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         Capital Punishment Religious Views:     more detail
  1. A position not, or not yet, mandated. (Catholic Church's view on capital punishment): An article from: First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life by Richard Neuhaus, 1998-04-01
  2. The Death Penalty Debate: Two Opposing Views of Capitol Punishment (Issues of Christian Conscience) by H. Wayne House, John Howard Yoder, 1991-07

41. Ethics Forum: Capital Punishment
has posted, that doesn t preclude plenty of diversity of views. including a summaryof the attitudes to capital punishment of the religious faiths dominant
http://www.ethics.org.au/ethics_forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=356&PN=1

42. TownHall.com: Conservative Columnists: Cal Thomas
Now THAT was cruel and unusual punishment. 71?) and judged guilty of a capital crime,cannot cited the views of professional and religious organizations, and
http://www.townhall.com/columnists/calthomas/ct20020625.shtml

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43. »»Reviews For Opposing Views««
that God s acceptance of capital punishment has changed retributionbased systemsof punishment (ie, some Should religious Values Guide Public Policy (Opposing
http://www.booksunderreview.com/Society/Religion_and_Spirituality/Opposing_Views
Opposing Views Reviews
Related Subjects: Agnosticism Anti-Cult Atheism Bah¡'i ... Yoga Book reviews for "Opposing Views" sorted by average review score: The Death Penalty Debate: Two Opposing Views of Capitol Punishment (Issues of Christian Conscience) Published in Paperback by Word Publishing (July, 1991) Authors: H. Wayne House and John Howard Yoder Amazon base price: Average review score: Enjoyed seeing this issue discussed from Biblical standpoint This book presented opposing viewponts on capital punishment from two prominent Biblical theologians. While I did not agree with either theologian on all points, this somewhat overly scholarly debate did help me reexamine my own beliefs and determine why I believe what I believe. Dr. House argued that capital punishment is not only condoned but also commanded by God in the Old Testament, and he used New Testament passages to affirm those commands were universal and unchanging. His arguments relied heavily on his interpretion of Genesis 9 (the Noachian Covenant) as a universal mandate establishing God's relationship to man, and man's relationship to each other. Unfortunately, I felt he took the "easy" way out by claiming that the entire Mosaic Law had been invalidated by Christ and therefore was not relevant to his case. I think a more fair analysis would have been to divide the Mosaic Laws into moral, religous, and legal subcomponents and deal with each separately. Dr. Yoder used a standard "Christ-transforming-culture" argument to assert that God's acceptance of capital punishment has changed from Biblical times to today. The themes of Christ's teachings have helped evolve modern culture past the need for retribution-based systems of punishment (i.e., some Scriptures have to be interpreted in terms of the cultural bias of its authors). Yoder explains away the Noachian Covenant as a reflection of an obsolete era and basis his arguments primarily on John 8, where Jesus pardons an alduteress about to be stoned to death.

44. Religion, Death Penalty To Be Topic At Jan. 25 Conference
in the official enactment of capital punishment, including Oklahoma How does religionshape current views about the What role should religious beliefs play in
http://chronicle.uchicago.edu/020110/deathpenalty.shtml
Jan. 10, 2002
Vol. 21 No. 7 current issue
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    Religion, death penalty to be topic at Jan. 25 conference
    By Seth Sanders
    News Office Prominent scholars of politics, religion and law will gather to consider the religious implications of the death penalty and the theological arguments for and against it. Major players in the official enactment of capital punishment, including Oklahoma Governor Frank Keating, Supreme Court Justice Anthony Scalia, former U.S. Senator Paul Simon, and prosecutor in the Timothy McVeigh trial Beth Wilkinson, will join scholars as conference participants. The conference will bring together Catholics, Protestants, Jews and Muslims from the fields of politics, religion and law to take up a broad range of views on the death penalty. Special attention will be given to the following guiding questions: How does religion shape current views about the death penalty? What role should religious beliefs play in a pluralistic democratic society that presumes strict boundaries between matters of private faith and political life? How might citizens, jurors, neighbors and people of faith draw upon religious ideas in carrying out their civic responsibilities? The Washington Post , a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and co-chair of the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life; Avery Cardinal Dulles, S.J., the Laurence J. McGinley professor of religion and society at Fordham University; Richard Garnett, assistant professor of law at the University of Notre Dame Law School; Gilbert Meilaender, professor of Christian ethics at Valparaiso University; and David Novak, chairman of Jewish studies at the University of Toronto.

45. Capital Punishment
A Theological Essay on capital punishment capital punishment. Kenneth Cauthen. This essay is part of Chapter Bible with Integrity. Theology as religious Belief. What I Believe This memoir
http://www.frontiernet.net/~kenc/cappun.htm
Capital Punishment
Kenneth Cauthen This essay is part of Chapter Eight in my Toward a New Modernism Thesis One: In principle a case can be made on moral grounds both supporting and opposing capital punishment. Thesis two: Concretely and in practice, compelling arguments against capital punishment can be made on the basis of its actual administration in our society. Two different cases can be made. One is based on justice and the nature of a moral community. This leads to a defense of capital punishment. The second is based on love and the nature of an ideal spiritual community. This leads to a rejection of capital punishment. JUSTICE AND THE NATURE OF MORAL COMMUNITY LOVE AND AN IDEAL SPIRITUAL COMMUNITY Agape , Christian love, is unconditional. It does not depend on the worthiness or merit of those to whom it is directed. It is persistent in seeking the good of others regardless of whether they return the favor or even deserve to be treated well on the basis of their own incessant wrongdoing. An ideal community would be made up of free and equal citizens devoted to a balance between individual self-fulfillment and the advancement of the common good. Communal life would be based on mutual love in which equality of giving and receiving was the norm of social practice. Everyone would contribute to the best of ability and each would receive in accordance with legitimate claims to available resources. What would a community based on this kind of love do with those who committed brutal acts of terror, violence, and murder? Put negatively, it would not live by the philosophy of "an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, and a life for a life." It would act to safeguard the members of the community from further destruction. Those who had shown no respect for life would be restrained, permanently if necessary, so that they could not further endanger other members of the community. But the purpose of confinement would not be vengeance or punishment. Rather an ideal community would show mercy even to those who had shown no mercy. It would return good for evil. The aim of isolation is reconciliation and not revenge.

46. ABC Bodybuilding: Quick Religious Question About Cloning And Capital Punishment.
supporting cloning or capital punishment, I just want a clearer view of everything. ReQuick religious question about cloning and capital punishment
http://www.abcbodybuilding.com/forum/showflat.php?Cat=&Number=736952&page=0&view

47. View Free Essays, Research Papers, Custom Writing, Free Termpapers
1. Select the text of the paper with the mouse and press Ctrl+C. 2. Open your wordprocessor and press Ctrl+V. religious Perspectives on capital punishment.
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48. The Economics Of Capital Punishment
The economics of capital punishishment, the death penalty the dollar costs of capital punishment versus life in prison position based on their religious beliefs.) Discussion with Catholic
http://www.mindspring.com/~phporter/econ.html
This thesis is meant to stimulate debate.
Please send comments or an antithesis to:
Phil Porter phporter@mindspring.com
The Economics of Capital Punishment
Contention:
Sentencing a prisoner to life in prison is a better allocation of resources than sentencing him to be executed. First I'll present figures representing the dollar costs of capital punishment versus life in prison/no parole. Then I'll discuss the deterrent effect as the only legitimate rational justification for capital punishment. Then I'll discuss the externalities of capital punishment. A Duke University study found... "The death penalty costs North Carolina $2.16 million per execution over the costs of a non-death penalty murder case with a sentence of imprisonment for life." ( The costs of processing murder cases in North Carolina / Philip J. Cook, Donna B. Slawson ; with the assistance of Lori A. Gries. [Durham, NC] : Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy, Duke University, 1993.) "The death penalty costs California $90 million annually beyond the ordinary costs of the justice system - $78 million of that total is incurred at the trial level." (Sacramento Bee, March 18, 1988).

49. View
Truth Free Candide Essays Voltaire s views on Optimism World Free Death Penalty EssaysReligious Perspectives of capital punishment Free capital
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50. United Nation\'s View On Capital Punishment
Sociology/ FT April 2001 Catholicism capital punishment FT April 2001 Catholicism capital punishment as clergy and religious, in view of their
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RING V. ARIZONA 2000) (dissenting opinion), and Harris v. United States, ante to agree with the dissenting view , and with See, eg, Weinstein, The Nation s Death Penalty Foes
supct.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/01-488.ZC2.html
Anti Essays : Free Essays on Against
Capital Punishment Essays
Anti Essays : Free Essays on Against Capital Punishment Essays reason to keep executing wrongdoers in the United States or Perhaps Andrei Sakhorov had the right view of capital which has one of the nation s largest death
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Sociology family, as they provide an alternative view to the a source of heated debate in the United States of the worst tragedies concerning our nation s children was www.co.cx/TermPapers/Sociology/

51. The Religion Report: 13 August  2003  - Terror And Punishment
about the religious or ethical merits of capital punishment. people from mainstreamgroups, many religious groups, appealed to What’s your own view about that
http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/8.30/relrpt/stories/s923243.htm
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Terror and punishment
13 August 2003
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Last week's death penalty for convicted Bali bomber Amrozi drew a mixed response from Australians. The papers and TV news carried images of Bali victims' friends and family members breaking out the champagne; some expressed the wish that they might be invited to join the firing squad; while other voices spoke out against capital punishment even for the worst crimes. But how has the death sentence been greeted in Indonesia, and what are religious leaders saying there? We present Muslim and Christian perspectives on forgiveness, crime and punishment. Program Transcript David Busch: Last week’s death sentence handed down to convicted Bali bomber Amrozi has reignited debate in Australia, Britain and other countries about capital punishment. Survivors and the families of victims are divided, though most seem satisfied that the death penalty is justified. Churches and human rights groups in Australia are maintaining their in-principle opposition to capital punishment, and they want Australian politicians to lobby the Indonesian government to commute Amrozi’s sentence to life in jail. But only a few Australian politicians are voicing any protest about Amrozi’s fate. That fate won’t be known for some weeks yet, as his appeal runs its course. Yet in Indonesia, there’s virtually no debate about the religious, moral or ethical principles at stake in the practice of capital punishment. There’s been widespread endorsement of the verdict and the sentence against Amrozi, reflecting a more pragmatic approach which affirms the need for the death penalty in a country in the throes of religious and political violence.

52. Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly . COVER STORY . Capital Punishment: Retribution Or
and Conservative Judaism have long condemned capital punishment, yet Orthodox thefastest growing major religion in the And her views on capital punishment are
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/week437/cover.html
Week of June 4, 2004
Cover Story

Profile

Headlines

COVER STORY:
Capital Punishment: Retribution or Justice?
May 11, 2001 Episode no. 437
Current Stories Cover Story: Nine Mile Canyon Dilemma Profile: Father Joe: Slum Priest Headlines: This Week in Religion News BOB ABERNETHY (anchor): The fate of Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh has triggered a national debate over the death penalty in the religious communities. This week, more than 65 American religious leaders asked President Bush not to execute McVeigh and to impose a moratorium on all Federal executions.
Leaders of the Episcopal Church, Presbyterian Church USA, the United Church of Christ, Catholics Against Capital Punishment, the Quakers, and the Union of American Hebrew Congregations signed a letter stating the pain of McVeigh's victims, of their community, and of the nation "cannot be healed through the retribution of capital punishment or by vengeance."
Last week, speaking for the U.S. Catholic Bishops, Cardinals Roger Mahony of Los Angeles and William Keeler of Baltimore reiterated the Catholic Church's longtime opposition to capital punishment, saying executing McVeigh will not bring healing or closure. Rather, the Cardinals said, "it will be just one more killing."
At the same time, many religious leaders support McVeigh's execution. Today, we have a special report on the capital punishment debate among people of faith. Our correspondent Tim O'Brien talked with two ministers in the same denomination, the First Christian Church [Disciples of Christ].

53. Corporal Punishment - Religious Cults, Sects And Movements
is sometimes confused with capital punishment (death penalty). this page Corporalpunishment Last Updated organizations, doctrines, religious practices and
http://www.apologeticsindex.org/c136.html
Corporal Punishment
An Apologetics Index research resource
Corporal Punishment
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Some religious groups use corporal punishment, ranging from spankings (for discipline) to amputations (as punishment). The term ''corporal punishment'' is sometimes confused with ''capital punishment'' ( death penalty
Though the Bible talks about spanking (proponents typically cite only a handful of verses from the Book of Proverbs), it does not condone abuse - which is what so-called 'discipline' often turns into.
For example, in recent years, a number of churches and religious groups have been in the news due to the abusive spanking of minors (see, for example, House of Prayer , or the Church of God (Restoration)
In the past, Jesus People USA practiced the disciplinary spanking of adult females - an unbiblical practice.
Note: this entry will be expanded in the near future to include various research resources.
- Articles -
Loving Discipline That Works
Christian Parenting Today, July/Aug 1999 - News Articles Database - Database of archived news items (Includes items added between Oct. 25, 1999 and Jan. 31, 2002. See

54. Capital Punishment - The Death Penalty
Isaac Ehrlich, capital punishment and Deterrence Some Further Homicide and DeterrenceAnother View of the penalty.htm; RL Young, religious Orientation, Race
http://www.religioustolerance.org/executb.htm
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT THE DEATH PENALTY
Basic reasons: pro and anti
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Common reasons in support of capital punishment
The Bible The Bible requires the death penalty for a wide variety of crimes, including sex before marriage, adultery, homosexual behavior, doing work on Saturday and murder. It even calls for some criminals (e.g. prostitutes who are the daughters of priests) to be tortured to death by being burned alive. Most Christians, with the exception of those in the Reconstructionist movement , feel that many of these grounds for the death penalty no longer apply to Christian societies. U.S. However, Bible passages are still used to promote the retention of capital punishment for murderers; some advocate that homosexuals also be executed. Justice/Vengeance Many people feel that killing convicted murderers will satisfy their need for justice and/or vengeance. They feel that certain crimes are so heinous that executing the criminal is the only reasonable response. Deterrence Many people feel that the death penalty will deter criminals from killing. This does not seem to be confirmed by an analysis of the available data. However, it feels intuitively correct for many people.

55. Capital Punishment
Then pick a view and debate the issue. tx.us/statistics/statshome.htm capital PunishmentThe Death site has information from different religious perspectives
http://www.42explore.com/capunish.htm
The Topic:
Capital Punishment
Special Note: This site is intended to be educational. However, some of the images and information included in this project may be disturbing, especially for younger learners. While we encourage all to learn, we hope that parents and teachers will be there to help explain events and guide young learners through the complexities behind what they may read and see. Adults should preview sites before providing access to younger children.
Easier - Capital punishment is the penalty or sentence of death for committing a crime. Harder - Since the beginning of the nineteenth century, most executions in the United States have resulted from murder convictions. However, the sentence of death has been imposed for such serious crimes as armed robbery, kidnapping, rape, and treason. People disagree about whether capital punishment is moral or if it is effective in discouraging crime. Many oppose the death penalty because they consider it cruel. Critics also believe that there is a risk of executing mistakenly convicted people. Supporters of the death penalty believe that in some instances, people who take another human life deserve to forfeit their own lives. Many supporters also argue that the threat of death discourages crime.

56. Capital Punishment Not The Gospel Way, Mason Says
When Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire underConstantine, Christian views toward capital punishment changed.
http://www.abpnews.com/abpnews/story.cfm?newsId=4258&srch=1

57. Capital Punishment
Since capital punishment is liable to be abused by faulty humans should not be considereda valid form of punishment. not look at it from a religious point of
http://www.freeessays.cc/db/28/lfm46.shtml
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58. I Love Philosophy :: View Topic - Capital Punishment
capital punishment Goto page Previous 1, 2. someone considers when the notion of punishmentis considered Insanity, drug addiction, religious beliefs, again I don
http://www.ilovephilosophy.com/phpbb/viewtopic.php?p=1589379

59. FT April 2001: Catholicism & Capital Punishment
the right, in principle, to inflict capital punishment in cases be imposed if thepurposes of punishment can be Church, such as clergy and religious, in view
http://www.firstthings.com/ftissues/ft0104/articles/dulles.html
Avery Cardinal Dulles Among the major nations of the Western world, the United States is singular in still having the death penalty. After a five–year moratorium, from 1972 to 1977, capital punishment was reinstated in the United States courts. Objections to the practice have come from many quarters, including the American Catholic bishops, who have rather consistently opposed the death penalty. The National Conference of Catholic Bishops in 1980 published a predominantly negative statement on capital punishment, approved by a majority vote of those present though not by the required two–thirds majority of the entire conference. Pope John Paul II has at various times expressed his opposition to the practice, as have other Catholic leaders in Europe. Some Catholics, going beyond the bishops and the Pope, maintain that the death penalty, like abortion and euthanasia, is a violation of the right to life and an unauthorized usurpation by human beings of God’s sole lordship over life and death. Did not the Declaration of Independence, they ask, describe the right to life as “unalienable”? While sociological and legal questions inevitably impinge upon any such reflection, I am here addressing the subject as a theologian. At this level the question has to be answered primarily in terms of revelation, as it comes to us through Scripture and tradition, interpreted with the guidance of the ecclesiastical magisterium.

60. The Truth Shall Set You Free
or allowing the voters the choice of capital punishment, but I But What About MoralityIs religion a way to get What Am I? My Personal views on God and reality
http://members.aol.com/chasklu/religion/
The Truth Shall Set You Free
Introduction
In recent years, there has been a surge of interest in religions, including a number of books which point out the errors in the literal interpretation of the Bible, as professed by the so-called Fundamentalist Christian denominations. Less attention has been devoted to examining the more liberal churches. These include the Catholic Church, liberal in the sense of not considering the Bible to be literally true. It is also the major Christian denomination and wields considerable influence in America and the world today. It would behoove us to take a rational look at the bases and influences of the more liberal churches, to see what value they have in informing our policies, both personal and public, in the light of Catholic/Protestant cooperation in the political arena, such as the Christian Coalition, and Operation Rescue, and papal pronouncements on birth control, war, capital punishment, and the third world. An example to consider is the fairly recent tenure of Governor Mario Cuomo of New York. He was pro-choice regarding abortion, a fact which led the local cardinal to suggest he might be subject to excommunication. He claimed to be personally opposed to abortion, in deference to his Catholic roots and constituents, but his opposition to abortion always seemed to me hypocritical, never reaching the level of his opposition to capital punishment, which he vetoed each year of his terms. We are not here to examine the relative merits of allowing women the choice of abortion or allowing the voters the choice of capital punishment, but I ask why the governor was afraid of excommunication so much as to denounce the threat of its use. What hold does the church (the Catholic Church, and religion in general) have over people? Was the governor concerned over his "immortal soul" or over his Catholic constituent/voters?

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