Re: The Religion Thread: A Believer-Atheist Alliance
I'd be curious to hear a fuller explanation. I've heard the case that it's a Christian duty to follow the law of the land (our rulers are elected by God's will, "render unto Caesar", etc.), but IMO when the law so clearly conflicts with Christ/love/mercy, it's an "unfaithful" abdication to give the ultimate authority to a worldly government.
To be morally consistent, one opposes all premeditated murder, be it the murder of the unfortunate child who has yet to take up residence outside the womb, or the murder of a convicted killer in prison.
the moral quandary comes about, not with the death "penalty," but when you have a person so dangerous, so depraved, so thoroughly evil, who delights in inflicting pain and suffering on others, that it is too dangerous to ask anyone to serve as his prison guard. One might try to sidestep the question by saying that the kind of person I just described isn't really human, and putting a creature like that to death is not a "penalty" at all, it is sort of like antibodies taking out a life-threatening disease before it spreads infection and kills the entire body.
If a person believes in the possibility of redemption, then to be morally consistent, that person also
must oppose the death "penalty" as well. I suppose that's the way around the quandary: if no redemption ever can be possible.
The "argument" that a woman has the right to control her own body to me seems a bit specious: just because she doesn't want to carry a human being inside her any more, doesn't necessarily mean that the child has to be put to death. There are ways to keep that child alive outside that woman's womb.