I was recently discussing the justice of the death penalty when the person I was talking with brought up the fact that God didn't have David executed for murdering Uriah the Hittite, nor did He let Saul's involvement in Stephen's stoning, which if it wasn't murder, it was certainly an unjust execution, stop Him from making him the Apostle to the Gentiles.
His argument was, in essence....
If failing to execute murderers is unjust then God must be unjust because there are murders that God didn't have executed and that therefore my strong stance on the death penalty is somehow overstepping what is Godly.
My response was less than terrific because it didn't make sense to me at first. I couldn't make it compute that someone could question God's authority in such matters. After all, the only reason we are to execute murderers (and those guilty of other capital crimes) is because He gave mankind that authority and responsibility and I even told him at the time that I wasn't sure how to respond because his argument made no sense to me.
The exchange has made me more aware of the vast gulf that has opened up in regards to the way people think about justice. There are deep underlying, presuppositional issues that make the topic quite difficult to discuss in any depth, especially with someone who is religiously educated. It seems like it should be a very straight forward topic. I mean, how more clear can you get than "And eye for an eye"? But, it seems there just one bump in the road after another that betrays the existence of underlying issues that are coloring every aspect of the topic.
So, how would you guys explain why God chose to spare David and to choose Saul in spite of their overt wickedness and to what degree should such instances impact our understanding of what criminal justice should look like?
His argument was, in essence....
If failing to execute murderers is unjust then God must be unjust because there are murders that God didn't have executed and that therefore my strong stance on the death penalty is somehow overstepping what is Godly.
My response was less than terrific because it didn't make sense to me at first. I couldn't make it compute that someone could question God's authority in such matters. After all, the only reason we are to execute murderers (and those guilty of other capital crimes) is because He gave mankind that authority and responsibility and I even told him at the time that I wasn't sure how to respond because his argument made no sense to me.
The exchange has made me more aware of the vast gulf that has opened up in regards to the way people think about justice. There are deep underlying, presuppositional issues that make the topic quite difficult to discuss in any depth, especially with someone who is religiously educated. It seems like it should be a very straight forward topic. I mean, how more clear can you get than "And eye for an eye"? But, it seems there just one bump in the road after another that betrays the existence of underlying issues that are coloring every aspect of the topic.
So, how would you guys explain why God chose to spare David and to choose Saul in spite of their overt wickedness and to what degree should such instances impact our understanding of what criminal justice should look like?