Not necessarily. The implementation of such things would require some nuance.
Adultery should be a capital crime, as should homosexuality, but as with how the law was set up for Israel, the process has some hidey holes.
That's probably not going to satisfy you. It's not so easy for me when it comes to imagining how I would establish the law if given the chance as it is to say broadly what God's standards are.
You're right. It doesn't satisfy me, but I truly appreciate your response. You admit the process has some "hidey holes". And that is a great big point that needs to be made. One would think a
city of refuge needed to be set up just in case these bedroom sins were ever found out.
Even manslayers could go and avoid death.
Numbers 35:6 And among the cities which ye shall give unto the Levites there shall be six cities for refuge, which ye shall appoint for the manslayer, that he may flee thither: and to them ye shall add forty and two cities.
Not only hidey holes, though, but unforeseen consequences as well. Like witnesses to the offence being murdered or bought off. People being paid to provide false witness against another.
This is why I say these laws didn't work for Israel any better than they would today....only difference being
that God gave the Jews an out. They could bring sacrifices for their sins. They were given cities of refuge. There were multiple witness rules that kept most sexual sins from being brought before the "judge" or the counsel. In fact, a penitent one would bring the appropriate sacrifice and thereby avoid any death penalty.
But then.....something happened.
I'm reminded of this sexual sinner Paul encountered. What would have been a death sentence under the law turned into excommunication from the church. 1 Cor. 5:1