Burden of proof
At the beginning of his 1990 legal novel, “The Burden of Proof,”
Scott Turow quotes an opinion of the United States Supreme Court and
Sigmund Freud; even interdisciplinary approaches to this question say
that clear-cut proof of one’s innocence or guilt is found only in
fiction. Experience says that all of us are judged every day. We are
judged by the face that looks back at us from the mirror. We are
judged by the faces of the people we love and by the faces and lives
of our children and by our dreams. Each day finds us at a crossroads,
and we are judged as much by the roads we have not taken as by the
roads we have.
Christianity proclaims that at some unforeseeable time in the
future there will come a day on which all our days and all the
judgments upon us and all our judgments upon each other will
themselves be judged. The judge will be Christ. About this, Frederick
Buechner writes, “Romantic love is blind to everything except what is
lovable and lovely, but Christ’s love sees us with terrible clarity
and sees us whole. Christ’s love so wishes our joy that it is
ruthless against everything in us that diminishes our joy. The worst
sentence love can pass is that we behold the suffering, which love
has incurred for our sake, and that is also our acquittal. The
justice and mercy of the judge are ultimately one.”
In other words, the one who judges us most finally and clearly
will be the one who loves us most fully and dearly.
THE VERY REV. CANON PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels Episcopal Parish Church
Corona del Mar
Jewish jurisprudence has minimal confidence in the validity of
circumstantial evidence. In Western society, it happens time and
again that an innocent man is convicted because of an accumulation of
circumstantial evidence, notwithstanding the adage “better that 1000
guilty men should go free than that one innocent man should be
punished unjustly.”
When the testimony of opposing parties cannot be established as
factual, a modern judge or jury would weigh the credibility of the
witnesses and the probability of their stories, and then decide
between them accordingly.
The authors of Jewish law did not trust themselves or their
successors with this discretion. They held that as someone was
evidently lying, and as they could not decide which of them it was,
the plaintiff’s demand should be defeated. The burden of proof lies
on the one who brings the charge and Jewish courts saw it as their
duty to decide the effect of testimony as a question of law, not as
one of the greatest probability.
RABBI MARK MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
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