Justice versus mercy in the jury room
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Dramatic post-crime transformations suggest to some that repentance
should stay the executioner’s hand.
Both the Bible and Jewish law affirm that repentance ameliorates
divine judgment. The prophet Ezekiel writes: “But if the wicked will
turn from all the sins which he has committed, and keep all my
statutes ... he shall surely live, and shall not die ... Have I any
pleasure at all that the wicked should die? Says the Lord God; and
not rather that he should return from his ways and live?”
The Talmud confirms the power of repentance to blot out one’s sins
before God.
This, though, refers only to the divine court and not human
reckoning. The Jewish tradition is clear that a person sentenced to
capital punishment is to be punished by death, regardless of
repentance. The human response cannot mirror God’s granting clemency
to repentant criminals.
If a person has returned to God through repentance, then he will
be forgiven by God for his sins. In human courts, though, justice is
grounded exclusively on past actions; repentance cannot undo what has
already been done. Further, Judaism insists that repentance cannot be
achieved until the injured party has forgiven the criminal for his
sin. It is impossible for a murderer to fully repent because he
cannot gain forgiveness from the victim. That option has been removed
with the person’s death. Therefore, there can be no forgiveness for
the murderer since there is nothing to be done to right the wrong. He
cannot take the murder back, and there is no forgiveness from the
grave.
Additionally, Judaism cautions that allowing repentant murderers
to escape capital punishment would fill death row with wholesale
claims of repentance. Every inmate would seize this mechanism to
escape the ultimate punishment. Also, it is beyond the scope of human
knowledge to verify whether the criminal has truly repented. The
death row inmate has understandable motivation to appear repentant to
avoid execution. Only God knows the human heart, and therefore only
God can accept repentance.
Oklahoma City bombing conspirator Terry Nichols asked for
forgiveness and offered to help victims’ families with the healing
process.
“My heart truly goes out to all the victims and survivors and to
everyone who was affected by the Oklahoma City bombing,” Nichols
said. “Words cannot adequately express the sorrow I have felt over
the years for the grief they have all suffered.”
To be honest, I care far less about Mr. Nichols’ sympathetic heart
than the hearts he stilled forever. Even if words could express his
sorrow, they would remain just that -- words. Any protestations of
remorse ring hollow, and they are too little, too late.
In God’s eyes, one who repents is as if he has gotten a “new heart
and new spirit” and begun a new life. In the Jewish legal system,
though, repentance was not germane to carrying out the sentence of
the court. Questions related to the sincerity of the criminal’s
repentance prevented human courts from staying an execution.
If criminals repent before their just punishment in this world,
they have the opportunity to become reconciled with God in the
world-to-come. That is not to deny their just punishment in this
world.
RABBI MARK S. MILLER
Temple Bat Yahm
Newport Beach
Conversion is a personal experience with public consequences.
Accepting God as one’s Lord and putting one’s whole trust in God’s
grace and love is a blessing and a gift to which one must respond.
Jesus said, “Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter
the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my
Father in heaven.” (Matthew 7:21)
Christian heritage and Holy Scripture, especially the Letter of
James, emphasize that “faith” necessitates “works.” We usually do
good, hoping that God will love us because we do good; Christian
truth is that we are to do good in response to God (already!) loving
us at our beginning and through our end. All of this emphasizes that
“actions speak louder than words!”
Conversion is less something one does than it is something that
happens. It requires both looking at the past and saying “I’m sorry”
and looking to the future and saying “Wow!” In that “Wow!” is an
amendment of life put into words in the Baptismal Covenant on pages
304-305 of the Book of Common Prayer: “persevere in resisting evil,
and whenever you fall into sin, repent and return to the Lord ...
proclaim by word and example the Good News of God in Christ ...
strive for justice and peace among all people, and respect the
dignity of every human being ... with God’s help.” When attempting to
be faithful to this commitment is apparent in one’s life, that person
may be said to be, and treated as, a “convert.”
If someone convicted of a crime has demonstrated “converted”
behavior between the time of that crime and the time of their trial
and sentencing, that “conversion” might be taken into consideration
at their sentencing. Simply having said, “Lord, Lord” should not be
sufficient reason for sentencing differently. Of course, “actions
speak louder than words” applies to all of us, extending well beyond
those accused of crimes.
[This question begs another, which I think, is more basic for
Christians: “Can those who worship God who, in human life, was put to
death as a victim of capital punishment, support our ‘death
penalty?’”]
THE VERY REV’D CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
There seem to be two possible expectations of our justice system.
The first is justice -- punishment for wrongs done. The second is
rehabilitation -- making better citizens of offenders.
As I raise my children, my heart bleeds for them as I punish them.
I don’t want to be the bad guy, but without justice, my children will
become spoiled brats. It is my hope that a timeout or restriction
will change their behavior. In the case of my family, justice has
twin objectives.
Taken to our legal system, a traffic ticket also has twin
objectives. Hopefully the fine and traffic school (which are
penalties) will change my driving behavior. This is true of any level
of justice, even in cases involving capital punishment. The
punishment is meant to change the course of a life.
Now, if there is no life after this one, then capital punishment
cannot bring justice and rehabilitation. Without life, rehabilitation
would be meaningless. What would be the point? The purpose of justice
is then limited to punishment.
As a Christ-follower, I am convinced that this life is just a test
lap for eternity. I will spend far more time there than here.
However, the decisions of this life have eternal ramifications in the
next. If the goal of this life is to prepare Mr. Payton for eternity,
then the death penalty has caused him to consider the path of his
life and succeeded. If he has truly turned his life over to Christ,
then both justice and rehabilitation will have been meted out in his
sentence.
Mr. Payton’s faith in Christ would be an overriding factor in
sentencing him, if there were no eternity. If he had been
rehabilitated to being a productive member of society, even from a
prison cell, then yes, it should be considered in his sentencing.
However, if there is no eternity, Christ could not change him, and
the point would be moot in the first place.
SENIOR ASSOCIATE PASTOR
RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity
Costa Mesa
At Donovan Penitentiary near San Diego, one of our most committed
Zen practitioners is a man serving a double-life sentence for murder.
He was sentenced as an 18-year-old and is now around 45.
His life was spared. He reads widely, has developed many skills
and interests, works at a daily prison job and realizes he must make
the best of his life, even if it will be lived within prison. He
tries to be a positive influence on the younger men who may be in
prison for shorter terms.
We have written in support of his parole applications, realizing
that our input about his Zen practice is only a part of the board’s
decision-making process, which must include other considerations,
such as details about his crime, the families of the victims and
psychiatric reports.
I am opposed to the death penalty even for prisoners who have not
converted. Capital punishment degrades the culture that resorts to it
and subverts the very humanitarian principles it seeks to avenge. In
sentencing hearings, all relevant factors including religious
experience should be considered. It is hard to understand why a judge
would make the mistake of excluding it, especially since testimony
about a conversion could be heard without requiring a favorable
decision.
The term “conversion” is foreign to Zen. There is nothing to
change, to turn away from or return to. We try to wake up to each
moment, to realize the true nature of our life and to manifest it in
our daily lives.
This process may be described as aspiring to do our best, living
with awareness, experiencing our delusions and imperfections, atoning
and again aspiring to do our best. This entire cycle is natural and
perfect. We move from unawareness to awareness to unawareness moment
by moment: no special state is achieved, and there is no sense in
which we have accomplished something definitive.
Atonement means to be “at one” with, which means being fully
present each moment. The traditional metaphor in Zen is “polishing
the diamond”: A diamond is perfect, and yet it is only natural that
we polish it to shine brightly. Our meditation and Zen training is
not an attempt through hard work or intervention to produce rubies
from coal, and we are not climbing some kind of spiritual ladder.
Our Donovan practitioner describes his experience in prison:
“Take the long capillary back to my cell.
Zen brother Steve is doing yard work.
Digging ditches and picking up trash as if his soul depends upon
it.
Maybe it does.
Thursday, Thursday, Thursday.
Cellie is at work when I get home.
Peace, quiet, solitude. A hot cup of coffee.
It’s great to be alive!
Folded blankets. One for the floor, two to sit on.
Posture. Breathing. Labeling.
Rumble and hiss of ventilation. Distant toilets. A radio.
I breathe. The beast breathes.
I awaken the Buddha.”
REV. DR. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
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