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         Capital Punishment Religious Views:     more detail
  1. A position not, or not yet, mandated. (Catholic Church's view on capital punishment): An article from: First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life by Richard Neuhaus, 1998-04-01
  2. The Death Penalty Debate: Two Opposing Views of Capitol Punishment (Issues of Christian Conscience) by H. Wayne House, John Howard Yoder, 1991-07

21. Justice Scalia On Capital Punishment - 'Death Is No Big Deal'
capital punishment Death Is No Big Deal By Kate Randall WSWS.org He wenton to claim, I don t think any of my religious views have anything to do
http://www.rense.com/general26/justicescaliaon.htm
Rense.com
Justice Scalia On
Capital Punishment -
'Death Is No Big Deal'

By Kate Randall
WSWS.org
The decision incurred the ire of the three dissenting justices. Chief Justice William Rehnquist and Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, all known for their extreme-right views, denounced the Court's majority for caving in to international and domestic public opinion opposing execution of the mentally retarded. In his dissenting opinion, Scalia argued that such individuals should not escape execution because "deservedness of the most severe retribution [the death penalty], depends not merely (if at all) upon the mental capacity of the criminal ... but also upon the depravity of the crime."
Scalia cited the New Testament to claim that government "derives its moral authority from God ... to execute wrath, including even wrath by the sword, which is unmistakably a reference to the death penalty." He then made the following remarkable declaration:
"Indeed, it seems to me that the more Christian a country is, the less likely it is to regard the death penalty as immoral. Abolition has taken its firmest hold in post-Christian Europe and has least support in the church-going United States. I attribute that to the fact that for the believing Christian, death is no big deal."

22. Capital Punishment -- Facts, Info, And Encyclopedia Article
capital punishment, also referred to as the death penalty, is the judiciallyordered (Putting a condemned person to religious views of the death penalty
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/c/ca/capital_punishment.htm
Capital punishment
[Categories: Death penalty]
Capital punishment , also referred to as the death penalty , is the judicially ordered (Putting a condemned person to death) execution of a prisoner as a (The act of punishing) punishment for a serious ((criminal law) an act punishable by law; usually considered an evil act) crime , often called a capital offense or a capital crime . Some jurisdictions that practice capital punishment restrict its use to a small number of criminal offences, principally (Disloyalty by virtue of subversive behavior) treason and (Unlawful premeditated killing of a human being by a human being) murder . Prisoners who have been sentenced to death are usually kept segregated from other prisoners in a special part of the (A correctional institution where persons are confined while on trial or for punishment) prison pending their execution. In some places this segregated area is known as " (The cellblock in a prison where those condemned to death await execution) Death Row
(Larceny by threat of violence) robbery or (The act of taking something from someone unlawfully) theft . It has also been frequently used by the military for (Plundering during riots or in wartime) looting (An insubordinate act) insubordination (Open rebellion against constituted authority (especially by seamen or soldiers against their officers)) mutiny , etc.

23. Capital Punishment - Art History Online Reference And Guide
capital punishment, also referred to as the death penalty, is the judiciallyordered execution 3.2 Arguments for. 4 religious views of the death penalty
http://www.arthistoryclub.com/art_history/Capital_punishment

24. Capital Punishment
4 religious views of the death penalty. 4.3 Death penalty in the Tanakh Those in favor of capital punishment most often build their views on a New
http://www.asinah.net/articles/content/c/ca/capital_punishment.html
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  • 25. The Death Penalty Debate
    On the Front Line Law Enforcement views on the Death Penalty by Richard C.Dieter Statements On capital punishment by religious Organizations Text of
    http://www.uaa.alaska.edu/just/death/debate.html
    Death penalty Focus on the Death Penalty The Death Penalty Debate
    Introducing the Debate
    provides a number of resources which present both sides of the death penalty debate in the U.S. Views of law enforcement officers , as shown in a national poll of police executives and a resolution from a national police organization, are split on the death penalty. A selection of resources indicating positions on the death penalty from a religious perspective include links to biblical citations and statements of officials, organizations, and individual adherents of different religious traditions, including Roman Catholicism, Protestantism, and Islam. The debate on capital punishment embraces many more specific issues, such as cost, inequities in the justice system, etc.; resources giving arguments on specific points are included on the Specific Issues page.

    26. Death Penalty Religious: Tucker's Death Affected Robertson Views
    We work with official religious bodies to aid antideath penalty activism There Robertson called capital punishment a necessary corrective to violent
    http://www.deathpenaltyreligious.org/education/perspectives/robertson.html
    Tucker's Death Affected Robertson Views By TERESA MALCOLM
    NCR Staff
    From NATIONAL CATHOLIC REPORTER April 23, 1999
    The execution of Karla Faye Tucker by the state of Texas last year brought protests from an unexpected corner: Christian conservatives, most notably Pat Robertson.
    Then recently Robertson, who heads the Christian Coalition, spoke out even more forcefully against capital punishment, to the surprise and delight of some death penalty opponents. During a program on clemency in New York in February, Robertson said that, while he still believed capital punishment should be used for unreformed "vicious killers," he favored allowances for mercy for those who have had "a genuine change of heart."
    call for the abolition of capital punishment in all cases.
    Robertson called for a vast public relations campaign to undercut public support for the death penalty. He echoed Catholic teaching as he called for opposition to the "culture of death" — a term often used by Pope John Paul II— saying, "We
    need to be pro-life across the board."

    27. Cruel And Unusual Crimes, Judicial Activism, And Capital Punishment.
    But I do not want our judicial employees imposing their religious views on me.If we re going to do away with capital punishment to satisfy religious
    http://tempknak.home.att.net/YoHoHo.html
    CRUEL, BUT NOT UNUSUAL, JUDICIAL MISCHIEF Many Americans favor abolition of the death penalty: they offer four main reasons. First, they say it's unconstitutional . . . it violates the Eighth Amendment's prohibition of "cruel and unusual punishments." Second, it's been fairly well documented that courts make a lot of mistakes in capital punishment cases. Therefore, we shouldn't trust them with anything as final as a life or death decision. The third reason offered is based on the claim that capital punishment does not deter crime. So its use is nothing more than collective vengeance which degrades us all. Finally, many sincere and idealistic people oppose capital punishment because it violates their religious beliefs. The first argument is based on "law," the second and third on "social science." The fourth is based on religion. Let's review the four arguments one at a time.
    IT'S UNCONSTITUTIONAL In 1791, when "We the People" ratified the Eighth Amendment, which forbids "cruel and unusual punishments," we also ratified the Fifth Amendment, which ordered that no person shall be "deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law." The Amendment treated "life" exactly the same way it treated "liberty" and "property," In 1791, every single state had mandatory death penalty statutes. All except Rhode Island punished ten or more crimes with death: the list typically included murder, treason, piracy, rape, arson, buggery (or sodomy), burglary, robbery, and, in some states, counterfeiting, horse-theft and slave-rebellion [1].

    28. NCADP National Coalition To Abolish The Death Penalty
    religious views OF capital punishment CATHOLIC Does not exclude death penaltyif it is the only way to defend lives against a perpetrator, but nonlethal
    http://www.demaction.org/dia/organizations/ncadp/news.jsp?key=1039&t=

    29. Webmasters, Increase Productivity, Download The Whole Site In Zip
    religious views of the death penalty Death penalty in the Tanakh (Hebrew Those in favor of capital punishment most often build their views on a New
    http://www.public-domain-content.com/Thomas_Alva_Edison/Capital_punishment.shtml

    30. Capital Punishment Death Penalty Execution Countries States
    There is ongoing debate whether capital punishment reduces crime rates, becausepotential murderers (or other 5 religious views of the death penalty
    http://www.economicexpert.com/4a/Capital:punishment.html
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    Key arguments for supporters of the death penalty include
    • People committing the most heinous crimes (usually murder in countries that practice the death penalty) have forfeited the right to life. Government is not an individual and is given far more powers. The death penalty shows the greatest respect for the ordinary man's, and especially the victim's, inviolable value. It strikes fewer "innocent persons" than alternative penalties, as among prisoners and ex-prisoners there are many who relapse into new crimes which strike "innocent persons". It provides peace of mind for many victims of crime and their families. It recognizes humankind's natural sense of equal justice, in this case, a life for a life It is the most effective way to protect society (its structures and its individuals) from a felon. It is less cruel than prolonged sentences of imprisonment , especially under the conditions that would be popularly demanded for heinous criminals.

    31. All About Capital Punishment - RecipeLand.com Reference Library
    Thus, capital punishment is the penalty for a crime so severe that it deservesdecapitation (losing one s head). 4 religious views of the death penalty
    http://www.recipeland.com/encyclopaedia/index.php/Capital_crime
    Home Browse Recipes Recipes By Title Recipes By Ingredient ... Community Find Recipes By Category Latest Reviews Latest Ratings Top 10 Recipes ... Top 10 Searches By Letter: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Search Encylopedia Browse
  • Culture Geography History Life ... Technology
  • Capital punishment
    Categories Death penalty
    (Redirected from Capital crime
    Capital punishment , also referred to as the death penalty , is the judicially ordered execution of a prisoner as a punishment for a serious crime , often called a capital offense or a capital crime . Some jurisdictions that practice capital punishment restrict its use to a small number of criminal offences, principally treason and murder . In recent years in the United States, these have also included killings that occur during the course of some other violent felony, such as robbery or rape . Prisoners who have been sentenced to death are usually kept segregated from other prisoners in a special part of the prison pending their execution. In some places this segregated area is known as " Death Row Historicallyand still today under certain systems of lawthe death penalty was applied to a wider range of offenses, including robbery or theft . It has also been frequently used by the military for looting insubordination mutiny , etc.

    32. Capital Punishment
    Viewers should not be left with such religious misinformation that is all too Modern biblical scholars views related to capital punishment are provided
    http://www.bibletexts.com/qa/qa142.htm
    shared from and with BibleTexts.com users Larry King Live discussion by Robert Nguyen Cramer (version 4.10.1.2) This BibleTexts website administrator has very much enjoyed questions and insights that have been emailed to him ever since this site was launched in September of 1996. On this page I share with BibleTexts browsers a few of the questions, insights, and responses, so that we all can further learn from and with each other. BibleTexts.com to Larry King of Larry King Live Abbreviations Dear Larry: In your September 29, 2004, Larry King Live program, The Rev. R. Albert Mohler, Jr. stated: I do support Capital Punishment, because the scripture is so clear about it. Now, I want it applied in a fair and just way. But there's no doubt "The Bible" in the Old and New Testaments, not only allows but mandates capital punishment, because it affirms the fact that the willful taking of human life is the violation of God's law, God's plan, and is to murder one who is made in the image of God. Mohler's statement was both textually and historically incomplete and incorrect. Viewers should not be left with such religious misinformation that is all too prevalent about Christianity, Islam, Judaism, and most other religions.

    33. Interfaith Forums - Capital Punishment
    View Full Version capital punishment or reintegrate these beings into society.they are there for punishment for holding religious views which the Red
    http://www.comparative-religion.com/forum/archive/index.php/t-2553.html
    Interfaith forums Secularism Politics and Society PDA View Full Version : Capital Punishment Geist 04-08-2005, 08:06 PM Should capital punishment be compulsey(Sp?) in every country?
    My personal feelings on this topic is yes because I believe in an eye for an eye a tooth for a tooth. Plus I don't think you can rehabilateate a murderer and I don't think they should be aloud to live. Vajradhara 04-08-2005, 08:28 PM Namaste geist,
    thank you for the post.
    i would say "no" as it is contrary to my world view which values the life of all sentient beings.
    killing one sentient being for the killing of another just ends up with two sentient beings that are dead... not justice for the victim, in my view. Geist 04-08-2005, 08:39 PM Namaste
    What does that mean?
    killing one sentient being for the killing of another just ends up with two sentient beings that are dead... not justice for the victim, in my view
    And putting them in a padded room for 25 years or so is? Vajradhara 04-08-2005, 09:42 PM Namaste Geist,
    thank you for the post.

    34. PopMatters
    Many of the traditional arguments against capital punishment had little traction I respect the religious views of persons who regard life as sacred,
    http://www.popmatters.com/books/reviews/u/utlimate-punishment.shtml
    BOOKS archive - A B C D ... front page
    ULTIMATE PUNISHMENT:
    A Lawyer's Reflections on Dealing with the Death Penalty
    by Scott Turow
    October 2003, 164 pages, $18 by Hank Kalet
    e-mail this article

    print this article

    comment on this article
    Lives in the Balance Gary Ridgway has admitted to 48 murders in the state of Washington, more than any other serial killer in US history. In his guilty plea, Ridgway told the court that he wanted "to kill as many women as I thought were prostitutes as I possibly could." He said he left their bodies in "clusters" and that he enjoyed driving by the sites afterward. It is hard to imagine a more heinous series of crimes, and yet the former truck driver will escape execution. A plea agreement reached in November in which Ridgway agreed to help prosecutors recover the still-missing remains of some victims, sets his sentence as life in prison. Ridgway's adjudication cast a shadow on the death penalty, raising questions about the fairness of its application. After all, if a man who has admitted to more murders than any other serial killer in history is not deserving of death, then who is? That's just one of the questions that Scott Turow's powerful new book

    35. Religion And Politics: Contention And Consensus (Part III)
    In 1996 views on the death penalty were largely unrelated to religious differences . While a majority favors capital punishment as a general policy,
    http://pewforum.org/docs/index.php?DocID=29

    36. Pew Forum On Religion & Public Life: Scalia Calls Death Penalty Constitutional,
    toward capital punishment, said that he did not find the death penalty immoral . In response to a question about how his religious views inform his
    http://pewforum.org/press/index.php?ReleaseID=11

    37. Life-and-Death Questions On Capital Punishment
    There are a number of compelling rationales for capital punishment. He rejectstheological arguments ( I respect the religious views of persons who
    http://www.commondreams.org/cgi-bin/print.cgi?file=/views03/0713-03.htm

    38. The Volokh Conspiracy - Justices And Religion:
    This means that capital punishment cannot be listed as a or even worse lethis personal religious views affect his vote in order to limit or undo any
    http://volokh.com/posts/1123091243.shtml
    The Volokh Conspiracy
    Contact Subscribe Features ... Search Eugene Volokh August 3, 2005 at 1:47pm 2 Trackbacks Possibly More Trackbacks Justices and Religion: Professor Bainbridge has a thoughtful post on Justices' religious faith and their legal decisions. link frankcross ( mail www Very good job. That's the first really good analysis of the "elephant in the room" excommunication argument that I've seen. Though I don't think Bainbridge's conclusion about legitimate questions follows from his analysis. It seems fair to get his understanding of the sorts of actions that might constitute impermissible "formal cooperation." link david giacalone ( www I've posted a lenghty reply to Prof. B's piece, which focused on my original post " What If John Roberts is a 'Serious' Catholic?
    My conclusion:
    I can't endorse Prof. Bainbridge's questions for Senators to ask Judge Roberts. They are incomplete, focusing on whether "formal cooperation with evil" would require recusal, but without giving or asking for a definition of the terms; asking how Judge Roberts would decide what constitutes absolute or intrinsic "evil", nor asking what Roberts thinks his obligations would be as a Catholic if recusal were not required in a case involving such evil.
    I believe a "serious Catholic" would feel obligated to actively oppose laws and decisions that his Church declares to be "intrinsically unjust." Sitting on the Supreme court would increase the duty. That would mean participating in the case and voting in a manner that would support eliminating or greatly limiting such evil. So, I ask again,"is John Roberts a Serious Catholic," and what are the ramifications if he is?

    39. Free Essays On Capital Punishment
    political views. More and more Americans seem to view the death penalty as just Should religious Support capital punishment? Human Events. 2
    http://www.123student.com/2159.htm
    Categories
    American History

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    ... Law > Capital Punishment
    Capital Punishment
    Below is free essays on Capital Punishment by 123Student, your one-stop source for free essays, free college term papers, and free term papers. Look for more free essays and free term papers using the search box above. Word Count: 1599
    Page Count: 7
    Capital Punishment
    Capital Punishment
    Mr. Carlisle
    Law and Justice
    18 March 1995
    The theory "a life for a life" is "as old as civilization itself"
    (McCiellan 9). The development of civilizations established what we call justice today. Capital punishment, the execution of a criminal convicted of a crime, or the legal taking of the life of a criminal, can be divided into three categories: first, crimes against the person; second, crimes against property; and third, crimes which endanger the security of the nation (Horwitz 13). Capital punishment is still in use in the United States today, but has been abolished by many countries (II 536). The countries that still have the death penalty on their books, rarely employ it .

    40. Freeindiamedia.com, Express Your Impartial, Radical, Grassroot Views On Current
    US Supreme Court Justice Scalia on capital punishment Death is no big deal He went on to claim, I don t think any of my religious views have
    http://www.freeindiamedia.com/america/8_july_america.htm
    US Supreme Court Justice Scalia on capital punishment: "Death is no big deal" By Kate Randall
    Recent rulings by the US Supreme Court on the death penalty have focused attention on the high court's attitude toward capital punishment-a practice still upheld by 38 US states. In a 6-3 decision June 20, the Court ruled that executing the mentally retarded is a violation of the Constitution's Eighth Amendment ban on "cruel and unusual punishment."
    The decision incurred the ire of the three dissenting justices-Chief Justice William Rehnquist and Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, all known for their extreme-right views-who denounced the Court's majority for caving in to international and domestic public opinion opposing execution of the mentally retarded. In his dissenting opinion, Scalia argued that such individuals should not escape execution because "deservedness of the most severe retribution [the death penalty], depends not merely (if at all) upon the mental capacity of the criminal ... but also upon the depravity of the crime."
    Reporting on the June 20 ruling, the British Guardian newspaper drew attention to remarks made earlier this year by Justice Scalia, which cast further light on the deeply reactionary outlook underpinning his support for the death penalty. Scalia spoke in January at the University of Chicago at the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, appearing on a panel with former Democratic Senator Paul Simon and Beth Wilkinson, lead prosecutor in the government's case against Timothy McVeigh. His comments have been virtually blacked out in the American press.

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