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Killers
So Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson wanted clemency for Karla Faye Tucker, the Texas
murderess who was executed yesterday evening. It's hard to imagine why. Won't the morals
of western society collapse in a sodden heap the day we allow compassion to over-rule our
sense of biblical justice?
It is hard to imagine how someone who claims to live his entire life according to the
precepts of the bible can come to some of the conclusions that Falwell, Robertson and
company come to. According to them, the Bible endorses free enterprise, capitalism, and
the American way. It's mind-boggling. Even if you are a literalist-- and I'm not--where on
earth does someone get the idea that the Hebrews believed in laissez faire economics? In
fact, time and time again, God held the Hebrews strictly accountable for how they invested
their capital, used their resources, and what they spent their money on. The widows,
orphans, and strangers had to be treated well, or God would withdraw his favours from
Israel. Nowhere does God say or suggest, "don't give generously to the poor, for in
so doing, thou wilt encourage dependency and sloth. And thou shalt keep the minimum wage
low that the Lord may bless your tax-free capital gains".
Back to capital punishment: contrary to what I just said, there is sound biblical
evidence for the application of capital punishment, right next to the sound biblical
evidence for mass murder and genocide. Does that sound harsh? Well, if you're a
literalist, you have to find some way to explain, to your heart's satisfaction, why God
occasionally approved of the slaughter of women and children, along with the
soldiers of Israel's enemies.
Personally, I'm happier believing that the Bible is infallible in the sense of
spiritual inspiration, but not necessarily in the sense of historic, social, or economic
truth. Thanks to the Dead Sea Scrolls, we have found more than a few errors of translation
in the gospels. One more error in translation I'd like to suggest is the idea that God
approved of Israel's violent campaigns against their Canaanite neighbors. More likely,
Israel's writers and historians merely did what all modern writers and historians do as
well: attribute a divine moral authority to an all too human act of nasty
blood-thirstiness.
© Copyright 1998 Bill Van Dyk
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February 3, 1998 |