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Being in prison

Salty

20,000 Posts Club
Administrator
I found this on one of my FB pages:

Long-term imprisonment is not biblical.

So far the only verse give is: Leviticus 24:10-12. Verse 12 says, "And they put him in custody, till the will of the Lord should be clear to them." Descriptive text no doubt, but obviously soon after the law was given ...

So do you believe the teaches about how long a person should stay in prison.
Or is it not even addressed - and thus there is no command one way or the other?
 

JonC

Moderator
Moderator
I found this on one of my FB pages:

Long-term imprisonment is not biblical.

So far the only verse give is: Leviticus 24:10-12. Verse 12 says, "And they put him in custody, till the will of the Lord should be clear to them." Descriptive text no doubt, but obviously soon after the law was given ...

So do you believe the teaches about how long a person should stay in prison.
Or is it not even addressed - and thus there is no command one way or the other?
Not really addressed. What is addressed is Christians treating those in prison as human beings with worth rather than discarding them.
 

Reynolds

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I found this on one of my FB pages:

Long-term imprisonment is not biblical.

So far the only verse give is: Leviticus 24:10-12. Verse 12 says, "And they put him in custody, till the will of the Lord should be clear to them." Descriptive text no doubt, but obviously soon after the law was given ...

So do you believe the teaches about how long a person should stay in prison.
Or is it not even addressed - and thus there is no command one way or the other?
They killed everyone for serious crimes in Leviticus.
 

canadyjd

Well-Known Member
I found this on one of my FB pages:

Long-term imprisonment is not biblical.

So far the only verse give is: Leviticus 24:10-12. Verse 12 says, "And they put him in custody, till the will of the Lord should be clear to them." Descriptive text no doubt, but obviously soon after the law was given ...

So do you believe the teaches about how long a person should stay in prison.
Or is it not even addressed - and thus there is no command one way or the other?
In OT and NT, prison was for folks awaiting trial. Sometimes, like Paul in Rome, it was house arrest with guards.

The punishments in Israel could be fines, exile, death but I can’t recall any “prison” where people stayed as punishment.

Since prisons are a secular institution, I suppose it falls under obedience to secular authorities.

peace to you
 

canadyjd

Well-Known Member
They killed everyone for serious crimes in Leviticus.
And some received the death penalty for things we don’t consider to be crimes at all, much less serious crimes.

I once heard someone review all the things punishable by the death penalty in the US at one time or another. I was surprised that stealing grapes made the list.

I didn’t verify the story with my own research. It was still very interesting.

peace to you
 

RighteousnessTemperance&

Well-Known Member
In OT and NT, prison was for folks awaiting trial. Sometimes, like Paul in Rome, it was house arrest with guards.

The punishments in Israel could be fines, exile, death but I can’t recall any “prison” where people stayed as punishment.

Since prisons are a secular institution, I suppose it falls under obedience to secular authorities.
Regarding Rome, that doesn't really tell the whole story. Imprisonment alone may not have been common, but some convicts were confined as forced labor. There were also convicts held and forced to provide entertainment in the arena, which usually led to death. Consider:

Sentenced to physical labor
For relatively minor crimes, a person might be condemned to work on public projects for a fixed period of time. Projects included building roads, maintaining aqueducts, and cleaning and maintaining sewers and public accommodations such as latrines and public baths. The convicted person did not lose Roman citizenship and was released after the labor was completed.

During the Principate (early Empire), new types of condemnation to labor were in essence slow death sentences. One such sentence was damnatio in metalla or damnatio ad metalla. This stripped the convicted persons of citizenship and made them penal slaves. They worked in the mines or quarries until they died, which usually didn’t take long.

Crime and Punishment - Life in the Roman Empire
 
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