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Not the Old Testament. Christ and grace are the New Testament.
Are you actually that foolish that you do not know that Christ is throughout the Bible, not limited to the New Testament? Or that Christ is the Living Word, and that includes the words that came before His emptying Himself to be take the form of a bond-servant, humbling Himself even to the point of death on the cross? Really??Not the Old Testament. Christ and grace are the New Testament.
Are you actually that foolish that you do not know that Christ is throughout the Bible, not limited to the New Testament? Or that Christ is the Living Word, and that includes the words that came before His emptying Himself to be take the form of a bond-servant, humbling Himself even to the point of death on the cross? Really??
Yes or No: Is Christ outside the Old Testament?
Yes or No: Does the New Testament teach anything whatsoever about what, if anything, should be the civil penalty for murder?
Do unto others what you would have done to you.
Why such a thirst for blood?
Alright-- if see a beautiful woman walking down the street, and nothing would please me more than for her to come to me, throw her arms around me, and give me a long passionate kiss, should I do that to her, since it's what I would have her do to me?
How do you know it was not court ordered. We are not given all the details.
Strange how blood thirsty some are.
Strange how you gotta turn everything personal. Some sort of insult, put down is always associated with your posts, but seldom facts. We know it wasn't court ordered because the man would have been present. TND and Prophet and myself all addressed this.
What if they are guilty?
What if justice is fairly meted out?
What if they are guilty?
What if justice is fairly meted out?
Don, life with no chance of parole. To me that is a worse punishment than being executed. Also, in our system it is less expensive. Also, with years to ponder what they have done maybe, just maybe they will turn to Christ and be saved.
Don, life with no chance of parole. To me that is a worse punishment than being executed. Also, in our system it is less expensive. Also, with years to ponder what they have done maybe, just maybe they will turn to Christ and be saved.
Okay, that just doesn't make a lick of sense. How do you justify that an execution is less expensive than life in prison?
http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/costs-death-penalty
Second, how do you justify that life in prison is a worse punishment than execution? If someone murdered your wife, and you are then asked to pay taxes each year to ensure that murderer has clothing, shelter, food, and entertainment, how is that punishment?
Your thinking is from the point of view of the murderer. Where is your regard for the victim? Or the victim's survivors? Or the rest of society that must live with the thought that a murderer is still among us?
I'm not talking about revenge, or even vengeance. I'm talking about what's best for society.
Once a person is executed their pain, suffering, regret is over.
Technically, you're only partially correct. It's not the executions that cost more than keeping the person in prison; it's the automatic appeals, separate prison arrangements for those on death row, etc., etc.Executions in our system cost more than keeping the person in prison for the rest of their life. This has been know for quite a long time and is well researched. One example is the article in the link I give here:
Prison's not supposed to be a nice place. It's supposed to be a place that people want to avoid, to the point of curbing their behavior so that they won't go there. And yet, our prisons are full.That is an easy one. If someone murdered my wife I would much rather they be in prison for the rest of their life. Prison is a terrible place to be and to be there for years and years and years is about the worst punishment I can think of.
What pain? What suffering? What regret?Once a person is executed their pain, suffering, regret is over.
Duly noted.As I said above life without parole, to me, is a much worse punishment.
Technically, you're only partially correct. It's not the executions that cost more than keeping the person in prison; it's the automatic appeals, separate prison arrangements for those on death row, etc., etc.And I do not believe that is going to change.
Prison's not supposed to be a nice place. It's supposed to be a place that people want to avoid, to the point of curbing their behavior so that they won't go there. And yet, our prisons are full.
I agree and that is why life without parole is worse than being executed.
It does say something about our society that we have more people per capita in prison than any country in the world. The majority are in prison for nonviolent crimes. Maybe we need to rethink nonviolent crime and incarceration. Could be an interesting thread.
What pain? What suffering? What regret?
So what you just said was that you prefer them to spend the rest of their lives in pain and suffering?
How is that the Christ-like point of view?
Duly noted.
I do not remember Christ speaking about prison.
However, with life without parole there are some who could
come to know and accept Christ and be saved ... even though they are in jail.