Godk Monopo~ of Execution
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Christians that there was something sinister about the Old Testa-
ment’s specified mode of execution, then we should not be surprised
to discover that humanistic concepts ofjutice, including economic
justice, have also become influential in the thinking of Christians.
Christians have voluntarily transferred their allegiance from the in-
fallible Old Testament to contemporary God-hating and God-deny-
ing criminologists and economists. They have traded their birthright
for a mess of pottage – or, given the nature of modern criminology’s
propaganda, for a pot of message.
Conclusion
That God has delegated this right to execute to the civil govern-
ment indicates that this institution has legitimate power. It can pro-
tect men from kidnapping, a capital crime (Ex. 21:16). It can also
protect men from the spread of disease, especially killer diseases, by
means of imposing a quarantine (Num. 5:1-4; Lev. 13-15). The police
power of the State is to serve as one of the foundations of social stability.
It thereby permits men to apply time and capital to their callings. It
offers legal predictabilip, which is vital to the flourishing of personal
freedom and economic development. Most important, the right of
the civil government to take a man’s life under specified conditions is
apt to remind men of the ultimate Judge who gives the gtit of life,
but who also retains the right to remove life from those who rebel
against Him. The civil government’s monopoly of execution testifies
to God’s absolute hostility against sin, especially the sin of striking
out against God’s own image.
This is an extremely important point. Man’s life is to be pro-
tected, not because each man possesses a hypothetical absolute and
original right of ownership over his own person (the fundamental
assertion of most libertarian and anarcho-capitalist theoreticians),
but because God is absolutely sovereign and the absolute owner of
all things, including men. He will not permit His image, man, to be
mortally wounded without imposing a form of judgment which, in
time and on earth, is analogous to that final judgment beyond the
grave. Peter speaks of “the grace of life” (I Pet. 3:7); to destroy
human life is to reject grace. Murderers have no place in God’s in-
heritance (Gal. 5:21; Rev. 21:8).