T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1353.1 | GUILTY! | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Thu May 01 1997 11:54 | 30 |
| I believe that "judge not, least you be judged" is for your
benefit, not for the object of judgement.
It is bad for you to judge someone and hold a grudge. This
impedes your freedom. It gets in the way of getting closer
to God. Your mind dwells on the trivial when the Almighty
is at hand.
What are your reasons for judging?
It can be because you have been slighted or injured. In this
case it is more important for you to learn to forgive, least
you give up the greater goal of pursuing the Almighty.
If it is because your society has called upon you to help
with justice, I think it is your duty to humbly serve that
society for the greater good. Purely practical.
You don't have to hate or revile the accused. You don't have
to say s/he's evil or bad. You just have to decide if s/he
did what they say s/he did.
There's an interesting twist to being on a jury. That is, even
if you believe the accused did what they say s/he did, if you
think the law is unjust, you can declare the accused innocent.
What a country!
Tom
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1353.2 | | PHXS02::HEISER | Maranatha! | Thu May 01 1997 12:45 | 3 |
| Re: .0
Because you've taken Christ's teachings in Matthew 7 out of context.
|
1353.3 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Thu May 01 1997 13:28 | 5 |
| > Because you've taken Christ's teachings in Matthew 7 out of context.
I'm afraid I don't find that helpful.
Tom
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1353.4 | | PHXS02::HEISER | Maranatha! | Thu May 01 1997 13:55 | 2 |
| Even the OT Law called for 2 or 3 witnesses for a conviction. Christ
came to fulfill the Law.
|
1353.5 | | APACHE::MYERS | | Thu May 01 1997 14:49 | 11 |
|
We judge things all the time; we judge with whom we will associate, who
our children hang around with, and we judge who is guilty of breaking
the laws of the land. What we should not judge is another's relationship
with God. We should judge their responsibility for their actions, not
their state before God. In matters of Christian living, we should not
be quick to find flaws in another's attempt to live a Christian life.
But this has nothing to do with judging another as being the one who
stole a car.
Eric
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1353.6 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Thu May 01 1997 15:11 | 23 |
| > Because you've taken Christ's teachings in Matthew 7 out of
> context.
No, I don't think so. From an earlier dialogue I had with Jack as well
as from something I've read from a book called "The Hard Sayings of
Jesus", I think I've got a fair handle on Matthew 7. There's a lot
more too, like "turn the other cheek", "forgive and you shall be
forgiven", "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone", "When you
do this to the least of your brothers..." etc... . Jesus' message in
this regard seems not to have been defined by one passage.
I like what Tom said. It made a lot of sense. I suppose it's possible
to love the accused while doling out a verdict of guilty. The capital
punishment thing might be a different matter.
The story of the prostitute who was to be stoned is very pertinent
here. She was found guilty under the law and was about to receive her
just punishment. Jesus classic response seemed to indicate that we
sinners are not in a position to judge and/or condemn others. Yes? No?
-dave
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1353.7 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Thu May 01 1997 15:31 | 23 |
| > The capital punishment thing might be a different matter.
Lawyers and district attorneys are aware of this.
Some Oklahoma City bombing trial jurors were rejected if
they weren't willing to condemn someone to death.
> The story of the prostitute who was to be stoned is very pertinent
Actually, her crime was adultery (I think).
And yes, there should be mercy in the courts.
But, when is it appropriate to have our society forgive and
when is it appropriate to hang the sucker?
I have yet to be asked to serve on a jury. Perhaps I'll never
have to decide someone else's fate in such a direct and profound
manner.
Good luck.
Tom
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1353.8 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Thu May 01 1997 17:35 | 14 |
| So what's the purpose of trying and sentencing someone in a sense that
would not contradict Jesus' teachings? Might it be construed somehow
as an act of love? Is it just a process for curtailing someone's
liberty for the good of all involved? Is incarceration a form of
rehabiliation... an act of caring? Is it a means to protect all
involved from ferther danger or damage? Or is it a form of punishment?
ANother one that comes to mind is "Remove the beam from your own
eye..."
-dave
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1353.9 | | PHXS02::HEISER | Maranatha! | Thu May 01 1997 17:39 | 3 |
| re: prostitute
you're confusing the spiritual condemnation vs. civil condemnation.
|
1353.10 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Thu May 01 1997 18:00 | 6 |
| > you're confusing the spiritual condemnation vs. civil condemnation.
I'd be interested to hear how you interpret these two terms
and how they differ.
Tom
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1353.11 | | APACHE::MYERS | | Fri May 02 1997 10:56 | 16 |
|
Sin is in the heart as well as the deed. I think you hit the nail on
the head when you used the word "rehabilitation." From a Christian
perspective we don't want to approach the judicial and penal systems
with a "make the bastards pay" attitude, but rather with an
attitude toward rehabilitation. And of course, we need to discriminate
between violent and non-violent crimes.
It is possible to judge culpability without anger. It is possible to
say "what you did was wrong," without wishing the person ill. If we
equate justice with moral self righteousness, if we de-humanize the
criminal rather than the crime, if we find satisfaction - even pleasure
- at the thought of criminal suffering, then we surely are not
following Christ.
Eric
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1353.12 | | PHXS01::HEISER | Maranatha! | Fri May 02 1997 11:41 | 9 |
| |> you're confusing the spiritual condemnation vs. civil condemnation.
|
| I'd be interested to hear how you interpret these two terms
| and how they differ.
Tom, what did Jesus Christ say to her? What did He not say to her?
What did He tell her to do no more? As God the Son He had authority to
do as He wished.
|
1353.13 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Fri May 02 1997 12:13 | 18 |
| > Tom, what did Jesus Christ say to her?
"Go, and sin no more."
> What did He not say to her?
Lots of things. He didn't say what she did was right.
> What did He tell her to do no more?
See above.
> As God the Son He had authority to do as He wished.
Are you saying we have no right to forgive her?
Tom
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1353.14 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Fri May 02 1997 12:46 | 11 |
| RE .11 (Eric)
But let's face the fact that very little rehabilitation goes on in
prison. So when a jury passes down a verdict of guilty, and the judge
passes sentance, in reality, they are sending the defendant into
punishment. Given this, should a Christian juror return a verdict of
not guilty so as NOT to PUNISH the defendant? True, caring
"rehabilitation" is not an optio until and unless proson reform
happens.
-dave
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1353.15 | | APACHE::MYERS | | Fri May 02 1997 14:16 | 9 |
|
Good point, Dave. I guess I was talking about judgment in a more
abstract, theoretical sense. Practically speaking, perhaps you're
right; maybe a Christian should claim something like conscience
objector status, given the current state of our penal system(s).
Have you considered taking such an apporach to your upcoming jury duty?
Eric
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1353.16 | | PHXS01::HEISER | Maranatha! | Fri May 02 1997 15:47 | 21 |
| |> Tom, what did Jesus Christ say to her?
| "Go, and sin no more."
So Christ was obviously addressing a spiritual offense not a civil one.
Adultery is a spiritual problem - a problem of the heart; regardless of
what the Torah said about it.
|> What did He not say to her?
| Lots of things. He didn't say what she did was right.
Exactly.
|> What did He tell her to do no more?
| See above.
ditto.
|> As God the Son He had authority to do as He wished.
| Are you saying we have no right to forgive her?
Only God can forgive sin.
|
1353.17 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Fri May 02 1997 15:49 | 12 |
| I don't know. I don't even know what kind of trials there might be.
Maybe criminal trials, maybe just law suits. Maybe the jurors are
supposed to be of the mindset that they just decide whether or not
someone committed the crime (as Tom said) and not think about the
consequences od the verdict. So the ball's in the judge's court. And
maybe s/he just doles out a sentance in accordance with the law. SO
now the ball's in the law's court. Who ultimately takes the
responsibility?
I think I'll have to play this one by ear.
-dave
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1353.18 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Fri May 02 1997 15:54 | 6 |
| RE .16 (Mike)
> Only God can forgive sin.
"Forgive and you shall be forgiven". This suggests that man can
forgive.
|
1353.19 | judge righteously and you'll be a good juror | PHXS01::HEISER | Maranatha! | Fri May 02 1997 15:55 | 7 |
| Re: .11
Eric, thanks for entering that reply. You explained what I've been
trying to tell Dave about Matthew 7. Christ taught not to judge
unrighteously, not to withdraw judgment completely like some think. In
the same chapter He teaches not to cast pearls before swine or give to
the dogs. Obviously you can't do this without judging.
|
1353.20 | | PHXS01::HEISER | Maranatha! | Fri May 02 1997 16:00 | 21 |
| | > Only God can forgive sin.
|
| "Forgive and you shall be forgiven". This suggests that man can
| forgive.
See, this is what happens with pretexts. It doesn't say "Forgive sin
and you shall be forgiven." Sin is a spiritual problem that can only
be dealt with by someone who is in a higher authority. Someone who has
conquered sin and all it involves. Man does not have that authority.
We are to forgive those who wrong us for doing things to us or
offending us. When someone offends you, you can forgive them, but you
have no authority for forgiving them of their sin. None of us do.
The Bible declares that only God can forgive sin. This is one of the
points that the Jews got so upset at Christ about. They knew this to
be true, and were shocked when they heard Christ forgiving people's
sin. This is one of the hundreds of reasons that we know Christ was
God incarnate.
Mike
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1353.21 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Fri May 02 1997 16:35 | 12 |
| > We are to forgive those who wrong us for doing things to us or
> offending us. When someone offends you, you can forgive them, but you
> have no authority for forgiving them of their sin. None of us do.
When someone sins against society (eg. not paying their taxes)
then it is up to society to either forgive or punish or rehabilitate
or reeducate or whatever.
Society is comprised of us. In these cases we not only have the
authority but also the duty to judge, and perhaps, to forgive.
Tom
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1353.22 | we have nothing save what God has given | PHXS01::HEISER | Maranatha! | Fri May 02 1997 17:27 | 16 |
| | When someone sins against society (eg. not paying their taxes)
I don't agree that this is a spiritual sin. It is a civil offense.
You might extrapolate this to dishonesty, but that is still between God
and the person. Render to Caesar that which is Caesar's and to God
that which is God's. We are to obey the laws of the land, but breaking
them won't always get you a ticket to Hell. You already have that
ticket anyways if you aren't covered by Christ's atoning blood.
| Society is comprised of us. In these cases we not only have the
| authority but also the duty to judge, and perhaps, to forgive.
I agree we have that authority in civil matters. Not spiritual ones.
Even then our civil authority is derived from God. Much of our legal
code comes from the Torah. Even the varying degrees and punishment for
homicide.
|
1353.23 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Fri May 02 1997 17:51 | 39 |
| Mike:
>Eric, thanks for entering that reply.
Ditto!
>You explained what I've been
> trying to tell Dave about Matthew 7.
No need, I got it some time ago. The source that makes the best sense
so far is a book by Frederick Fyvie Bruce.
>Christ taught not to judge unrighteously...
In my mind, I'd rephrase it "Jesus taught not to judge in a condemning
way". So I guess the difference lies in "righteous" vs "condemning
way".
>See, this is what happens with pretexts. It doesn't say "Forgive sin
> and you shall be forgiven."
I chose my words carefully. I intentionally avoided saying "man can
forgive sin" to avoid the lecture. Your reply to Tom's inquiry in .13
didn't seem to answer his question about man forgiving man. Your
statement in .20 "We are to forgive those who wrong us..." did.
Thank You.
Getting back to something I mentioned to Eric, if the default action of
a judgement is in fact to condemn (in a physical sense), is it correct
to judge? If the jurors of the Oklahoma City bombing case know that a
verdict of guilty will send McVeigh to the firing squad, can they,
with a clear conscious and in a caring/loving way, render a guilty
verdict?
-dave
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1353.24 | | APACHE::MYERS | | Fri May 02 1997 18:14 | 5 |
|
Perhaps it's the difference between making a judgment and being
judgmental... Language can be filled with nuance, *sigh*.
Eric
|
1353.25 | | SMART2::DGAUTHIER | | Mon May 05 1997 12:21 | 24 |
| >Language can be filled with nuance, *sigh*.
Countries have gone to war over miscommunications. double *sigh*
When I think of the judicial system we have, it would appear that we've
got a system where the responsibility of judging and condemning is passed
"over the wall" to others. A juror can think "All I'm being asked to
do is determine whether someone dit it or not and I'm not condemning
anyone. Besides, I'm just one of twelve". The judge can think "Heck,
the jury decides guilt, I just pass sentance according to the law".
And not the responsibility lands in the lap of "The Law" and not a
person (at least not directly). I mean the law is decided on by
elected or appointed official, both past and present, who are removed
from individual court cases or the sentances paseed in those cases.
Who passes judgement and condemns?
Not the jurors.
Not the Judges.
Not the officials.
Who then?
-dave
|
1353.26 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Mon May 05 1997 12:39 | 25 |
| > When I think of the judicial system we have, it would appear that we've
> got a system where the responsibility of judging and condemning is passed
> "over the wall" to others. A juror can think "All I'm being asked to
And so it should be.
It is right and fitting that laws be made by the legislature. It
is right and good that a judge follow the laws and shows mercy whe
s/he deems fit. It is also right, good and fitting that the pronouncement
of guilt be made by a jury of civilians, where the power of the
system and state ultimately resides.
This means that laws can be passed after rational thought and debate
(or, at least, that's the theory) and the judge, in a fit of passion
of prejudice, cannot sentence someone to life imprisonment for picking
his nose is court.
We make laws. We follow them. We follow them even when someone
else breaks the law.
The one thing that scares me more than unpunished criminals and
freed terrorists is a police force and judiciary that makes it's
own laws. (Why? Because we say so!)
Tom
|
1353.27 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Spigot of pithiness | Mon May 05 1997 13:23 | 12 |
| I would encourage anyone who is going to sit on a jury to read the
account of the trial of William Penn, which we are fortunate enough
to have because an anonymous spectator committed it to paper as it
happened. Your public library would have it.
Juries have more power than they're normally given to realize.
Incidentally, one of the grievances listed against the crown in our
Declaration of Independence was the absence of trials by jury.
Richard
|
1353.28 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Fri Jun 06 1997 10:16 | 17 |
| epilogue... I didn't get picked as a juror. I guess my appearance
in the "one day, one trial" system practiced here in Mass excuses me
from service for 3 years.
Regarding the Timothy McVeigh trial, how would you like to be sitting on
that jury now? A man's life literally rides on your decision.
I used to be for capital punishment until I heard an interview on a
radio show one evening. The woman being interviewed was the mother of
a child who was brutally murdered. They caught the guy, tried and
convicted him, and sentenced him to death. While on death row, this
woman, who originally applauded the sentence, changed her mind and
pleaded with the governor for his life. She said that the turning
point came when she was thinking to herself how wrong the man was for
killing her child. She argued in her conscious that no one had the
right to take the life of another. Then it dawned on her... "NO ONE
HAD THAT RIGHT".
|
1353.29 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Fri Jun 06 1997 10:50 | 23 |
| > Regarding the Timothy McVeigh trial, how would you like to be sitting on
> that jury now? A man's life literally rides on your decision.
This brings up an interesting question. It is right and good for
you to forgive someone. If you don't, then you won't be forgiven,
either by yourself, others or God. From a spiritual point of view
it is the best thing you can do.
But can the state afford to forgive such transgressions? Does the
state work on a spiritual or just a socialogical level? Does a
nation have a soul and is that soul in need of forgiveness? Does
the state, of necessity, have to play by different rules than
people do?
I personally believe that Jesus didn't die for the state, but
that He died for the sake of people. The state does not have
a soul. Whereas people need to surrender to God, the state
must control it's people (within reason). Laws are passed and
convicts are not assured of forgiveness.
Hmmm... It seems we are closer to God than the state...
Tom
|
1353.30 | no martyrs | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Fri Jun 06 1997 10:58 | 13 |
| Which brings to mind:
If we crucify McVeigh he could become a martyr, especially if
it's shown later that the trial was rigged and that he was
innocent.
It is in the state's best interest to sentence him to 999 years.
Give him a chance to repent and regret.
Blowing up children cannot be tolerated in a civilized society.
Tom
|
1353.31 | | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 381-0426 ZKO1-1) | Fri Jun 06 1997 10:59 | 17 |
| re Note 1353.29 by THOLIN::TBAKER:
> > Regarding the Timothy McVeigh trial, how would you like to be sitting on
> > that jury now? A man's life literally rides on your decision.
>
> This brings up an interesting question. It is right and good for
> you to forgive someone.
Remember that the remaining issue before the jury is not
whether to forgive but the form of punishment. (Life in
prison is hardly being forgiven.)
I'd actually like to see him kept alive not only because I'm
against capital punishment but also because I think he knows
more than he's saying and that eventually he may talk.
Bob
|
1353.32 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Fri Jun 06 1997 11:19 | 21 |
| Interesting idea. It's reminiscent of the note on corporate sin.
If the state is a collection of "souled" people, then would not that
state, by necessity, have a soul, or a collective soul (isn't that the
name of a rock group?)? By regarding the state as being something
separate from and different than the people, we also disconnect
ourselves from the responsibility for the actions of the state. It
allows us to say that "the state" is executing McVeigh and not us.
"The state" is not forgiving and will not be forgiven in return,
insulating us from the responsibility and lack of forgiveness. I
suppose the men on trial in Nuremberg tried to throw responsibility for
their decisions and actions onto the state. Yes? No?
The bottom line is that people have tried and convicted and will
sentence McVeigh. Others may be the ones who throw the switch or pull
the trigger (or however they execute people in Colorado). And the rest
of us are part of the system... the state.. that's allowing this.
McVeigh should be forgiven... and then locked up for the rest of his life
as an act of love to the rest of the population who might, in the future,
fall prey to his madness if he were free.
|
1353.33 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Fri Jun 06 1997 11:33 | 17 |
| And as we yell "CRUCIFY HIM" from the gallery, what does
it do to *our* souls? You may be right that people with
souls cannot "afford" to condemn someone to death.
Then there are other practical matters. We've been all
through these before, haven't we?
RE: "I was only following orders."
Killing one man who has been tried and convicted is different from
humiliating and exterminating an ethnic group.
Yes. I'm glad I'm not on that jury. Either way it is decided,
they may face the wrath of the rest of the populus for making the
"wrong" decision, whatever it is.
Tom
|