October 19, 2006 By Tom McAnally
Fifty years ago, delegates to the Methodist General Conference granted full clergy
rights to women. Action by that top legislative body of the denomination prompted
anniversary celebrations across the United Methodist Church this year. Delegates
to the 1956 conference in Minneapolis took another historic action that has received
little attention. For the first time, delegates put the church officially on record
as opposed to the death penalty. Each Methodist and United
Methodist General Conference since that time has reaffirmed its opposition to
capital punishment. Meeting every four years, these assemblies are the only bodies
that can speak officially for the denomination. In plenary
debate at the 1956 conference, lay and clergy delegates debated several issues
related to a proposed update of the church's Social Creed. They discussed the
role of the United Nations and argued at length about war and conscientious objection
to military service. They talked about capitalism and communism and whether the
church should bless any particular economic system. And, as might be expected,
they talked about abstinence from drugs and alcoholic beverages. One
thing they didn't debate ? at least in the body as a whole ? was the addition
of a new statement condemning the death penalty. Perhaps all the wrinkles were
ironed out in a legislative committee before being sent to the entire body for
consideration. Or perhaps a majority of delegates were opposed to the practice
and no debate was needed. Between the 1952 and 1956 Methodist
general conferences, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg died in the electric chair, the
first civilians to be executed for espionage in the United States. They had been
found guilty of conspiring to share atomic secrets with the Soviet Union and were
executed June 19, 1953. What influence, if any, their widely publicized trial
and executions had on the 1956 delegates is not known. Debate over the Rosenberg
trial and their guilt or innocence continues to this day. Delegates
‘deplore' capital punishment The 1956 Methodist statement
opposing the death penalty included two short paragraphs in a section of the Social
Creed titled "Treatment of Crime." "We stand for the
application of the redemptive principle to the treatment of offenders against
the law, to reform of penal and correctional methods, and to criminal court procedures.
For this reason we deplore the use of capital punishment. "We
recognize that crime, and in particular juvenile delinquency leading to crime,
is often a result of bad social conditions. Christian citizens and churches have
a special opportunity and responsibility for creating those conditions of family
life, wholesome recreation, vocational training, personal counseling, and social
adjustment by which crime may be reduced." While women
clergy have generally prospered within the denomination since 1956, the new statement
deploring the death penalty has apparently had modest influence on governmental
policies in the United States. In an interview with United
Methodist News Service, Bill Mefford, director of civil and human rights for the
United Methodist Board of Church and Society, said change on the issue has come
slowly. "Seeking to abolish the death penalty is a slow and unpredictable process.
One can't just look at this issue and say that A plus B equals C." The
long-term challenge is not so much the changing the minds of individual politicians
as it is changing the "winds" of public opinion, he said. "We want to further
the idea that all of life is worth defending. Church people can do that." Number
of death sentences dropping While progress may seem slow
to some, opponents celebrate the fact that the annual number of death sentences
has dropped dramatically from a total of 300 in 1998 to 125 in 2004. Mefford,
a United Methodist layman, is a graduate of Asbury Theological Seminary where
he is currently working on a doctor of theology degree. He joined the Washington-based
Board of Church and Society staff in February. A native of Tennessee, much of
his adult life was spent in Texas, a state which ranks first in the number of
executions since 1976 (375) and second, behind California, in the number of inmates
now on death row (404). Mefford is working to reinvigorate
"United Methodists against the Death Penalty," a network of death penalty opponents
started by one of his staff predecessors. "Capital punishment is an issue being
dealt with state by state, but we want United Methodists to know that as they
work for change, we at the national level are interested in them and want to offer
encouragement and resources." Today, 38 of the 50 states
allow the death penalty. According to the Death Penalty Information Center in
Washington, 1,045 individuals have been executed since 1976. The largest number
in a single year was in 1999 with 98 executions. As of September, 41 individuals
have been executed this year. The church's Social Principles,
found in both the 2004 United Methodist Book of Discipline and 2004 Book of Resolutions,
include a succinct paragraph calling for elimination of the death penalty from
all criminal codes. All human life sacred "We
believe the death penalty denies the power of Christ to redeem, restore, and transform
all human beings," the Social Principles statement says. While expressing concern
about crime and the value of life taken by murder or homicide, delegates to the
most recent General Conference in 2004 reaffirmed the church's position that "all
human life is sacred and created by God." United Methodists are urged to see all
human life as "significant and valuable." When governments
implement the death penalty the life of the convicted person is "devalued and
all possibility of change in that person's life ends," the statement declares.
"We believe in the resurrection of Jesus Christ and that the possibility of reconciliation
with Christ comes through repentance. This gift of reconciliation is offered to
all individuals without exception and gives all life new dignity and sacredness."
That Social Principles statement is not alone among official
United Methodist pronouncements on the subject. No less than five resolutions
addressing capital punishment were adopted or reaffirmed by the 2004 General Conference
delegates and are included in the 970-page 2004 Book of Resolutions. Two
resolutions adopted first in 2000 were reaffirmed: one urging bishops to be aggressive
in opposing capital punishment and another calling for a moratorium on the death
penalty. Bishop Janice Riggle Huie, president of the
Council of Bishops, told United Methodist News Service that she is proud of the
church's long and consistent stance against the death penalty. "Even though we
are aware that all United Methodists don't agree, there has been no significant
opposition to the church's position in 50 years. Deep in their hearts they know
it speaks to the moral rightness of our policy," said the bishop of the Houston
Area. More lengthy statements giving reasons for opposing
capital punishment ? one adopted in 1980 and another adopted in 2000 ? were reaffirmed
in 2004, with some revisions. Each includes specific recommendations for individual
members, congregations, and church-wide agencies. Delegates
to the 2004 General Conference in Pittsburgh adopted a new resolution specifically
opposed to the practice of executing juveniles. Since the first recognized execution
of a juvenile offender in 1642, the United States has executed at least 366 people
for crimes committed as juveniles and has, since 1990, executed more juvenile
offenders than all other countries combined, according to the resolution. In
2005, the U.S. Supreme Court in Roper v. Simmons struck down the death penalty
for juveniles. With reasoned arguments for why Christians
should oppose the death penalty, why hasn't the church's opposition during these
50 years made a greater difference in U.S. governmental policy? Does
death penalty deter crime? Well-meaning people of faith
weigh in on both sides of the debates. Some argue that the death penalty deters
crime, but death penalty opponents point to the 2004 FBI Uniform Crime Report
which shows that the South, where 80 percent of the executions occurred, has the
highest murder rate. The Death Penalty Information Center reports that a survey
of former and present presidents of the country's top academic criminological
societies indicates that 84 percent of them rejected the notion that the death
penalty acts as a deterrent to murder. When asked in
a May 2006 Gallup Poll whether the death penalty deters murder, 64 percent of
those polled said it does not; only 34 percent believe it does. This is a dramatic
shift from the 1980s and early 1990s, when the majority of Americans believed
that the death penalty prevented murder. Various polls
indicate that a majority of Americans support the death penalty. However that
percentage is declining, according to a recent Gallup Poll. When given a choice
between the sentencing options of life without parole and the death penalty, Gallup
found that only 47 percent of respondents chose capital punishment, the lowest
percentage in two decades. Forty-eight percent favored life without parole for
those convicted of murder. The poll also revealed that overall support for the
death penalty is 65 percent, down significantly from 80 percent in 1994. Some
argue the death penalty is biased against the poor and African Americans, and
isn't something that Jesus would do. Thirty-four percent of those executed in
the United States since 1976 have been African Americans. Another issue given
prominence in recent years is the number of mentally ill individuals executed
despite a U.S. Supreme Court decision. Death row
inmates found innocent It could be that the growing percentage
of people opposing the death penalty has been influenced by the significant number
of death row inmates found innocent in recent years, thanks to new evidence or
revelations. Since 1973, more than 120 people have been released from death row
with evidence of their innocence, according to 1993 staff reports from the House
Judiciary Subcommittee on Civil and Constitutional Rights and updated by the Death
Penalty Information Center. In the year 2000, eight inmates
were freed from death row and exonerated. Another nine were exonerated from 2001
to2002; 12 in 2003 and six in 2004. One of the most recent cases involved Jeffrey
Deskovic who was convicted and sentenced to life in prison in 1990 for the rape
and murder of a high school classmate in New York. He was freed from prison on
Sept. 20, 2006, after DNA evidence from the crime was matched with another man
who also confessed to the murder. The other man was already in prison for a murder
in the same county. The Innocence Project reports that
184 people have been exonerated through DNA evidence since 1989. Of the 123 who
have been exonerated from death row since 1973, 14 were freed as a result of DNA
testing. The Innocence Project at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva
University in New York was created by Barry C. Scheck and Peter J. Neufeld in
1992. The recent Gallup survey of American public opinion on the death penalty
found that 63 percent of those polled believed that an innocent person has been
executed in the past five years, an increase over previous results. Some
individuals support the death penalty as justified punishment for crimes committed.
A 1980 General Conference resolution, reaffirmed every
quadrennium since, says, "The United Methodist Church cannot accept retribution
or social vengeance as a reason for taking human life. It violates our deepest
belief in God as the Creator and the Redeemer of humankind. In this respect, there
can be no assertion that human life can be taken humanely by the state." The statement
contends that in the long run the use of the death penalty by the state "will
increase the acceptance of revenge in our society and will give official sanction
to a climate of violence." Prison ministry transformational
Writing in the Oct. 3, 2006, issue of The Christian Century,
United Methodist Bishop Kenneth L. Carder says the criminal justice system is
dominated by notions of retribution, vengeance, punishment and isolation. "The
core values of the Christian gospel ? forgiveness, compassion, redemption, reconciliation,
restorative justice ? run counter to prevailing sentiments in the justice system,"
says Carder, who teaches pastoral formation at United Methodist-related Duke University
Divinity School. Involvement with prison and jail ministries
keeps pastors focused on critically important matters, writes Carder. "No place
confronts us with life-and-death challenges like death row. Relationships with
the condemned and those whose job it is to guard them and execute them are among
the most intense and transformative pastoral relationships. Capital punishment
ceases to be an abstract political, ethical and theological issue. "Being
present with persons who are awaiting execution, along with their families and
the families of the victims of violence, pushes the pastor to the edges of faith
and stability," says Carder. "Unless it is involved with the people in jails and
prisons, the church will surely lack integrity, consistency and dependability."
The Christian Century section titled "I was in prison
..." includes a reading list on Christians and prisons. Recommended books are
also included in an article by Elizabeth Morgan titled, "Wrestling with the death
penalty: Crime and Punishment." A comprehensive web site
with up-to-date information about the death penalty, including state-by-state
statistics, is at the Death Penalty Information Center. Other sites are: National
Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty and Citizens United for Alternatives to
the Death Penalty. United Methodist News Service Tom
McAnally, retired director of United Methodist News Service, lives in Nashville. |