CAPITAL PUNISHMENT: AN ACT OF MERCY
by F.R. Duplantier
ST. LOUIS/ Behind The Headlines -- Sister Helen Pr‚jean is the Louisiana nun whose book
Dead Man Walking was made into a feature film star
ring Sean Penn and Susan Sarandon. Reeking with
false compassion for convicted murderers awaiting
execution on death row, both the book and the movie
offered an emotional appeal for the prohibition of capital punishment. Ironically, Sister Helen has conceded
in at least one interview that some of the condemned
men to whom she has ministered have experienced
conversion as a direct result of knowing the certain
date of their departure from this world. Nevertheless,
she seems unable to recognize that salvation is a
greater good than life itself, and persists in opposing
the one means available for rescuing especially hard
cases from certain damnation.
Professional genius Marilyn vos Savant once
devoted half of her "Ask Marilyn" column in Parade
magazine to a consideration of the pros and cons of
capital punishment, without once mentioning the possibility of an afterlife and the correlation between
reconciliation and the prospect of eternal punishment.
Marilyn conceded that she considers "capital murder
far more abhorrent than . . . capital punishment" and
for that reason "reluctantly support[s] the administration of the death penalty." She insisted, however, that
she could find "nothing positive about the concept of
capital punishment." Apparently, Marilyn hasn't
searched hard enough.
Anyone seeking a deeper understanding of the
positive effects of capital punishment would be well
advised to read The Consolation of Philosophy, by
Boethius, or Herman Melville's short story "Billy
Budd." One is a factual, the other a fictional, account
of a man unjustly condemned to death who nevertheless overcomes his bitterness and self-pity and,
recognizing the blessing in his misfortune, seizes the
opportunity to save his soul. Atheists and agnostics,
depending on their temperament, view capital punishment either as just or vengeful. Only the faithful,
however, can see it for what it really is: the ultimate
act of mercy.
Assuming that eternal life -- in heaven or hell -- awaits us after our brief sojourn on earth, anything that redounds to our salvation must be counted as
more valuable than human life itself. Far from being
inhumane, then, a death sentence is one of the greatest
blessings we sinners can receive. By focusing the
mind on the mortality that most of us ignore, it provides a compelling incentive for reconciliation. This
applies even to those rare few who've been falsely
convicted.
How many "victims" of capital punishment (not to
mention terminal illness) might have been damned
without the knowledge of their imminent demise? Do
they share our mortal squeamishness in paradise? Not
likely. They undoubtedly conclude, and rightly so, that
we place too much emphasis on this life and too little
on the next.
Duplantier is the author of Politickles: Limericks Lampooning
the Lunatic Left (Merril Press, 2000), available at The Conservative Bookstore and other online locations.
Published by permission.
|