|
WHEREAS
in our modern society we have means of keeping an offender from
banning others. Although in previous times people of faith have
employed capital punishment, today we have the ability to realize
better the principles of mercy, forgiveness and unconditional
love for all people as evoked in the Hebrew Scriptures by the
Prophet Ezekiel: "As I live, says the Lord God, I have no pleasure
in the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn from their
ways and live; turn back from your evil ways." (Ez. 33:11)*; and
WHEREAS the evidence is overwhelming that racism, classism
and economics are governing factors in administering the death
penalty: and that greater numbers of people of color are executed
than is reflected in the general population; that mentally incapacitated
people and far too many poor and uneducated people have been executed
- thus demonstrating the injustice of the current practice of
exercising the death penalty; and
WHEREAS
we believe that the compassionate example of Christ calls us to
respect the God-given image found even in hardened criminals,
and we stand in solidarity with the profound pain of the victims
of brutal crime,* therefore be it
RESOLVED
that the Texas Conference of Churches in Assembly in San Antonio,
February 24, 1998, calls on the State of Texas to put an end to
the practice of exercising the death penalty and reaffirms its
previous resolutions in 1973 and 1977 in opposition to the death
penalty; and be it further
RESOLVED that all judicatories, churches, members and caring
citizens acknowledge our complicity in the continuing use of and
support of the death penalty. When we are silent in the face of
injustice cruelty or oppression, our silence becomes our assent;
and be it further
RESOLVED that we call upon all judicatories, churches,
members and caring citizens to work in every way possible to oppose
the death penalty and to work to create a humane, just and decent
society; and be it further
RESOLVED that copies of this resolution be given publicity
within the churches of the Texas Conference of Churches, sent
to the Governor of Texas, the Lieutenant-Governor, the Attorney
General, to the members of the Texas Legislature, to candidates
for these offices and to the Chair of the Texas Board of Pardons
and Paroles.
*These paragraphs are quotations from the Statement of the
Catholic Bishops of Texas on Capital Punishment, October. 1997.
TOP
OF PAGE
RETURN
TO RESOLUTIONS & DECLARATIONS INDEX
For
a printer friendly version of this page go here.
You will need Adobe Acrobat v4.x or v5.x
to
view and print the page. If you don't have v4.x or v5.x of
Acrobat you may get a "color space error..." To get
the latest version of Adobe Acrobat (free) go here.
|