Intermediate

Religion, Crime and Punishment: Punishment and the Death Penalty

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·AQA GCSE Religious Studies·AQA 8062·12 min
3.2.1.5 Theme E: Religion, crime and punishment — Religion and punishment

The Aims of Punishment

Why do we punish people who break the law? Three main aims are specified by the spec, and religious traditions have different views on which should take priority.

Retribution — punishing the offender because they deserve it; "an eye for an eye." The punishment is proportionate to the crime, regardless of future consequences. It is backward-looking: it addresses what the criminal did.

Deterrence — punishing offenders to discourage future crime, either by the same individual (specific deterrence) or by others who fear the same punishment (general deterrence). It is forward-looking: it aims to prevent future harm.

Reformation — changing the offender's behaviour and attitudes so they do not reoffend. Prison programmes, education, and therapy are reformative in aim. It is forward-looking and optimistic about human capacity to change.

AimReligious supportReligious critique
RetributionIslam: the Qur'an permits proportional punishment (qisas — "eye for an eye"); justice requires consequences. Christianity: "an eye for an eye" appears in Exodus 21:24 and Leviticus 24:20Christianity: Jesus modified retributive law — "You have heard it said 'an eye for an eye'... but I say, do not resist an evil person" (Matthew 5:38–39). Forgiveness over revenge. Buddhism: retribution generates negative karma and perpetuates suffering
DeterrenceWidely supported as a practical measure; Islamic hudud punishments (fixed penalties) are partly justified on deterrence groundsEvidence that harsh punishments deter is mixed. Buddhism emphasises addressing the causes of crime, not just fear of consequences
ReformationMost favoured by Christianity and Buddhism. Quaker tradition of prison reform (Elizabeth Fry). The parable of the Prodigal Son (Luke 15) shows God welcoming the reformed offenderIslam permits retributive punishments that may not prioritise reformation, though mercy is always available

The three spec issues requiring contrasting views (Christianity + one other religion) in Theme E are: corporal punishment, death penalty, and forgiveness.

Treatment of Criminals: Prison and Community Service

Prison — incarceration as punishment or protection of the public.

Religious views on prison:

  • Christianity: Many Christians, particularly in the Quaker tradition (Elizabeth Fry, 1780–1845, reformed conditions in Newgate Prison), emphasise reformative prison conditions. Prison should rehabilitate, not just punish. Prison Fellowship (a Christian charity) works with prisoners to support reformation and address spiritual needs.
  • Islam: Prison exists primarily as a means of protecting society and allowing time for reflection and repentance (tawbah). The goal is ultimately reform.
  • Buddhism: Prison should focus on removing harmful conditions and creating the space for change of mind and behaviour.

Corporal punishment — physical punishment such as caning or flogging.

This is one of the three contrasting issues in Theme E.

Christian viewIslamic view
SupportSome conservative Christians cite Proverbs 13:24 ("Whoever spares the rod hates their children") as supporting physical discipline; some historical Christian societies used corporal punishmentClassical Islamic law (shari'a) includes hadd punishments such as flogging for specific offences (e.g. alcohol consumption in some interpretations); seen as divinely mandated
OppositionMost mainstream Christian denominations now oppose corporal punishment as violating human dignity; the sanctity of every person made in God's imageMany contemporary Muslim scholars argue that hudud punishments require strict conditions that are rarely met in practice; mercy is always available; context matters greatly

Community service — requiring offenders to contribute to the community as part of their sentence.

Most religious traditions strongly support community service as aligned with:

  • Christianity: serving others as a core Christian duty (Matthew 25:34–40 — caring for the poor and vulnerable)
  • Islam: charitable service (khidmah) as a virtue; making amends to the community
  • Buddhism: compassionate action (karuna) as part of moral development

Forgiveness

Forgiveness — releasing resentment towards someone who has wronged you; not requiring revenge.

Forgiveness is one of the three contrasting issues requiring developed comparison (Christianity + one other religion).

Christian teaching on forgiveness:

  • Central to Christian ethics. Jesus taught in the Lord's Prayer: "Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us" (Matthew 6:12).
  • When Peter asked how many times to forgive — "Seven times?" — Jesus replied "Seventy times seven" (Matthew 18:22), meaning without limit.
  • The parable of the Unmerciful Servant (Matthew 18:23–35) warns that those who do not forgive others cannot expect God's forgiveness.
  • The crucifixion is understood as God's act of forgiveness toward all humanity: "Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing" (Luke 23:34).

Buddhist teaching on forgiveness:

  • Forgiveness (khama) is essential to Buddhist practice. Holding resentment perpetuates suffering for the one who resents, not just for the person resented.
  • The Buddha taught that hatred does not cease by hatred — it ceases by love. Metta (loving-kindness) meditation involves extending goodwill to those who have harmed you.

Islamic teaching on forgiveness:

  • Allah is Al-Ghafoor (the Most Forgiving) and Al-Raheem (the Most Merciful) — divine forgiveness is a core attribute. Humans are called to model this.
  • Qur'an 42:40: "The recompense of an evil act is an evil act like it, but whoever pardons and makes reconciliation — his reward is from God." Forgiveness is presented as superior to retaliation.
  • However, Islam also permits justice: the victim's family may choose retaliation or accept diyya (blood money). Forgiveness is a virtue but not always obligatory.

Tension between forgiveness and justice: Forgiving an offender does not mean removing consequences. Religious traditions distinguish between personal forgiveness (releasing one's own resentment) and legal justice (which the state administers). A victim may forgive a murderer while still supporting a prison sentence.

The Death Penalty

The death penalty (capital punishment) is the execution of a person by the state as punishment for a crime.

Religious arguments for the death penalty:

  • Retribution: "Whoever sheds human blood, by humans shall their blood be shed" (Genesis 9:6). Life is so sacred that taking it demands the ultimate penalty.
  • Deterrence: A permanent punishment may deter potential murderers.
  • Protection: Execution ensures the person cannot reoffend.
  • Islamic hudud law includes the death penalty for specific offences (murder, certain acts of treason). The Qur'an permits capital punishment: "Take not life, which God has made sacred, except by way of justice and law" (Qur'an 6:151). The victim's family may choose to execute, accept blood money, or forgive.

Religious arguments against the death penalty:

  • Sanctity of life: All life is created by God and belongs to God. Executing a person denies their capacity for repentance and redemption.
  • Possibility of error: Innocent people have been wrongly executed — this cannot be undone. Religious traditions that emphasise the infinite value of each person find this especially troubling.
  • Christian mainstream: Most Christian denominations, including the Catholic Church (Catechism §2267, revised 2018) and the Church of England, oppose the death penalty. Pope Francis stated in 2018 that capital punishment is "inadmissible" because it attacks human dignity.
  • Buddhist: Ahimsa (non-harming) makes execution wrong. Taking life generates negative karma — even the execution of a criminal.
ForAgainst
ChristianitySome biblical texts (Genesis 9:6) permit it; historically usedMost mainstream churches now oppose it; sanctity of life; capacity for redemption
IslamHudud law permits it for specific offences; Qur'an 6:151Must meet strict evidential standards; the victim may choose forgiveness; many Muslim scholars call for moratoriums
BuddhismAhimsa; execution takes life and harms the karma of the executioner too

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Ethical Arguments Related to the Death Penalty

The spec requires ethical (not just religious) arguments — specifically those based on the principle of utility and sanctity of life.

The principle of utility (utilitarian argument):

Utilitarianism, developed by Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill, holds that the right action is the one that produces the greatest happiness for the greatest number.

Utilitarian case for the death penalty:

  • If executing murderers deters others from killing, the suffering of one person (the executed) may be outweighed by the lives saved.
  • Protection of society from an irreformable offender benefits the majority.

Utilitarian case against the death penalty:

  • If the evidence that the death penalty deters is weak or absent, there is no utilitarian benefit — only cost.
  • The suffering of the executed person's family, the psychological harm to executioners, and the damage to public trust in justice when innocents are killed all register as disutility.
  • Life imprisonment achieves the protection goal without the irreversibility of execution.

The sanctity of life argument:

Sanctity of life — the belief that human life is sacred and precious, because it is given by God (in religious ethics) or because of inherent human dignity (in secular ethics).

  • Religious sanctity of life arguments: since God gives life, only God should take it. Executing a person usurps divine authority.
  • Secular/humanist sanctity of life arguments: every person's life has inherent worth that cannot be forfeit, even for the worst crimes. The state should never deliberately kill its own citizens.
  • Counter-argument: if life is sacred, then the murderer has violated the most sacred thing — and the punishment should reflect this.

Humanist perspective: Humanists oppose the death penalty on the grounds of human dignity, the possibility of error, and the lack of evidence that it deters crime better than life imprisonment. Humans are capable of change, and execution removes that possibility permanently.

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Treating all three aims of punishment as equal

The exam may ask which aim is most important according to a religion. Christianity generally prioritises reformation; Islam combines retribution with mercy; Buddhism prioritises reformation and compassionate treatment. Have a clear view for each tradition.

2. Confusing forgiveness with removing consequences

Forgiving someone does not mean the state cannot still punish them. Personal forgiveness (releasing resentment) is separate from legal justice (the courts administering proportionate punishment). Religion supports both.

3. Saying "Islam supports the death penalty" without qualification

Islamic law permits the death penalty for specific offences under strict evidential conditions, and the victim's family may choose forgiveness. The presentation of Islam as simply "supporting" execution oversimplifies a nuanced tradition. Show the complexity.

4. Ignoring the Catholic Church's updated position

Pope Francis revised the Catechism in 2018 to state that the death penalty is "inadmissible." This is the current official Catholic position. Claiming all Christians support the death penalty based on Old Testament texts misrepresents contemporary Christian teaching.

5. Writing utilitarian arguments without explaining what utilitarianism is

The spec specifically requires ethical arguments including those based on the principle of utility. Define utility (greatest happiness of the greatest number) before applying it, or the argument may appear to lack a clear framework.

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