Intermediate

Religion, Crime and Punishment: Causes of Crime

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·AQA GCSE Religious Studies·AQA 8062·11 min
3.2.1.5 Theme E: Religion, crime and punishment — Religion, crime and the causes of crime

Good and Evil Intentions and Actions

Before examining crime, it is essential to understand how religions think about good and evil — and whether causing suffering can ever be good.

Good — in religious ethics, an act or intention that conforms to God's will, promotes human flourishing, or reflects values such as love, justice, and compassion.

Evil — a deliberate choice to harm, or the conditions that lead to suffering and injustice. Religions distinguish between moral evil (caused by human choices) and natural evil (caused by nature, such as disease or earthquakes).

Can it ever be good to cause suffering?

This is a genuine ethical question that the spec requires students to address. Religious responses include:

PerspectiveViewExample
ChristianitySuffering can serve a greater good — God permitted his Son to suffer for humanity's redemption. Punishment may cause short-term suffering to achieve long-term reformation.Jesus' crucifixion; prison as a corrective institution
IslamGod tests humans through suffering (sabr — patience under trial is a virtue). Punishments (like hudud) may cause pain but serve justice and deter future harmQur'an 2:286: "God does not burden a soul beyond that it can bear"
BuddhismCausing suffering is generally wrong (ahimsa); however, the intention behind the act matters. A doctor who causes short-term pain to heal a patient acts with compassion, not crueltyMedical treatment; tough love in Dharma teaching
HumanismActions are judged by their consequences — if causing suffering produces a significantly better outcome (e.g. surgery, vaccination), it may be justifiedUtilitarian reasoning: greatest good for the greatest number

The role of intention: most religious traditions distinguish between actions that look similar but differ in intention. Killing in self-defence is treated differently from murder. A surgeon's knife and an attacker's knife cause the same physical harm, but the intention — and therefore the moral status — is entirely different. In Christianity, the mens rea (guilty mind) matters to moral judgement; in Islam, niyyah (intention) is central to the ethics of any act.

Poverty, Upbringing and Crime

The spec requires students to know the reasons people commit crime, and how religious traditions respond to those reasons. Poverty and upbringing are the first two.

Poverty as a cause of crime:

When people lack food, shelter, or income, some turn to crime out of desperation — particularly theft. Religious responses:

  • Christianity: The root cause of theft due to poverty is injustice in society. Christians have a duty to address structural poverty (Luke 4:18 — "to proclaim good news to the poor"). Organisations like the Trussell Trust (UK food banks, supported by many churches) address immediate need; campaigners like William Wilberforce worked to change unjust systems.
  • Islam: Zakat (obligatory giving) and sadaqah (voluntary charity) are designed to reduce poverty and prevent desperation. The Qur'an explicitly condemns the hoarding of wealth (Qur'an 104:2–3).
  • Views about those who commit crime due to poverty: Most religious traditions show compassion to those who steal to survive, without condoning the act. The goal is to address the underlying injustice.

Upbringing as a cause of crime:

Children raised in environments of neglect, abuse, or criminality may normalise harmful behaviour. Religious responses:

  • Christianity: The parable of the Prodigal Son (Luke 15:11–32) shows God's compassion for those who have gone astray and returned. Rehabilitation, not just punishment, is important.
  • Buddhism: The concept of dependent origination (pratītyasamutpāda) holds that actions arise from conditions — a person raised in harmful conditions will naturally produce harmful actions. The solution is changing conditions, not simply punishing individuals.
  • Society has a collective responsibility to raise children well — neglect of this is itself a moral failure.

Mental Health, Addiction, Greed and Hate

Mental health problems and addiction:

Some people commit crimes as a result of mental illness or substance dependency, rather than deliberate harmful intent. Religious and ethical approaches:

  • Compassion-first: Christianity, Buddhism, and Islam all emphasise compassion for those who are suffering. A person in the grip of addiction or mental illness is not fully in control of their actions. Treatment and support are more appropriate than punishment.
  • Christianity: Jesus consistently healed those who were mentally ill (Mark 5:1–20, the Gerasene demoniac). Christian mental health charities like Mind and Soul (UK) offer support grounded in the belief that God values every person.
  • Buddhism: Mental states are central to Buddhist ethics. Addiction arises from craving (tanha) — a form of suffering that itself requires compassionate treatment, not condemnation.

Greed and hate as causes of crime:

Greed (desiring more than one needs at others' expense) and hate (hostility towards a person or group) are motivations the spec identifies explicitly.

  • Christianity: Greed is one of the seven deadly sins. Jesus said it is harder for a rich man to enter heaven than for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle (Matthew 19:24). Hate crimes violate the commandment to love your neighbour (Mark 12:31).
  • Islam: Greed (tama') is condemned; sharing wealth through zakat is a religious duty. Hatred and violence against others without just cause violates God's command.
  • Views about those who commit crime out of greed or hate: Religious traditions are less sympathetic to these causes than to poverty or mental illness. Those who choose greed or hate as motivations have acted against clear moral teaching and are more culpable.

Opposition to Unjust Laws: Civil Disobedience

The spec requires examination of crime committed in opposition to an unjust law — civil disobedience.

Civil disobedience — deliberately breaking a law on the grounds of conscience, in order to protest its injustice. The person accepts the legal consequences of their action.

Religious arguments in favour of breaking unjust laws:

  • Acts 5:29 — "We must obey God rather than human beings." The early Christians continued to preach despite being forbidden by the Sanhedrin.
  • Martin Luther King Jr. (Baptist minister) argued in Letter from Birmingham Jail (1963) that unjust laws — laws that degrade human personality or are imposed on those who had no voice in creating them — need not be obeyed. He drew on Augustine and Aquinas: "An unjust law is no law at all."
  • Gandhi's non-violent resistance (satyagraha) to British colonial law in India was rooted in Hindu ethical principles.

Religious arguments against breaking the law:

  • Romans 13:1 — "Let everyone be subject to the governing authorities, for there is no authority except that which God has established." Paul taught that Christians should obey rulers, except where they directly contradict God's commands.
  • Islam teaches respect for law and order (shari'a — the framework of religious law — and civil law where it does not contradict Islamic principles). Fitna (chaos and civil strife) is to be avoided.

Views about those who break the law for conscience: most religious traditions distinguish between opportunistic lawbreaking and principled civil disobedience. Those who break unjust laws non-violently, accept punishment, and do so for clearly moral reasons tend to attract more sympathy than those who break laws for personal gain.

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Types of Crime: Hate Crimes, Theft and Murder

The spec requires students to examine religious and ethical views on different types of crime. Three are named.

Hate crimes — crimes motivated by prejudice against a person's race, religion, disability, sexual orientation, or other protected characteristic.

  • Christianity: Every person bears the imago Dei (image of God). Hate crimes attack a person specifically for who God made them to be — this makes them a profound violation of Christian ethics.
  • Islam: Qur'an 49:13 — "O mankind, indeed We have created you from male and female and made you peoples and tribes that you may know one another." Racial or ethnic hatred contradicts divine intent.
  • Hate crimes are generally treated as more serious than equivalent crimes without a hate motivation — they harm not just the individual victim but the whole community targeted.

Theft — taking what belongs to another.

  • Christianity: "Thou shalt not steal" (Exodus 20:15). Context matters: stealing to survive is viewed with more compassion than stealing out of greed.
  • Islam: Theft is a hadd offence (a category with Qur'anically specified penalties). However, the punishment applies only when society has ensured no one is in need — theft from necessity is treated differently in classical Islamic jurisprudence.

Murder — the unlawful killing of another person with intent.

  • Christianity and Islam: Both have absolute prohibitions on murder — the deliberate taking of innocent life. Christianity: "You shall not murder" (Exodus 20:13). Islam: Qur'an 5:32 — "whoever kills a soul... it is as if he had slain all mankind."
  • Buddhism: The first precept is "do not take life." Murder is one of the most serious possible violations of Buddhist ethics — it generates heavy negative karma.

Christian and Islamic Views: Contrasting Perspectives

Theme E requires contrasting views from Christianity and one other religion on the three specified issues: corporal punishment, death penalty, and forgiveness.

This lesson introduces the context; the companion lesson (Punishment) covers these issues in detail. Here, the contrast focuses on how the two traditions view criminal behaviour and responsibility.

IssueChristian responseIslamic response
Causes of crimeSin, free will, and social injustice. Poverty and injustice must be addressed collectively. Compassion for the criminal alongside justice for the victimHuman weakness (nafs) and deviation from God's guidance. Society has a duty to prevent conditions that lead to crime through zakat and social solidarity
Types of crimeAll crime violates love of neighbour. Hate crimes are especially serious. Context and intention matter for assessing culpabilityCrime violates God's law. Classical Islamic law distinguishes categories of crime with differing responses. Intention (niyyah) is central
Civil disobediencePermitted when laws directly contradict God's command (Acts 5:29); MLK traditionPermitted when laws violate Islamic principles; avoiding fitna (civil chaos) is also important

Exam tip: When contrasting Christian and Islamic views, use specific teachings (Bible verses, Qur'anic references) rather than general statements like "Christians believe..." or "Muslims think...". Specific references are more convincing and demonstrate deeper knowledge.

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Ignoring intention in ethical judgements

Many students say "crime is always wrong" without acknowledging that religious traditions distinguish between acts based on intention. Address intention (niyyah, mens rea) when discussing why people commit crime.

2. Treating all reasons for crime the same

The spec distinguishes four causes: poverty/upbringing, mental health/addiction, greed/hate, and opposition to unjust laws. Religious traditions respond differently to each. Show that you know these distinctions.

3. Confusing civil disobedience with ordinary crime

Civil disobedience involves deliberately breaking a law for conscientious reasons and accepting the consequences. It is distinct from crime motivated by self-interest. Most religious traditions treat these very differently.

4. Saying "Muslims believe..." without specifying which view

Islam, like Christianity, contains internal diversity. Classical Islamic jurisprudence distinguishes between types of theft (from necessity vs. greed); not all Muslim scholars agree on every issue. Use "many Muslims" or cite a specific source.

5. Forgetting Buddhist or humanist perspectives

The spec allows "one or more other religions" — Buddhism is a valid contrast religion for Theme E. Its emphasis on compassion, intention, and the causes of suffering (craving/ignorance) provides distinctive angles on crime and punishment.

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