Derf
Well-known member
God's word has that God said vengeance is mine I will repay. This is God speaking. It is not for you or I. If you think it is for you, you may need to report the crime and trust the outcome to the courts.
I don't disagree with you--there's a jurisdictional issue on most laws. But it doesn't take away from the law itself, or the principle involved. If God says "Vengeance is mine", does that mean there is no penalty for murder except that God does it? Or does it mean that that particular portion of the law is to be executed by the local authorities, which God has installed?
And how do we treat that law if we are one of the local authorities? Do we sit back on our hands and say, "Sorry, that's God's job to avenge murder."?
And one other question--did God change His position on murder if to Noah He said "avenge murder" and to us He says "don't avenge murder"? Even worse, did God change his mind even in Moses time, allowing for the avenger of blood in Numbers 35:19 and claiming all vengeance action in Deut 32:35?
Rather, as I think you've pointed out, the personal vengeance is denied to the Christian by Paul's citation of Deut 32:35, but the state is still responsible to carry out the sentence--just as God's vengeance is seldom wreaked without the hand of man involved somewhere.
So sometimes the law is corporate and sometimes it is individual. And the state still has a job to do upholding God's law. And we, in our democratic society, still have a job to do to elect people that are willing and able to seek out God's law and enact in our own statutes.