‘He Ought Not to Live any
Longer’
[Acts 25:23-27]
If you were a university
professor, how would you deliver your 'last lecture'? I became interested when I read an article
last Friday (July 25, 2008) on the front page of CNN.com titled "'Last
lecture' professor taught others how to live." In the article, it discussed Randy Pausch, a
47-year-old professor at Carnegie Mellon University who, as a husband and
father of three, was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and given only 3 to 6
months to live. About a month later, in
September 2007, he delivered his last lecture at Carnegie Mellon University,
sharing not only the content of his final lecture but also the news of his
impending death. Curious about the
lecture, I went to YouTube.com and listened to the summarized content. The
lecture was titled "Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams," and he
began by posing the question, 'If you were to give your last lecture, how would
you do it?' One part of the lecture that
resonated with me was when he talked about applying for a job at Disney,
recalling his childhood dreams. After
being rejected and emphasizing the importance of persistence, he stated:
"The brick walls are there for a reason ... to show us how badly we want
something, … because the brick walls are there to stop the people who don't
want it badly enough. They're there to stop the other people. Professor Pausch, despite facing rejection
when attempting to fulfill his childhood dream of working at Disney, was an
unstoppable individual. Ironically, he
became even more famous while living with terminal cancer, inspiring many
through interviews and, especially, his last lecture (which received 3.2
million views on YouTube after being uploaded last December). Upon learning last Friday that he had
ultimately succumbed to pancreatic cancer, I couldn't help but think, ‘Oh, that
person should have lived longer.’ However,
individuals like Randy Pausch, who make us think, ‘Oh, he should have lived
longer,’ are not the only ones we encounter in life. There are also those who make us think, ‘Oh,
that person probably shouldn't have lived longer.’ For instance, if you read the news in Korea
online these days, you may occasionally come across reports of gruesome murder
cases. While reading such news, seeing
the police searching for various parts of a mutilated corpse, you can't help
but wonder how someone could kill another person in such a manner. Thoughts might even drift towards the idea
that the person who committed such a heinous act may not be someone worth
keeping alive. Of course, life and death
are under God's control. I believe that
God has a purpose for everyone born on this earth. Yet, even with this understanding, when
reading news about someone taking another person's life in such a brutal way,
thoughts may lean towards, ‘This person may not be someone worth sparing.’
Looking at today's passage, Acts
25:23-27, we see a loud cry from all the Jewish people declaring that there is
a person who must not be allowed to live. That person is none other than Paul, who
preaches the gospel of the living Jesus Christ. As we have already meditated, Paul was a
blameless person. He strongly asserted
his innocence, even to the point of risking his life (v. 11). He declared, "I have committed no
offense, either against the law of the Jews or against the temple or against
Caesar" (v. 8). He had not done any
wrong to the Jewish people (v. 10). Despite this, Paul was marked as a person who
must not be allowed to live by all the Jewish people. In today's terms, from the perspective of all
the Jews at that time, Paul was like a condemned criminal. All the Jews wanted Paul to be sentenced to
death. Therefore, they tried to bring
Paul to trial by appealing to Governor Felix, then two years later to Governor
Festus, and even organized a conspiracy to kill Paul without proper legal
proceedings (Yoo). However, contrary to
the viewpoint of these Jews, Governors Felix and Festus did not find any
evidence of crime deserving death (24:22, 25:25). In particular, Governor Festus testified to
King Agrippa, saying, "I found he had done nothing worthy of death"
(v. 25). Governor Festus, having
examined Paul in a trial initiated by the Jewish religious leaders, concluded
that Paul had not committed any crime deserving death. However, since Paul had appealed to Caesar,
making it impossible to send him to Caesar without a charge under Roman law,
Governor Festus presented Paul before King Agrippa and the prominent officials
of Caesarea today (25:27). Interesting,
isn't it? On the one hand, people are
shouting that Paul must not be allowed to live, while on the other hand,
Governor Festus states that Paul has committed no crime deserving death. Which side is right? Of course, we know that Governor Festus is
correct. We know that Paul did not
commit any crime deserving the death penalty. Nevertheless, despite this fact, Paul was
labeled by all the Jews as a person who must not be allowed to live.
It is reported that South Korea
has essentially become a country that has abolished the death penalty since no
executions have been carried out in the last ten years, as of December 30,
2007. However, about two months ago,
there was renewed attention on the death penalty system when Suwon District
Court sentenced Sung-hyun Jung (39 years old), accused of murdering three
individuals, including An Yang-chodong elementary school students Hye-jin Lee
and Ye-seul Woo, to death (Internet). Particularly,
Governor Moon-soo Kim of Gyeonggi Province sparked a public debate on the death
penalty system, stating, ‘Our country, which does not execute those like Young-chul
Yoo, who killed 21 people, is a country without human rights,’ and emphasizing
the need to execute the death penalty quickly (currently, there are about 60
death row inmates in Korea). According
to a survey conducted by the opinion research institution ‘Real Meter’ on March
21, 2008, as reported on SBS's 'Eo-jun Kim's News and Joy,' the opinion that
'the death penalty should be abolished' was at 22.2%, while 'it should be
maintained' was at 57.0%. The survey
results indicated a surge in the opinion that the death penalty should be
maintained, following the An Yang elementary school abduction and murder case
(Internet). However, among those
campaigning for the abolition of the death penalty, a letter sent by former
President Dae-jung Kim to the International Amnesty Commission (Amnesty) in
June 2006 reveals that he supported the abolition of the death penalty for
reasons such as the irreversible nature of executions, stating, ‘There is no
way to correct the wrong after the execution. ... We cannot completely exclude
the possibility of prosecutors or judges making wrong judgments.’ Former President Kim cited past cases of judicial
murder in South Korea, such as the wrongful execution of individuals associated
with the In-hyeok-dang incident. He
argued, ‘There are many cases in which dictators wrongly used the death penalty
as a means to suppress and expel advocates of democracy and political
opponents. ... In Korea, those involved
with In-hyeok-dang were wrongly prosecuted and executed, and even I narrowly
escaped the death penalty (Internet).
I am not attempting to engage in a
debate for or against the death penalty here. However, I do believe that in this world,
there are people who unjustly await the day to be put to death even though they
are innocent. In Acts 25:23-27, all the
Jews cried out that Paul was a person who out not to live any longer (v. 24). Was Paul, who proclaimed the death and
resurrection of Jesus Christ as he went about, truly a person not to be kept
alive? Was he someone who deserved to be
put to death? Reflecting on the Apostle
Paul, who, as a prisoner condemned by all Jews, bears the stigma of being a
condemned man, I thought of Jesus. When
Jesus was accused, Pilate, unable to find any fault in Him, declared, "I
find no guilt in this man" (Lk. 23:14). Pilate knew that there was no reason to put
Jesus to death (v. 15). Yet, despite
finding no guilt in Him (v. 22), Pilate yielded to the clamor of the crowd,
allowing Jesus to be crucified on the accursed cross, demanded by the people in
the tumult arising from the release of Barabbas (vv. 18-19), urging,
"Crucify him! Crucify him!" (vv. 21, 23). How unjust was this death in the eyes of us
humans? Jesus, who was entirely
innocent, was nailed to the cross, the cursed tree, from the Jewish
perspective. Shouldn't Barabbas, who
incited riot and committed murder, have been put to death instead? Why did Jesus, who was innocent and the
eternal Son of God, have to come into this world in human form and die on the
cross at Golgotha after 33 years? The
reason is to give us the gift of eternal life, a gift that the world cannot
offer but only God can. Look at Romans
6:23 - "... the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our
Lord." Don't you want to receive
this gift of eternal life? This gift of
eternal life is only possible through saving faith: "... Believe in the
Lord Jesus, and you will be saved—you and your household" (Acts 16:31).
A sinner who cannot be kept alive forever,
James Kim
(Reflecting on Jesus, who was nailed to the cross and died
for sinners like me)
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