The Use of the Bible in Modern Court System: A Critique of the Appropriateness of the Practice

The study examines the practice of using the Bible to swear in the law court. It exposes biblical texts that speak about swearing of oath and taking vows. Since this is an ongoing debate, the paper raises scholarly opinions that support and speak against the practices by examining their theological...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Abraham Nortey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Noyam Journals 2024-11-01
Series:E-Journal of Religious and Theological Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://noyam.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/ERATS202410121.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850143901847912448
author Abraham Nortey
author_facet Abraham Nortey
author_sort Abraham Nortey
collection DOAJ
description The study examines the practice of using the Bible to swear in the law court. It exposes biblical texts that speak about swearing of oath and taking vows. Since this is an ongoing debate, the paper raises scholarly opinions that support and speak against the practices by examining their theological basis for doing so. The goal of this research is to highlight the consequences associated with swearing with a sacred book considered the words of a just God. The research is a literary one. It uses textual analyses of selected biblical passages and critiques various theological positions on the subject by some selected denominations and theologians to propose a review of the practice. Specific attention will be given to key but controversial biblical passages in Genesis 24: 2-3, Matthew 5:34-37 and James 5:12 on oath- taking that has generated varied responses. The study establishes that for the Bible to be used in court the lawmakers should establish their position on certain biblical laws on crime and their implications by working hand in hand with God-fearing theologians. Once such statements of faith are added to the laws or constitution it will authenticate the need to use the bible to swear. The researcher has observed that since the judgment of court cases do not impinge on the content of the Bible, the practice is not helpful in adjudication. It rather ends up profaning the name of God in case witnesses lie in court. One would therefore propose that those who are occupying office for the first time could swear with the Bible as a way of asking God to help them discharge their functions well.
format Article
id doaj-art-ac72989d09cd4f0985a73604faab5709
institution OA Journals
issn 2458-7338
language English
publishDate 2024-11-01
publisher Noyam Journals
record_format Article
series E-Journal of Religious and Theological Studies
spelling doaj-art-ac72989d09cd4f0985a73604faab57092025-08-20T02:28:32ZengNoyam JournalsE-Journal of Religious and Theological Studies2458-73382024-11-011012405412https://doi.org/10.38159/erats.202410121The Use of the Bible in Modern Court System: A Critique of the Appropriateness of the PracticeAbraham Nortey0https://orcid.org/0009-0006-8302-798XPentecost University, Accra GhanaThe study examines the practice of using the Bible to swear in the law court. It exposes biblical texts that speak about swearing of oath and taking vows. Since this is an ongoing debate, the paper raises scholarly opinions that support and speak against the practices by examining their theological basis for doing so. The goal of this research is to highlight the consequences associated with swearing with a sacred book considered the words of a just God. The research is a literary one. It uses textual analyses of selected biblical passages and critiques various theological positions on the subject by some selected denominations and theologians to propose a review of the practice. Specific attention will be given to key but controversial biblical passages in Genesis 24: 2-3, Matthew 5:34-37 and James 5:12 on oath- taking that has generated varied responses. The study establishes that for the Bible to be used in court the lawmakers should establish their position on certain biblical laws on crime and their implications by working hand in hand with God-fearing theologians. Once such statements of faith are added to the laws or constitution it will authenticate the need to use the bible to swear. The researcher has observed that since the judgment of court cases do not impinge on the content of the Bible, the practice is not helpful in adjudication. It rather ends up profaning the name of God in case witnesses lie in court. One would therefore propose that those who are occupying office for the first time could swear with the Bible as a way of asking God to help them discharge their functions well.https://noyam.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/ERATS202410121.pdfoathvowswearingcompurgationperjurylollardsmodern court
spellingShingle Abraham Nortey
The Use of the Bible in Modern Court System: A Critique of the Appropriateness of the Practice
E-Journal of Religious and Theological Studies
oath
vow
swearing
compurgation
perjury
lollards
modern court
title The Use of the Bible in Modern Court System: A Critique of the Appropriateness of the Practice
title_full The Use of the Bible in Modern Court System: A Critique of the Appropriateness of the Practice
title_fullStr The Use of the Bible in Modern Court System: A Critique of the Appropriateness of the Practice
title_full_unstemmed The Use of the Bible in Modern Court System: A Critique of the Appropriateness of the Practice
title_short The Use of the Bible in Modern Court System: A Critique of the Appropriateness of the Practice
title_sort use of the bible in modern court system a critique of the appropriateness of the practice
topic oath
vow
swearing
compurgation
perjury
lollards
modern court
url https://noyam.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/ERATS202410121.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT abrahamnortey theuseofthebibleinmoderncourtsystemacritiqueoftheappropriatenessofthepractice
AT abrahamnortey useofthebibleinmoderncourtsystemacritiqueoftheappropriatenessofthepractice