Race, Ethnicity, and the Functional Use of Religion When Faced with Imminent Death
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Religious Coping Theory
3. The Last Statements of Death Row Inmates
4. Data and Plan of Analysis
The Social Context of the Death Chamber and Chang over Time
5. Results
5.1. Race/Ethnic Variation in Religious Statements
5.2. Race/Ethnic Variation in Religious Statements over Time
5.3. How and Why Race and Ethnic Groups Express Themselves in Religious Terms during the Imminent Death Experience
Jesus take me home. (white inmate)
Lord Jesus Christ, I commend myself to you. I am ready. (black inmate)
Thank you, Lord Jesus receive my spirit. (Hispanic inmate)
5.4. Race, Ethnicity, and the Hierarchy of Preferred Religious Coping Methods over Time
5.4.1. Intimacy with Others
5.4.2. Gaining Comfort from and Closeness to God
5.4.3. Gaining Control
5.4.4. Achieving Life Transformation
6. Discussion and Conclusions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Religious Methods of Coping to Gain Control | |
---|---|
Collaborative religious coping | Seeking control through a problem-solving partnership with God |
Active religious surrender | An active giving up of control to God |
Passive religious surrender | Passive waiting for God to control the situation |
Pleading for direct intercession | Seeking control indirectly by pleading to God for a miracle or divine intercession |
Self-directed religious coping | Seeking control directly through individual initiative rather than help from God |
Religious methods of coping to gain comfort and closeness to God | |
Seeking spiritual support | Searching for comfort and reassurance through God’s love and care |
Religious focus | Engaging in religious activities to shift focus from the stressor |
Religious purification | Searching for spiritual cleansing through religious actions |
Spiritual connection | Experiencing a sense of connectedness with forces that transcend the individual |
Spiritual discontent | Expressing confusion and dissatisfaction with God’s relationship to the individual in the stressful situation |
Marking religious boundaries | Clearly demarcating acceptable from unacceptable religious behavior and remaining within religious boundaries |
Religious methods of coping to gain intimacy with others and closeness to God | |
Seeking support from clergy or congregation members | Searching for comfort and reassurance through the love and care of congregation members and clergy |
Religious helping | Attempting to provide spiritual support and comfort to others |
Interpersonal religious discontent | Expressing confusion and dissatisfaction with the relationship of clergy or congregation members to the individual in the stressful situation |
Religious methods of coping to achieve a life transformation | |
Seeking religious direction | Looking to religion for assistance in finding a new direction for living when the old one may no longer be viable |
Religious conversion | Looking to religion for a radical change in life |
Religious forgiving | Looking to religion for help in shifting to a state of peace from the anger, hurt, and fear associated with an offense |
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1 | Depsite the conceptual and empirical distinction between the words “religion” and “spiritual,” I use them throughout the text interchangeably. |
2 | The term “Hispanic” is used by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, which is the primary data source used in this study. |
3 | |
4 | Missouri also publishes the last statements of death row inmates. See Upton et al. (2017) for an analysis of Missouri data. |
5 | Considering the religious orientation of Texas, one anonymous reviewer asked why Texas would be in the business of collecting and retaining the last statements of death row inmates, and subsequently, making them available to researchers. This important question is beyond the scope of the paper but, noted on p. 3, historical explanations for recording last words were linked to attempts on the part of the state to convey mercy and provide the inmate with an opportunity to repent before execution (Elder 2010). That said, it is not clear why Texas would make the last statements available to the public. Certainly the rationale behind that decision is worthy of future research. |
6 | During the study period, 108 inmates declined to give a last statement. Thus, we have no way of knowing whether those inmates would have expressed themselves in religious terms. A much smaller subset of inmates provided incoherent or rambling statements. The idea that death row inmates would decline or offer an unintelligible last statement is interesting in its own right. Consistent with ethnographic investigations (Johnson et al. 2014, p. 147), such instances may be a function of the consequential and debilitating effects of years of confinement on death row. |
7 | A handful of last statements were written by inmates or an associate prior to the inmate’s trip to the death chamber. Since this study is focused on the spontaneity of oral statements, all written statements are excluded from analysis—an exclusion that does not alter in any way the results of the study. |
8 | See Elder (2010) for a rendering of last statements delivered during historical eras featuring executions by hanging, firing squad, electric chair, and the gas chamber. And see Johnson et al. (2014) for a more contemporary description of the process. |
9 | Before 1995, executions in Texas were comparatively sparse, so the first time period (1982–1995) encompasses executions that took place over a thirteen-year period. After 1995, executions accelerated to such an extent that aggregating the data into four- to five-year time spans generated roughly as many executions as the first time period. |
10 | In a related matter, in 1982, Charles Brooks, Jr, earned the dubious distinction of becoming the first man executed by lethal injection in the United States. Mr. Brooks was accompanied by a Muslim chaplain, Akbar Nurid-Din Shabazz who, according to his New York Times obituary, recently died of Covid-19 (New York Times, 27 June 2020, A24). Beyond the warden, prison chaplains or other spiritual advisors are the only personnel allowed into the death chamber with the inmate. While chaplains pray with the inmate and offer some measure of comfort leading up to the execution, inmates who practice a religion other than Christianity or Islam may find themselves void of this option. The Supreme Court recently weighed in on the side of an inmate who requested that a Buddhist chaplain accompany him into the death chamber after the Texas Department of Criminal Justice rejected his request. Arguing that the inmate’s religious rights had been violated, the Court issued Texas an ultimatum: either supply a chaplain for inmates of all religions, or ban the practice altogether. Texas decided to ban the practice altogether (Montgomery 2020). |
11 | Caution should be taken when interpreting the numbers for Hispanics as their cell counts are very small. |
Hispanic | White | Black | Total | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Number of executions | 100 | 239 | 196 | 535 |
2 | Number of oral statements | 81 | 190 | 157 | 428 |
3 | Number of oral religious/spiritual statements | 56 | 124 | 89 | 269 |
4 | Religious statements as a percentage of all oral statements | 69% | 65% | 57% | 63% |
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Smith, R.A. Race, Ethnicity, and the Functional Use of Religion When Faced with Imminent Death. Religions 2020, 11, 500. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11100500
Smith RA. Race, Ethnicity, and the Functional Use of Religion When Faced with Imminent Death. Religions. 2020; 11(10):500. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11100500
Chicago/Turabian StyleSmith, Ryan A. 2020. "Race, Ethnicity, and the Functional Use of Religion When Faced with Imminent Death" Religions 11, no. 10: 500. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11100500
APA StyleSmith, R. A. (2020). Race, Ethnicity, and the Functional Use of Religion When Faced with Imminent Death. Religions, 11(10), 500. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11100500