Professor Emeritus Robert Cochran Quoted in "From Judges to Justices: Keeping Executive Power in Check Is an Ancient Problem" -- Christianity Today
Professor Emeritus Robert F. Cochran is quoted in the Christianity Today article "From Judges to Justices: Keeping Executive Power in Check Is an Ancient Problem." The article examines the Supreme Court’s latest ruling on presidential immunity.
Excerpt from "From Judges to Justices: Keeping Executive Power in Check Is an Ancient Problem"
While the case on the surface deals with weighty legal matters of contemporary politics, one legal expert said the questions around the rule of law at the heart of the case are the same controversies that biblical figures wrestled with in the Old Testament.
“Much of the Old Testament are stories of kings abusing their power,” Robert Cochran, professor emeritus at Pepperdine’s Caruso School of Law and coeditor of a 2013 InterVarsity Press book, Law and the Bible, told CT.
He pointed to the story of King Ahab, who coveted a vineyard owned by a man named Naboth. Naboth refused to sell. So Queen Jezebel had him killed, and Ahab took the vineyard.
Prior to Israel installing a king, the nation suffered from the opposite problem of general lawlessness. The Book of Judges explored the need for someone to be in charge, due to chaos caused by human sin, and the concern that human-held power is liable to corruption.
Cochran pointed to the last five chapters of Judges, where people unrestrained by the rule of law committed rapes, mass murders, kidnappings, and forced marriages (Judges 17–21).
“At the end of each story appears the refrain ‘In those days Israel had no king; all the people did whatever seemed right in their own eyes,’” Cochran said, citing Judges 21:25 (NLT). “The implication is clear: Israel needs a strong executive to enforce the law.”
But establishing a king did not fix ancient Israel’s problems either.
Donald Trump’s case puts this same tension on display, Cochran said. “Both sides are arguing that the other side will abuse power if not restrained. .… We need a rule that will enable presidents to govern effectively, but one under which they will not abuse their power.”
The complete article may be found at Christianity Today