
The Russell Moore Show Malcolm Gladwell on Radical Forgiveness and the Death Penalty
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Apr 8, 2026 Malcolm Gladwell, bestselling author and host of Revisionist History, reflects on The Alabama Murders and how forgiveness, charisma, and institutional power shaped the case. He probes the human cost of prolonged executions and questions capital punishment. He also connects religion, memory, and storytelling to reckon with justice and redemption.
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How The Alabama Murders Story Found Its Way To Gladwell
- Malcolm Gladwell discovered the Alabama murders after a psychologist mentioned one of the convicted men while he was interviewing her about trauma work.
- That casual mention led Gladwell to investigate a 1988 church scandal where a preacher hired two men to kill his wife, spawning an 8-part Revisionist History series.
Mennonite Daughter Stopped The Execution And Found Peace
- Gladwell contrasts the Alabama case with a Florida Mennonite minister's murder where the minister's daughter forgave the killer and helped spare his life.
- Her active forgiveness brought peace to herself, the killer's family, and the church, ending the case quickly.
How Withheld Forgiveness Prolongs Community Trauma
- The refusal to grant forgiveness can prolong communal trauma for decades, as seen in the Alabama case where legal processes dragged on nearly 40 years.
- Gladwell argues the drawn-out death penalty process kept victims' families, killers' families, and communities in moral limbo without closure.

