Nothing in Scripture and tradition indicate that being a law enforcement officer will send you to hell.
The closest we have to directly mention this is in the New Testament, is when John the Baptist is asked about moral guidance. Luke 3:14: Then some soldiers asked him, “And what should we do?” He replied, “Don’t extort money and don’t accuse people falsely—be content with your pay.”
Further, the "good thief" crucified next to Christ says the two thieves deserved their punishments while Christ didn't, and he is not contradicted by Christ whose response to the good thief is to assure him of his salvation, thus indicating that enforcing laws for the non-innocent at least, is acceptable.
So, provided you're a cop who is not crooked (bribes, extortion, lying on the witness stand, etc.) and your not actively enforcing immoral and unjust laws to the extent they should resign (after all, we live in an entire system that is unjust, but it was even more so in Roman days), then I presume a cop is not geared towards hell automatically.
Nothing in Scripture and tradition indicate that being a law enforcement officer will send you to hell.
The closest we have to directly mention this is in the New Testament, is when John the Baptist is asked about moral guidance. Luke 3:14: Then some soldiers asked him, “And what should we do?” He replied, “Don’t extort money and don’t accuse people falsely—be content with your pay.”
Further, the "good thief" crucified next to Christ says the two thieves deserved their punishments while Christ didn't, and he is not contradicted by Christ whose response to the good thief is to assure him of his salvation, thus indicating that enforcing laws for the non-innocent at least, is acceptable.
So, provided you're a cop who is not crooked (bribes, extortion, lying on the witness stand, etc.) and your not actively enforcing immoral and unjust laws to the extent they should resign (after all, we live in an entire system that is unjust, but it was even more so in Roman days), then I presume a cop is not geared towards hell automatically.
I'm no theologian, but this is my take.