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duskyjewel
Guest
I saw this quote on another thread:
But when I read this, a question popped into my head. What about righteous Gentiles, including Catholics, who saved Jews during WWII? Would they have had to lie about SOMETHING at SOME POINT? They probably had to lie often, well, and repeatedly in order to save the lives they did. I have not done any reading on the detailed history of all of it, but I would bet that even Pius XII, when helping Jews escape and hiding them in his summer palace, had to do some lying.
So, how do the two things square? If the Catechism says lying is never justified under any circumstances, using the “evil may not be done that good may come of it” argument, then how are the righteous Gentiles, and especially Catholics who risked their lives to save Jews, and probably had to lie to do it, righteous? (BTW, I know that term comes from Israel, that it is a declaration made by them upon a person.)
Is there something that mitigates the seemingly impervious disallowance of lying in the Catechism, when it concerns more serious moral issues?
Of course, this poster is right. I myself have posted that Catechism quote on another thread.I don’t think lying is any better, from a Catholic standpoint – I have learned through other threads here that the CCC is unequivocal in its condemnation of lying under any circumstance, even to save another person’s life; so doing so to salvage one’s image would be even less justifiable.
But when I read this, a question popped into my head. What about righteous Gentiles, including Catholics, who saved Jews during WWII? Would they have had to lie about SOMETHING at SOME POINT? They probably had to lie often, well, and repeatedly in order to save the lives they did. I have not done any reading on the detailed history of all of it, but I would bet that even Pius XII, when helping Jews escape and hiding them in his summer palace, had to do some lying.
So, how do the two things square? If the Catechism says lying is never justified under any circumstances, using the “evil may not be done that good may come of it” argument, then how are the righteous Gentiles, and especially Catholics who risked their lives to save Jews, and probably had to lie to do it, righteous? (BTW, I know that term comes from Israel, that it is a declaration made by them upon a person.)
Is there something that mitigates the seemingly impervious disallowance of lying in the Catechism, when it concerns more serious moral issues?