J
Jocko_VT
Guest
That’s alright. Ender can make the argument if s/he wants. I don’t think it’s been made yet, though.That’s why I said to ask for one. That is the point Ender just put forward.
I did read that quote–wasn’t that in your initial post here? It says nothing about the death penalty, but is just about punishment meeting the crime. The next paragraph actually *explicitly *deals with the death penalty. That’s meaningful to me…that the death penalty get special attention aside from the previous paragraph–as if it is specifically meant to qualify the previous paragraph.I’m sure you also read this quote from the Catechism:
But, when one quote goes out of its way to make a specific point (about death penalty), that seems to me to be the final word on the death penalty–that paragraph trumps the previous paragraph, I’d think, and is meant to do so. I have trouble seeing how it could be read otherwise. Also, I don’t think there’s anything else in the entire CCC about the death penalty–just that one paragraph! Of course, I’m reading this as if the CCC contained everything relevant about the issue–perhaps I’m wrong.It’s never as simple as one quote.
I see why you read it that way, but that wasn’t my point. My point was that, for Catholics in the US, the death penalty should not be a viable option, based on *my *reading of the paragraphs you quoted from the Catechism (which is obviously in question). I was not making an argument about legislation.In regards to legislating the Church’s morality, my point was in respect to this:
With my statement in the context of a discussion about what the Church teaches regarding the morality of the death penalty, you took it to conclude that therefore it should be illegal in the U.S.
Maybe. I’d have to look up the specifics, but that seems reasonable. As I mentioned already–just above–I wasn’t suggesting that the catechism be used to drive legislation.I may be mistaken but were you not in another thread arguing that religious reasons cannot be used in determining the legality of things in a secular society?
And the point isn’t whether a religious reason can be used or not. The point is that, in a secular state, laws can not be based only on religious arguments. There has to be an argument aside from that. Thus, for example, if gay marriage is to be outlawed, or if adultery is to be outlawed, etc., then the rationale will have to go further than “Because God says so,” or “Because the Church tells us that it’s a sin.” In other words, a religious argument is an inadequate foundation for a secular law, I think.
It’s ironic to hear you say this. So many Catholics in these forums (and religious people everywhere) seem to think that if the Bible didn’t say it, or if the Church didn’t say it, we’d all be raping and pillaging, etc. Religious people are the ones, in my experience, who have trouble understanding that just because an argument is made in a religious source, that does not automatically make it a religious argument.Or are you just able to see in this thread how just because an argument comes from a religious source that does not automatically preclude that it is a religious argument?
I don’t do that.
I think the problem here may be a difference on whether the religious argument is or is not a religious argument, rather than an argument that can stand without invoking the authority of God or of the Church.
“accusations”?If I’m wrong in assuming you were one of the ones making such accusations before then forgive me, but my point still stands to those out there who were.
Mind you, I’m pro-death penalty. I think it’s used incorrectly, but I’m for the death penalty in many instances). I see the Church’s stance on the death penalty–which I think does in fact exclude its use in the US–as something I’ll have to deal with if I decide to convert.