Do you not understand what those words mean? Something is intrinsically evil if it has no exceptions; if there are exceptions then the act is not intrinsically evil.* But the negative moral precepts, those prohibiting certain concrete actions or kinds of behaviour as intrinsically evil, do not allow for any legitimate exception*. They do not leave room, in any morally acceptable way, for the “creativity” of any contrary determination whatsoever. (JPII)
That isn’t an assumption; it is part of the definition of the term.
No. There are no exceptions. Adultery is intrinsically evil, killing is not. Your comparison fails because the acts are not morally equivalent. If you want a moral equivalent to adultery try murder. Can you conceive of an example where murder is justified?
Somehow? This is where we have descended to that “somehow” our acts are justified if only we believe enough?
This is flat wrong. Killing per se is not evil and the church has never taught otherwise.
Adultery is a moral evil. It is intrinsically evil. There are no exceptions.
Ender your seem to have a difficulty with the intrinsic ambiguity of language whose full meaning often rests on context. You seem to treat language like mathematical symbols and wonder why you see confusion everywhere because people just as intelligent as yourself, and often better educated, see things you fail to see. Saying “do you not understand” does not suggest you are particularly open to the possibility that you may be the one who holds things poorly

.
Let’s look at your over simplistic appreciation of “intrinsically evil”.
You are trying to manipulate symbols of reality to force an insight into reality that doesn’t actually seem to hold water.
- You seem to hold that adultery and personal killings are not analogs because there are exceptions to personal killings but not to adultery.
Well, I do not know where you got this conclusion from re adultery as this is the very point being investigated.
But it is quite clear to me that personal “killings” are always morally wrong. The CCC says as much as does “Thou shall not kill”.
Yet we know that some personal “killings” are morally acceptable by reason of TPODE.
So you are confused by this alleged exception.
You conclude there is only one solution to this confusion, ie “killing” is not intrinsically evil.
But then you have a problem with the CCC and the 5th Commandment. You get around this by saying it really means “Thou shall not kill the innocent” (ie murder).
It’s awkward though…because the Magisterium refuses to translate the 5th with murder these days. And your understanding of a “moral act” “moral evil” and “physical evil” is somewhat vague. But you are not professionally trained in these terms…and some used to translate the 5th as “Thou shall not murder” … so you feel justified in glossing over these contradictions in your approach and world view on the matter.
I have taken a more complex approach to these things which I belive better harmonizes with the translation of the Commandments the Magisterium actually uses, and I belive my under-the-hood professional understanding of moral evil and other evils is more precise than your “drivers manual” appreciation of those conceptual realities.
I therefore translate the 5th and 6th Commandment to mean “Thou shall not personally directly kill” and likewise with adultery. This does fully accord with the CCC.
So what this means is that lethal self defence is not in fact an exception to not killing because it is not a direct killing…just as the CCC states. It is an indirect killing.
This changes the character of the moral act of killing. A moral act has three fonts from which we guage it’s sinfulness or not. A licit indirect killing no longer has killing (grave matter) as its object font. The object font is now protecting the wife and kids. The intention font is good (so long as one intends the object font not the consequences font), the circumstances/consequences font involves grave physical evils…but if the goods obtained outweigh these grave evils (the principle of proportionality) then this font becomes good overall. Therefore in licit lethal self defence all fonts are good and so the whole moral act is praiseworthy.
It is still a killing so far as language and indeed physical acts are concerned, but it is not a killing so far as moral acts or the 5th Commandment is concerned. It is not an exception.
Direct killings are still intrinsically evil as you say.
The question is are some physical acts of alleged adultery able to be validly treated in the same way.
Pope Francis has already indicated the reality holds pastorally. If this be true then theology must be able to accommodate his apparent exception to the 6th Commandment.
I do not say my hypothesis must be correct, but it is a valid hypothesis that has never been theologically explored to the best of my knowledge.
And your arguments against it simply don’t hold water yet sorry Ender.
If we understand the Commandments as prohibiting direct personal acts of killings and adultery then arguments of intrinsic evil are irrelevant.
The question simply becomes, how do we know there can never be indirect acts of adultery?