S
SoCalRC
Guest
FWIW, JPII tied this to a coherent whole in one of his books. It helps understand our teaching on abortion being prohibited even to save the life of the mother.If you believe the answer to both of these is “no”, then I think we are pretty close in principle. Death can not be applied merely because is stops other killings. It has to be the way we reasonable believe is required, not just an effective way.
It also is worth noting that early Christianity appears to have taken this principle very seriously. After several centuries, Augustine still took it as an absolute given that we, as individuals, were prohibited from resisting evil doers physically - even as he developed the beginnings of our Just War tradition. In other words, early Christians felt strongly that it was wrong to fight or kill, even in the immediate case of self defense. Just war was argued to be permissible because it entailed going to the justified defense of others.