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Ender
Guest
I cited Cardinals Ratzinger and Dulles and the USCCB; surely they count as actual Church officials. As for your claim that 2267 has not been described as prudential it seems mere semantics to claim otherwise. I admit that no one has explicitly said “2267 is a prudential opinion” but that conclusion is surely the only one that can be logically drawn from the comments that have been quoted.I have also never seen it described as prudential by an actual Church official, despite the many claims.
Not so. Dulles said: “The Pope and the bishops, using their prudential judgment, have concluded …” and “In coming to this prudential conclusion, the magisterium …” There is nothing whatever in the statements of the JPII, Ratzinger, Dulles, or the magisterium that applies uniquely to the US.Cardinal Dulles said that it was the prudential opinion of USCCB that the death penalty in the U.S. conflicts with the Church’s teaching on the death penalty.
Section 2267 of the catechism quotes JPII’s encyclical Evangelium vitae. That section **is **the Pope’s call to end the death penalty; calling either of them prudential automatically calls the other prudential as well. In fact there is no “other”; they are one and the same thing. Since you accept Dulles’ description of the JPII’s comments (in Evangelium vitae) as prudential I consider this question resolved.He said that the Pope’s call to end the death penalty was prudential. He did not say that 2267 was ITSELF prudential …
Name any Church doctrine about which someone could say there may be a “legitimate diversity of opinion” among Catholics. Such a statement about a doctrine would contradict what the catechism says in 892: "To this ordinary teaching the faithful “are to adhere to it with religious assent " which, though distinct from the assent of faith, is nonetheless an extension of it.” Since the faithful must assent to ordinary teachings (doctrine) there can be no question that 2267 is not doctrine as Ratzinger himself has said that we may, legitimately, disagree with it.Cardinal Ratzinger said that … there was room for disagreement on when the death penalty may be applied. … Nothing in his statement even suggests that the Church’s teaching on the death penalty is merely an opinion. He did not use the word prudential.
Ender