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Ender
Guest
Church catechisms have always addressed killing in war, self defense, and executions together and always withing the context of the fifth commandment as they are all exceptions to that law.The death penalty is addressed by the CCC in the same breath as war is addressed and I think for very sound reasons.
Whatever may be made of the Israelites, the church’s just war teaching, presented at least 800 years ago, has nothing to do with rationalizing wars of conquest.The Old Testament finds God telling the wandering Israelites to conquer Canaan and make it their own also, but we don’t (hopefully) defend *conquest *as the primary end of war (anymore).
If by this you mean we may reject something in the Old Testament simply because it is in the Old Testament rather than the new then this goes too far. That some things, like the Law of Moses, are no longer applicable cannot mean that no teaching from those times are applicable.The way one contemplates the Old Testament has to be necessarily different to the way we contemplate the New.
The passage at issue here is Gen 9:5-6 and that is part of God’s covenant with Noah; it had absolutely nothing to do with the Israelites if for no other reason than there were none.God had His plan for His ‘chosen people’ back then, but by virtue of adoption, Jesus shows we are all God’s chosen people. That distinction no longer existed after the resurrection. We necessarily have to regard each other differently.
Punishment has four ends: retribution, rehabilitation, protection, and deterrence. The primary end is defined in 2266: *“The primary scope of the penalty is to redress the disorder caused by the offense.”*What is meant by “redressing the disorder” is retribution. This is what the church teaches today and is true of all punishment including capital punishment.There is no longer a ‘them and us’ and the laws made within the old Covenant, which you could say had the primary end of ‘retribution’ or ‘conquest’ in establishing the sacred nature of mans life… now have a primary end of ‘common good’ (bearing in mind there is no ‘them and us’ anymore ) in establishing the sacred nature of mans life.
Ender