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Ender
Guest
the act of sin makes man deserving of punishment (Aquinas)Please provide an example of “a situation” involving already incarcerated prisoners where the taking of human life not against an active aggressor could be morally justified.
*Punishment is proportionate to sin in point of severity, both in Divine and in human judgments. *(Aquinas)
Man is responsible for his actions. Sins oblige punishment and the severity of the punishment is determined by the severity of the sin. Your question involves the assumption on your part that there is no sin that deserves to be punished with death.
It seems to me that the church has always understood Gen 9:6 to mean just what it says:
Whoever sheds man’s blood, by man his blood shall be shed, for in the image of God He made man.
That is, it is God himself who has said that the murderer deserves death for his crime. Reference to this passage in this context goes at least as far back as Innocent I in 405 and is even cited in the current catechism in section 2260 with the additional comment that “This teaching remains necessary for all time.”
Our disagreement lies in the fact that I believe for some sins, and murder for certain, the just punishment is death and while there may surely be exceptions, this is the precept that should be commonly followed.
Ender