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Ender
Guest
Conditions change with the times but morality does not. If execution was the just punishment for murder in the past then it remains the just punishment for all time. Again, though, you focus on the wrong objective of punishment. It may well be true (although I don’t accept this) that capital punishment is unnecessary to prevent future murders but that says nothing whatever about whether imprisonment is an adequate punishment for the murder already committed. 2260 calls for the execution of murderers to satisfy the demand of justice; 2267 calls for the imprisonment of murderers because their execution is (assumed) unnecessary to prevent more killing. You cannot satisfy both passages.It is not impossible to satisfy the intent of both sections. You just have to be willing to realize that though the teachings are constant, the conditions under which they have to be applied are liable to change.
Yes, absolutely he could. The command to forgive is given to the individual while the command given to the State is to execute punishment. Beyond that, forgiveness does not mean that sins are not to be punished. Forgiveness and punishment are not mutually exclusive.The citation of Gn. 9:5-6 cannot be suggesting that the Noahite law in favor of capital punishment is binding. If that were true, then the Lord could not have asked “Forgive them, they know not what they do”, without asking for a violation of the demands of the law, could he?
Show me what the Church has said that supports your position, don’t give me your personal interpretation of scripture. Mercy is appropriate in some cases but not in all and was never meant to be applied universally.The law must not demand that the people responsible for the murder of an innocent man be killed, or else the Lord could not have said that. St. Stephen said the same thing while he was being stoned, so it was not just the redemptive death of Jesus that may rightly ask for mercy on the offenders, then.
First, I disagree, but, more importantly, it doesn’t matter. As I keep saying, the defense of society is only a secondary objective of punishment. Let’s focus on what is necessary to satisfy the primary objective.Also, keep in mind that the ability of the state to successfully and safely incarcerate murderers is not the same now as it was 1600 years ago.
The conditions for satisfying the primary objective have not changed nor can they change since they are based on the nature of the crime, and the nature of murder is constant.The teaching does not change, but the conditions can and do change.
Ender