Andreas Hofer:
You should learn how to construct better arguments from primary sources because your first and third sources contradict each other - Lactantius obviously stands in opposition to the Church in this issue for he holds that all killing is always forbidden
no, he doesn’t: he says that “putting to death” is always wrong. i.e.
executing a man is always wrong. if he meant “killing”
simpliciter, that’s presumably what he would have said.
Andreas Hofer:
whereas the Church, as you quote from the Catechism, holds that it is sometimes permissible to take human life.
the catechism says that it is permissible to take life
in self-defense, which is what “capital punishment” amounts to if it is used only when no other recourse exists for the maintenance of the mortal safety of the public.
that is to say, the catechism says that “capital punishment” is ok only insofar as it is not punishment, but self-defense.
sounds like lactantius to me.
Andreas Hofer:
As for your third source, while the authority is to be respected, I’d hardly consider a single bishop from a conference known for colossal pastoral failure to be a source of as “great esteem” as Church Fathers and popes. Call it elitism if you will, he hasn’t quite reached that level.
it is a statement by the president of the NCCB given
on behalf of the NCCB, which is a not insignificant part of the magisterium. certainly not dispositive, but, just as certainly, indicative.
Andreas Hofer:
Because the application of the Holy Father’s teachings on capital punishment involve such a prudential judgment, a Catholic may in good conscience either support or oppose the use of the death penalty. But a Catholic who denies the *validity *of the death penalty is not speaking with the Church.
you’re missing the point. which is simply that a morally rectifiable use of what you’re calling the “death penalty”, isn’t, in fact, penal - it’s defensive.
what is uncontroversial is that the church condones the commission of (some) actions which cause the death of individuals where the
point of those actions is to defend the life of an individual or individuals whose own lives would otherwise be or likely be lethally threatened.
what is perhaps not so clear is whether or not it is possible to end the life of an individual in order to “teach them a lesson”, or to “level the moral playing field”, or for some other pedagogical or punitive reason.
personally, it seems to me that what is wrong, always and everywhere, is intentionally to end the life of another human being. period.
Andreas Hofer:
You should learn how to construct better arguments from primary sources
and you should perhaps improve your reading comprehension, or at least the depth of your familiarity with moral philosophy and theology before you start pointing out the speck in your brother’s eye.
…how did that last line sound to you? if, as i suspect, you found it to be abrasive and rude, how do you think snowdog felt?
let’s leave stuff like this out of the conversation, shall we?