“Redress the disorder” and “retribution” are not synonyms. Redress includes all the acts necessary to restore and maintain the order in society disrupted by sin, one of which is retribution, the just punishment due the sinner.
Since a great deal of confusion would be clarified by settling this question, let’s analyze this point.
Redress is defined by the catechism as the primary objective of punishment. Dulles has identified four such objectives: protection, deterrence, rehabilitation, and retribution, and the question is: to which of these does redress refer?
Regarding the meaning of redress, it is defined as “to remedy, or to set right.” That is, it refers to repairing something, so while I agree with you that it involves “restoring”, there is no concept in the term for “maintaining.” Maintaining is not restoring; these are different concepts.
So, of the four ends of protection, which ones deal with restoring or remedying something? Certainly deterrence does not; that is about preventing future disruptions, not remedying old ones. The same argument is true of protection; redress cannot refer to it either. Rehabilitation is at least a possibility. Certainly one could look at restoring the moral health of an individual as redressing his disorder, but the entire phrase is *“The primary scope of the penalty is to redress the disorder caused by the offense.” *What is being referred to here is the disorder caused to the social order, which is more than simply rehabilitating a disordered individual.
Given that deterrence and protection redress nothing at all, and rehabilitation ignores the impact on society, the most reasonable conclusion is that redress refers to retribution as the primary end of punishment.
Retribution is nothing more than instruction which holds the state to **limited **penalties as taught in “an eye for an eye, tooth for tooth.”
The concept of an eye for an eye limits the penalties; it is this limitation that determines the justness of a retributive punishment.
If retribution instructed the state to exact penalties identical to the crime then retribution would require that the state rape the rapist, steal from the thief, and lie to the liar.
But the catechism does not mandate this. As it clearly states, the severity of the punishment must be “commensurate” with the severity of the offense, not identical. Retribution does not “instruct”. It is an act of justice.
We speak of merit and demerit, in relation to retribution, rendered according to justice. Now, retribution according to justice is rendered to a man, by reason of his having done something to another’s advantage or hurt. (Aquinas ST I-II 21,3)
Retribution does not require but merely allows capital punishment.
You assert this but provide nothing to support the claim. Justice requires that the punishment be as severe as the crime, and it seems that God himself has identified death as the just punishment for murder.
Also, the principle of the double effect I think, clearly does not apply to capital punishment for two reasons: …
I agree with both of these reasons.
Ender