E
Ender
Guest
*God does not delight in punishments for their own sake; but He does delight in the order of His justice, which requires them. *(Aquinas ST I-II 87, 3 ad 3)Again, it is not enough for you to claim that Catholic doctrine taught that “it is the punishment itself that achieves [repairing the disorder],” without evidence of a magisterial citation in support. Aquinas’ quote does not support the claim that punishment itself restores right order.
*For guilt cannot be restored to order save by punishment *(Aquinas ST III 71, 5 ad 2)
Subsequent to 1995? Are you really willing to discount everything the church taught prior to the very end of the 20th century? When did the understanding of retribution change, that its meaning today is different than it was less than forty years ago?If absence of the word “retribution” has caused a misunderstanding then the confusion would be evidenced in the USCCB statements on capital punishment subsequent to 1995.
It is the order of justice that has been damaged. Giving back what was taken, repairing what was broken, rehabilitating the offender are all proper objectives, but none of them restores the disorder.*the act of sin makes man deserving of punishment, in so far as he transgresses the order of Divine justice, to which he cannot return except he pay some sort of penal compensation, which restores him to the equality of justice. *(Aquinas ST I-II 87,1)As to the words “redress” and “retribution” having identical meanings in philosophy or law, I still disagree. While redress may certainly include retribution, it is not accomplished by it. Redress seeks to restore the order for all – offender, victim and society. Retribution, as one of the justifications of punishment, is aimed at the offender.
No, he did not because he could not. This is a misunderstanding of what he said. He would not simply rewrite 2000 years of church doctrine on the nature of punishment. His opposition to capital punishment was prudential, not theological.What is more important than what we think is what did JPII think. In EV, he disallows retribution as a morally valid reason for capital punishment.
Now that you accept that retributive justice is the primary objective of punishment (which is what Dulles, Rice, and the USCCB said) we can move on to whether the church ever taught that retributive justice is a valid moral reason for capital punishment. Or do you still reject the notion that retribution and “redress the disorder” mean the same thing?Kaczor is correct: punishment’s primary purpose is retributive justice. He does not write, however, (as you claim) that retributive justice is historically in Catholic doctrine a valid moral reason for capital punishment.
Ender