G
Guardian
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Is it possible for a person to be a devout and obedient Catholic and be a government assassin by profession?
Thanks.
Thanks.
The crusades were at least partially defensive. Christian people in the Holy Land were being harrassed and attacked by Muslims, and were prevented from living peacefully in the Holy Land or safely getting to the Christian holy places (the Holy Sepulchre and so on) that they wanted to visit.that is exactly why i don’t understand the crusades…could someone explain it to me?
Well, I would say that a government assassin is a national defense/military context. Except instead of the government paying you to be a soldier in a platoon to shoot other people, the government is paying you to be an assassin to shoot other people.Assassin? As in paid to kill other than in a self-defence or national defence (military) context? No.
still, they killed…and that is the basic question of the thread…i still don’t get it.The crusades were at least partially defensive. Christian people in the Holy Land were being harrassed and attacked by Muslims, and were prevented from living peacefully in the Holy Land or safely getting to the Christian holy places (the Holy Sepulchre and so on) that they wanted to visit.
If you’re in uniform shooting at other people who are also a) in uniform, b) trained as soldiers and c) shooting right back at you it’s entirely different to, say, going undercover disguised as a cleaner into Hitler’s office to shoot him there - probably in the back when he’s unarmed and not expecting anything. There’s no direct or obvious necessity requiring you to do the second thing.Well, I would say that a government assassin is a national defense/military context. Except instead of the government paying you to be a soldier in a platoon to shoot other people, the government is paying you to be an assassin to shoot other people.
Is there a difference? I am thinking not, except perhaps in uniform.
So all soldiers in Iraq are committing sins because the people they are shooting at are not in uniform?If you’re in uniform shooting at other people who are also a) in uniform and b) shooting right back at you it’s entirely different to, say, going undercover disguised as a cleaner into Hitler’s office to shoot him there. There’s no direct or obvious necessity requiring you to do so.
They didn’t begin it, for starters, and it was their own fellow-citizens (Christian pilgrims and settlers from the same countries in Europe as the crusading soldiers) who were the ones being attacked.still, they killed…and that is the basic question of the thread…i still don’t get it.
I’m not saying that you can only shoot uniformed personnel - of course you can kill anyone who threatens your safety - but it has to be a more direct threat than most assassins would be dealing with. In many cases there’s no threat at all to the assassin - the victim is unarmed, unaware of their existence and has no antipathy for them even.So all soldiers in Iraq are committing sins because the people they are shooting at are not in uniform?
As far as being a soldier for a government and being an assassin for a government, I see no difference. What clothes you wear on your body to distinguish what you are really makes no difference as to whether the action is right or wrong.
I also find it faulty for there to be considered an immediate threat to life versus an eminent threat to life.If you’re in uniform shooting at other people who are also a) in uniform, b) trained as soldiers and c) shooting right back at you it’s entirely different to, say, going undercover disguised as a cleaner into Hitler’s office to shoot him there - probably in the back when he’s unarmed and not expecting anything. There’s no direct or obvious necessity requiring you to do the second thing.
so theoretically, if you could choose your assignment, it might be possible, since the government does not–in theory–just indiscriminately waste their resources going after anyone who is not a threat and who has not already proved deadly and dangerous.This comes back to just war theory. I think St Augustine and St Thomas argued it was acceptable to kill in a just war, a view the CC still maintains. But the CC doesn’t endorse or encourage aggressive war for its own sake, and condemns killing of civilians and non-combatents as a grave evil. If the Catholic was a sniper in the police or military, then if he had to kill someone for defence of his nation, its citizens, or soldiers, then that is just, but if he worked for the CIA or another secret service organisation and assassinated people or encouraged it, we are on murkier ground, and if he killed civilians or non-combatants deliberately and unjustly past the laws of war then that is a grave sin.
Unlawful killing is a sin.still, they killed…and that is the basic question of the thread…i still don’t get it.
You appear to ignore the fact that there’s less likely of a chance for you to be killed in your scenario PRECISELY because he’s posing no direct threat to you. If he’s not posing some sort of fairly immediate threat then what right do you have to kill him?I also find it faulty for there to be considered an immediate threat to life versus an eminent threat to life.
So, you’re suggesting that, in your hypothetical situation, the person should not kill Hitler until he a.) puts on his uniform, b.) gets his gun and then c.) starts shooting at you? Kill him now when there’s less likely a chance to be killed, or kill him when he’s about to kill you? Seems silly.
Maybe not directly at you, but he could be posing a threat to others. So if you are directed to kill him, you could be saving other lives. How does that fit into the equation?You appear to ignore the fact that there’s less likely of a chance for you to be killed in your scenario PRECISELY because he’s posing no direct threat to you. If he’s not posing some sort of fairly immediate threat then what right do you have to kill him?
Case-by-case reallyMaybe not directly at you, but he could be posing a threat to others. So if you are directed to kill him, you could be saving other lives. How does that fit into the equation?