Dear Severus68,
Your emotive statement that " the execution of any person is the ultimate act of violence as it is a deliberate act done by the State which otherwise considers acts of violence wrong", surely runs counter to both Sacred Scripture and Church teaching.
One of the most important pronouncements in Sripture regarding capital punishment is found in Genesis 9:6, “Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed; for God made man in his own image”. It is the reference to the image of God that gives a rationale for the death penalty. You speak of an act of violence by the state, yet Scripture speaks of an act of violence perpetrated by one man against another man and says that this, in effect, is an outrage against God. Clearly any attack on man represents an attack on the divine majesty. It is for this very reason that capital punishment was sanctioned by God at the very beginning.
Romans 13: 1-7 is pivitol in any debate on capital punishment. In verse 4 St. Paul states that the civil magistrate “…does not bear the sword in vain; he is the servant of God to execute his wrath on the wrongdoer”. Now the term “sword” (machaira) which St. Paul employs here is not the weapon the emperor carried as the symbol of the authority of his office, but rather the one worn in the provinces by the superior magistrates, who had the authority to inflict capital punishment.
In Acts 25: 11 St. Paul, imprisoned for the Gospel and standing before Festus, stated that “…if I have committed anything for which I deserve to die (emphasis mine), I do not seek to escape death”. Is it not plainly evident that St. Paul was saying that if he had in fact committed a capital crime he did not seek to escape the supreme penalty. What is surely noteworthy is that the Apostle clearly presupposed that some crimes are in fact worthy of death - a presupposition that is at variance with modern abolitionist thinking. Thus in St. Paul’s mind, not only were some crimes intrinsically worthy of death (Acts 25: 11), but the “powers that be” actually had the divinely sanctioned authority to exercise capital punishment in such cases (Rom. 13: 4).
It is true, of course, that many Christians have found it hard to square such mandates for the violent restraint of evil with our Lord’s teachings on love and non-violence. However, we should bear in mind that Sacred Scripture clearly affirms that God is concerned both for the preservation of the world from evil and the sinner’s salvation. Does not the Bible affirm both the “law (that) brings wrath” (Rom. 4: 15) and the “faith working through love” (Gal. 5: 6) - both “Christ’s strange work” and his “proper work”. God ordains the punishment in* time* of those whom He may in fact pardon in eternity.
Finally, any punishment inflicted by the state is not an act of violence or revenge, but an act, the sole purpose of which is, the supression of evil. Indeed more benevolence is demonstrated in punishing violence, and thus repressing it, than in allowing it to prevail. Consonant with this is the teaching of our church which states that "Preserving the common good of society requires rendering the aggressor unable to inflict harm. For this reason the traditional teaching of the Church has acknowledged as well founded the right and duty of legitimate public authority to punish malefactotrs by means of penalties commensurate with the gravity of the crime, not excluding, in cases of extreme gravity, the death penalty…" (Catechism of the Catholic Church, para 2266) (emphasis added).
Warmest good wishes,
Portrait