F
FightingFat
Guest
OK, but can you explain how that doesn’t contradict the Catechism when it teaches that capital punishment is allowed if the “guilty party’s identity and responsibility have been fully determined” and if the death penalty is the only way to defend others against the guilty party?Well, the Church has said retribution is the primary objective. As I pointed out, the USCCB did not order the objectives by priority, they simply listed them and retribution was the third one listed. It remains, however, primary. Cardinal Dulles made a similar observation in 2001:
The purposes of criminal punishment are rather unanimously delineated in the Catholic tradition. Punishment is held to have a variety of ends that may conveniently be reduced to the following four: rehabilitation, defense against the criminal, deterrence, and retribution.
Again, he only lists them, he does not prioritize them, but it should be reasonably clear that retribution is the only one of the four purposes that could possibly be meant by “redressing the disorder”.
Ender
Also, from documents freely available on the website of the Holy See, such as this it would seem that the death penalty should never be used, despite the document’s assertion that “Criminal activity demands effective punishment” it also asserts that:
"The position of the Holy See, therefore, is that authorities, even for the most serious crimes, should limit themselves to non-lethal means of punishment, as these means “are more in keeping with the common good and more in conformity with the dignity of the human person” (cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church, n. 2267). States have at their disposal today new possibilities for “effectively preventing crime, by rendering one who has committed an offense incapable of doing harm - without definitively taking away from him the possibility of redeeming himself.» (Cf. John Paul II, Evangelium Vitae, n. 56).”
It also states that there is:
“no definitive evidence to support the belief that the death penalty reduces the likelihood of capital crimes being committed. Populist exploitation of feelings of fear or insecurity is no substitute for hard evidence. Crime will be overcome significantly by comprehensive policies of moral education, of effective police work and by addressing the root causes of criminality. Punishment should be secure and proportionate to the crime, but should also be directed at restoring the criminal, wherever possible, to being a constructive member of society.”
I’m all for a realist Catholicism which takes seriously the obligation to defend the weak, with, where unavoidable, violence, but, unless I don’t understand your position properly, what you’re advocating appears at odds with Catholic teaching?