L
Light1111
Guest
Hello,
I have a question about war, relating to Church doctrine.
In Catholic school, we were taught that a person may never sin, including if he is asked to commit a sin by his parents, by his boss, by his principal, by his government, by his military leaders. We were told that if ever one sins, he takes the sin on himself, and it impacts his own soul; he cannot use an excuse that “My Mom made me do it” or even “My country made me do it.”
Does this mean that in times of war, a soldier is singularly responsible for every casualty he causes? So, by Church doctrine, is a soldier a murderer?
Also, I have tried to search this online, so I apologize if the answer has already been mentioned in one of these forums. But what is the official position of the Church regarding war in general? And has the Pope commented on the two wars the U.S. is currently engaged in? If so, what statements has he made? What is the Church’s stance? If it has one.
Thank you! Peace to each one of you.
I have a question about war, relating to Church doctrine.
In Catholic school, we were taught that a person may never sin, including if he is asked to commit a sin by his parents, by his boss, by his principal, by his government, by his military leaders. We were told that if ever one sins, he takes the sin on himself, and it impacts his own soul; he cannot use an excuse that “My Mom made me do it” or even “My country made me do it.”
Does this mean that in times of war, a soldier is singularly responsible for every casualty he causes? So, by Church doctrine, is a soldier a murderer?
Also, I have tried to search this online, so I apologize if the answer has already been mentioned in one of these forums. But what is the official position of the Church regarding war in general? And has the Pope commented on the two wars the U.S. is currently engaged in? If so, what statements has he made? What is the Church’s stance? If it has one.
Thank you! Peace to each one of you.