S
sealabeag
Guest
When did I say I think that? I just asked some questions. 
And these conditions are extant throughout the entire world? That seems rather dubious.It is also not an acceptable remedy in the modern age.
We are morally obligated to assent to all the doctrines of the church. We are not, however, required to assent to all prudential judgments, even those of the pope and Magisterium, so the real question here is: which does this change represent, a new doctrine or a new judgment?I cannot find myself able to accept this ânewâ teaching of Pope Francis. Does a Catholic have to accept everything in the Catechism? Can I disagree with this teaching of the Pope in the Catechism? And if so, why this teaching and not others?
Church teaching can develop, but development cannot include repudiation so that what was a heresy to accept before becomes a heresy to reject today.How can a teaching of the Church change?
The âneedâ for capital punishment is not determined by whether it provides protection but by whether it is the just punishment for the crime.I understand societies ability to reform and house prisoners without the need for the death penalty has increased greatly, especially in the west, however surely what is morally acceptable cannot change?
It is very ambiguous. It implies that capital punishment should be treated as intrinsically evil even though it cannot be explicitly defined that way.[inadmissible]
Seems like a very vague word for the Church to use, thoughâŚ
We are required to assent to doctrines. We are not required to assent to judgments. If there is a prudential judgment in the catechism we are not in fact obliged to assent to it simply because it is in there, as Cardinal Ratzinger himself made clear when the catechism was first promulgated:Iâm pretty sure Pope Benedict formerly Cardinal Ratzinger would not tell you âyeah thatâs fine, if itâs just some little moral issue feel free to ignore what the Catechism says.â I just canât see that coming out of his mouth.
I mentioned all of Europe in my post.I make no excuses for the UK having used the death penalty until 1964. This isnât really a USA vs. UK issue. Itâs more a USA vs. most of the rest of the world issue.
It is simply a search for the truth of the matter, which is quite independent of the country from which an argument originates. What used to be done in England, and what is currently done in the US is also irrelevant. What was done by popes, the Papal States, and the Vatican, however, does matter.This isnât really a USA vs. UK issue. Itâs more a USA vs. most of the rest of the world issue.
My disputes are not with what the church has said. What I disagree with are the interpretations others give to those comments. My arguments are not with the church but with other posters who understand their words differently. We disagree over what the church has âactuallyâ said.When one debates with Catholics who support the death penalty, on the other hand, they wonât say, âOh, I know that this is contrary to Church teaching, but I believe it anyway.â They cite the Bible and the Church fathers and use formal logic to argue that the Church says something that it doesnât actually say or to try to show that the pope is mistaken.
. . . or, simply observant Christians who havenât yet gotten around to razoring Genesis 9:6 and the 13 chapter of Romans out of their Bibles.Also, they always seem to be American conservatives who feel a strange cultural attachment to the practice of people being killed by the state.