M
Maximus1
Guest
It is ultimately a human dignity issue. Like abortion, people miss that
What of the command “Thou shalt not kill”? That comes with no general rules for exceptions either, so how should we interpret it? No one thinks it means literally what it says, that would be ludicrous, and it is equally unreasonable to suggest that Gn 9:6 is to be understood literally and without exception. This objection is spurious.This verse does not say “Whosoever sheds the blood of man, provided the circumstances are serious enough and the transgressor is mentally fit, by man shall his blood be shed”. It says nothing about general rules, or default punishments, or anything of the sort. So if you insist on interpreting this verse as instructions to civil authorities, then you would have to take the absolute command interpretation, which you obviously will not do. Therefore your interpretation that this in instruction to civil authority is unfounded.
You have completely altered the nature of that passage from a command which God himself gave to mankind to exist for all time into a warning to the unjust that he might possibly face execution. Your interpretation bears no resemblance to the actual words, nor do you provide any justification for dismissing the explanation given by a Doctor of the Church in favor of your own opinion.It is neither a prophecy nor instruction to civil authorities. It is a warning to transgressors.
I guess no matter how often I explicitly reject this as not in the least resembling my position you will continue to insist this is what I believe, as it is surely easier to rebut the irrational statement you ascribe to me than to effectively respond to what I have clearly presented as what I actually believe.All the support you have offered for your position have been either too strong or too weak. Too strong meaning if taken the way you want would require executing children.
Of course I have; you just dismiss the citations I provide making that exact point.Nowhere have you cited any support for your “default punishment” interpretation in Church teaching.
The language of a command to civil authority would have been something like this:You have completely altered the nature of that passage from a command which God himself gave to mankind to exist for all time into a warning to the unjust that he might possibly face execution.It is neither a prophecy nor instruction to civil authorities. It is a warning to transgressors.
Something like this then?The language of a command to civil authority would have been something like this:
“ When one among you sheds the blood of man, you shall shed his blood in reparation. ”
That might be a good plan if the pope had given his interpretation of Genesis, but since he hasn’t there is nothing to which to defer.When it comes to interpreting Genesis, I defer to our Pope.
As long as we are cherry-picking scripture I will point out that scripture also says that one caught in the act of adultery should be stoned. That is why I defer to current teaching and do not try to deduce it myself from scripture.LeafByNiggle:![]()
Something like this then?The language of a command to civil authority would have been something like this:
“ When one among you sheds the blood of man, you shall shed his blood in reparation. ”
Whoever strikes a person mortally shall be put to death. If it was not premeditated, but came about by an act of God, then I will appoint for you a place where the killer may flee. But if someone willfully attacks and kills someone by treachery, you shall take the killer from my altar for execution. (Ex 21:12-14)
The deference I speak of is the preference of not applying the death penalty. It implies a different interpretation of Genesis even if it does not mention Genesis.That might be a good plan if the pope had given his interpretation of Genesis, but since he hasn’t there is nothing to which to defer.When it comes to interpreting Genesis, I defer to our Pope.
I see. You rejected the plain meaning of Gn 9:5-6 because God didn’t address it directly to a government, and when I find another passage where God addressed it exactly as you insisted you reject it because, well, we just can never know what scripture really means anyway. It’s just that “If this, then that” doesn’t really lend itself to too many different interpretations.As long as we are cherry-picking scripture I will point out that scripture also says that one caught in the act of adultery should be stoned. That is why I defer to current teaching and do not try to deduce it myself from scripture.
Your position depends on claiming both that an If-Then statement is incomprehensible as well as the ability to intuit the interpretation of a passage that is neither mentioned nor referenced simply because the topic is common. Words begin to lose meaning in such circumstancesThe deference I speak of is the preference of not applying the death penalty. It implies a different interpretation of Genesis even if it does not mention Genesis.
I agree with your other comments, just not so much with this one. Is it your sense that Gn 9:5-6 is in any significant way different than the citations from Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy? It is one thing to argue that (all) of Mosaic law was abrogated, but quite another to suggest that the same is true of the Noahic covenant.The Church has not taught that the state must use the death penalty (that went out with the mosaic law) but that it may impose the death penalty on malefactors if it is necessary to do so
The meaning of Leviticus 20:10 is just as plain as the meaning of Ex 21:12-14. Yet the Church now interprets Leviticus to mean other than its plain meaning. So why not Exodus as well?LeafByNiggle:![]()
I see. You rejected the plain meaning of Gn 9:5-6 because God didn’t address it directly to a government, and when I find another passage where God addressed it exactly as you insisted you reject it because, well, we just can never know what scripture really means anyway. It’s just that “If this, then that” doesn’t really lend itself to too many different interpretations.As long as we are cherry-picking scripture I will point out that scripture also says that one caught in the act of adultery should be stoned. That is why I defer to current teaching and do not try to deduce it myself from scripture.
I don’t have the time to do an exhaustive search of the bible for all passages that support mercy vs. punishment, so such a contest would not prove anything other than who has more time on his hands.As for “cherry-picking”, you fling that charge rather promiscuously so let’s see how appropriate it is in this case. Here’s what it means:
the act of pointing to individual cases or data that seem to confirm a particular position while ignoring a significant portion of related cases or data that may contradict that position.
I’ll provide citations to show my earlier comment wasn’t a one-off and you can look for any passage that contradicts it, and we’ll see whose position is better supported.
No, it depends only on faith in the Pope.LeafByNiggle:![]()
Your position depends on claiming both that an If-Then statement is incomprehensible as well as the ability to intuit the interpretation of a passage that is neither mentioned nor referenced simply because the topic is common. Words begin to lose meaning in such circumstancesThe deference I speak of is the preference of not applying the death penalty. It implies a different interpretation of Genesis even if it does not mention Genesis.
Or shows that life is so valuable that even those who have committed the most henious acts don’t lose that right.However, getting rid of capital punishment diminishes human dignity. It reduces human life to something worthless enough that something less than another human life can requite its loss. To answer a life with something less than a life is an insult and a blasphemy, one tantamount to desecration of the dead. Don’t even dare to pretend that such obscenities come out of any concern for “human dignity.”