A
AlNg
Guest
It was on the ballot : Do you want capital punishment to remain legal.Inadmissible means not to be allowed or tolerated.
Is it inadmissable to vote YES ?
Last edited:
It was on the ballot : Do you want capital punishment to remain legal.Inadmissible means not to be allowed or tolerated.
Article 6 and the whole of Q87 is exclusively addressing punishment for sin by God, not by human justice. Penal compensation here is referring to penance only. Read the whole chapter and it should help you understand. There is only one reference to human justice as an aside at the end of Art. 8.Emeraldlady:![]()
Is it now? Here is the entire section my citation was drawn from:Article 6, which you cherry picked, is exclusively related to penance for sin and a persons relationship with God. Here is the Article in it’s fullness as proof.
Two things may be considered in sin: the guilty act, and the consequent stain. Now it is evident that in all actual sins, when the act of sin has ceased, the guilt remains; because the act of sin makes man deserving of punishment, in so far as he transgresses the order of Divine justice, to which he cannot return except he pay some sort of penal compensation, which restores him to the equality of justice; so that, according to the order of Divine justice, he who has been too indulgent to his will, by transgressing God’s commandments, suffers, either willingly or unwillingly, something contrary to what he would wish. This restoration of the equality of justice by penal compensation is also to be observed in injuries done to one’s fellow men. Consequently it is evident that when the sinful or injurious act has ceased there still remains the debt of punishment.
Given that “penal compensation is also to be observed in injuries done to one’s fellow men” it would seem that your insistence that this section applies “exclusively…to penance for sin and a person’s relationship with God” is…less than accurate.
No. Whether you have misread the chapter or knew that you were conflating two separate types of penal compensation ie penance and civil punishment, the error is wholly and solely yours. My comments are not wrong. They are informed and accurate and I am obliged to correct misleading arguments especially ones intended to cast doubt on Church teaching.Charging me with blatant deception for your misreading of Aquinas is closer to calumny than duty. Your comments really are - aside from being wrong - inappropriate.
.Do you want capital punishment to remain legal.
Yes…Is it inadmissable to vote YES ?
While I agree with the end result, your answer does not explain how the death penalty communicates and carries out God’s love for the person being executed.Someone sentenced to a death penaly would have the opportunity to receive the sacraments. If they confess their guilt and accept the punishment willingly, they make an act of reparation, which removes consequences of sins for the afterworld
A Short History:You assert these things with nothing to substantiate them, and in this case it isn’t true. The primary purpose of punishment is retributive justice, to restore the balance upset by the crime.
The primary scope of the penalty is to redress the disorder caused by the offense. (CCC 2266)
I have already explained why Aquinas is not the go-to authority on this topic. Aquinas was not aware of the last few centuries worth of unfolding revelation. Some of Aquinas’ words concerning punishment would now be considered horrid by any modern Christian.…Aquinas…
Why do you think God did not communicate love to the Good Thief?While I agree with the end result, your answer does not explain how the death penalty communicates and carries out God’s love for the person being executed.
If God speaks through people, then how does the death penalty communicate God’s love to anyone?Why do you think God did not communicate love to the Good Thief?
None of those three were being discussed. Here was your assertion with which I disagreed:Now, if you do not accept that today, let’s go back to the question: What is the purpose of retribution, order, and justice? What is the purpose of all these?
That statement is contradicted by the catechism which states that: “The primary scope of the penalty is to redress the disorder caused by the offense.”Punishment is for the individual being punished.
Given that virtually all of the Fathers and Doctors of the Church acknowledged the legitimacy of capital punishment, discarding Aquinas really doesn’t limit the field that much.I have already explained why Aquinas is not the go-to authority on this topic.
Your instincts are dead on here.That the proper and moral response to a Hitler or Stalin is life imprisonment is wholly irrational to me and actually opposed to the common good, and I can’t seem to consider otherwise.
So it is inadmissable to vote in favor of capital punishment. Suppose though that you did so, knowing that it was inadmissable. Would you have to go to confession before receiving Holy Communion?Yes…
I would… but your conscience would have to tell youSo it is inadmissable to vote in favor of capital punishment. Suppose though that you did so, knowing that it was inadmissable. Would you have to go to confession before receiving Holy Communion?
So in the end it is prudential.I would… but your conscience would have to tell you
What isn’t prudential then?So in the end it is prudential.
No. birth control is grave matter. It is not prudential. Whether to abstain from meat on Friday or perform some other penance is prudential in some countries. If, for a serious reason, you choose to remain apart from your spouse but not remarry, whether or not to apply for a marriage annulment is prudential.What isn’t prudential then?
Birth control,
As humans, we have all sorts of freedoms to make our own choices… choosing the death penalty as a Catholic is a big bad deals voting for capital punishment
grave matter ? Yes
inadmissable ? Yes
prudential ? No… not okay to choose or support it
The church held it to be heresy to deny that States had the right to use capital punishment, but if it is now immoral to believe otherwise apparently the heretics were right. That’s probably not something most of us ever expected to hear.Was it ok to support the death penalty in July 2018 but not the next month? Or better yet, the day before the Catechism was changed but not the day after?