M
Maximus1
Guest
A mystery? That is at least more Catholic than FUNDEMENTALISM.
Was Pope Saint Joh Paul II a “fundamentalist”? In the Catechism he wrote this:Adam and Eve are Adam and Eve. This is not them.
I say this because the genetic evidence brings this into question. And of course we are not a FUNDEMENTALISM religion.
These books are historical texts, even thought they may use a figurative language. The Church (including the Fathers, the Doctors and the ordinary and universal magisterium of the popes ) has always considered them to be historical.These stories are inspired, but are not part of a history or natural science text.
The use of Ancient Near East warfare rhetoric by the biblical author may account for the genetic and archeological evidence. There was a conquest, but not a total extermination.the genetic evidence brings this into question.
The death penalty as a right of the state has never been absolute and has been constrained over history by Church teaching in its permissible circumstances. The advance of technology is a legitimate cause for further restraint.… however surely what is morally acceptable cannot change?
“Further restraint” perhaps…and debatable, and obviously does not imply immorality…but an absolute abolishment is nonsensical.The death penalty as a right of the state has never been absolute and has been constrained over history by Church teaching in its permissible circumstances. The advance of technology is a legitimate cause for further restraint.
Yes, yes and never suggested the last.“Further restraint” perhaps…and debatable, and obviously does not imply immorality…but an absolute abolishment is nonsensical.
Not necessarily.The argument may work if the Church taught that deterrence was the sole purpose of punishment.
No absolute assertion was made. ?It might also work if the above was true and it were also true that such an absolute assertion was supported by absolute evidence.
A “teaching” based on circumstances is by definition a prudential judgment.The death penalty as a right of the state has never been absolute and has been constrained over history by Church teaching in its permissible circumstances.
The prudence applies only to particulars of a case, not to the general principle.A “teaching” based on circumstances is by definition a prudential judgment.
“Prudential” has a technical theological meaning… It refers to the application of Catholic doctrine to changing concrete circumstances…" (Cardinal Dulles)
And while such judgments need to be taken seriously, they do not oblige our assent.
“…To differ from such a judgment, therefore, is not to dissent from Church teaching.”
It seems here you are agreeing with my post so I make no comment.As for whether a state’s right to use it is “ absolute ” depends on what that word means. It has never meant “ justifiable in every case ” simply because a state has the general right to apply it, but it does in fact mean absolute in the sense that it has always been - and continues to be - a right belonging to the state. Whether they abuse the right doesn’t go to the issue of whether they have the right.
30 That is why many of you are weak and ill, and some have died. 31 But if we judged ourselves truly, we should not be judged. 32 But when we are judged by the Lord, we are chastened so that we may not be condemned along with the world.
I meant that the Church seems to have made an absolute statement, not you. The absoluteness of it all is what is shocking really.No absolute assertion was made. ?
My response was appropriate to the comment it was directed at, which was that capital punishment was “constrained over history by Church teaching in its permissible circumstances.” You raise a different objection.This aspect of your analysis is confusing
“Application of Catholic Doctrine to changing circumstances.”
I can see modern genetics and criminology being that. I can see modern incarceration facilities being that. To an extent changing cultural values when they are positive.
But how about HUMAN DIGNITY? That doesn’t work does it?
I realize it is asserted we (as of 2018) have come to better understand man’s dignity. It just seems a bit unlikely that man’s dignity precludes capital punishment while at the same time its use is justified by Scripture. Those are mutually exclusive positions. No interpretation of man’s dignity can contradict Scripture.HUMAN DIGNITY, once recognised, identified and our understanding becomes enhanced is an evolution toward an eternal truth.
No, this is not the general principle inasmuch as protection is not the primary objective of punishment and of itself cannot justify it. What justifies punishment is retribution, retributive justice.The prudence applies only to particulars of a case, not to the general principle.
The general principle that the teaching makes explicit is that in order to justify an execution, the circumstance that no non-lethal means are available to “defend and protect people’s safety.”
The inspired text is absolutely inerrant. It can’t contain any error or falsehood. Not only on matters of faith and morals, but on everything.Dei Verbatim makes it clear with it’s last phrase on the subject. If I recall it concludes," FOR THE SAKE OF SALVATION." Inspiration is inerrant in terms of the Genesis passages text with this qualifier. It isn’t a science or history text. AND NEVER WAS.
The authors of Genesis , and those the text were written to, know this.It derives from their tradition, cultural, language and other influences foreign to us that give the text meaning.
This view that somehow the Holy Spirit made hand puppets out of many authors taking dictation is absurd. You want modernist, there it is. Mature modernist.