SoCalRC,
I’m still interested in your comments about the principle of double effect (see post #66). I thought perhaps you missed my post.
Thanks,
VC
I did miss it, sorry. I have to take DP discussions in moderation.
St. Augustine did not use the words, “Double Effect”, but he started to plant the seeds. In many ways, his theological interpreations were very literal. For example, he seems to have believed that we, as individuals have no right to self defense against unjust aggression because Jesus told us to “turn the other cheek”.
Our modern theological understanding of the same passage is a little different. We do not generally believe that Jesus was instructing us to be passive to evil, but giving us examples on how to resist evil without resorting to the evil of violence.
But in St. Augustine’s time, Christians were, by and large, literalists. For example, they took “no more of this” literallly, and were renouned pacifists, refusing to take up arms. Look at, say, Tertullian, who stated flatly, if you want to be Christian and are in the army, either quit the army, or be prepared to be martyred for not fighting.
Since Christians were no longer an oppressed minority but actually
were the state, these positions were problematic, so St. Augustine reasoned the idea of competing moral impertives, and unintended results. He did not argue, we should have a right to self defense, he reasoned that we have an obligation to love and protect our neighbor. It actually is a bit odd by today’s standards, but he was seemingly saying, don’t lift a finger to stop an evil person from hurting you, but you have an obligation to protect your neighbor from evil because you are compelled to love him as yourself.
The important seed was seemingly that not all moral obligations are of equal weight. St. Thomas Aquinas took this much further. He did not use the words “double effect”, but clearly applied the principles in arguing that we do, in fact, have a right to self defense. We are pursing the greater of moral imperitives, so side effects are unintended… Taken to extremes, this has always been a troubling concept. Look at ectopic pregnancy, the Church stated in 1902 that, no, you cannot simply remove such a fetus unharmed and let nature take it’s course. But a theological argument was made that if we just take a piece of the tube and pretend that we are treating the tube, not aborting the fetus inside, it is just an unintended side effect…
The argument has always been considered “thin”, even by the scholar who first proposed it. And it has become even more dubious now, since the fetus is generally aborted before there is even a discernable medical problem to the tube… But we don’t have to debate the applicaiton, I only want to demonstrate that it has always been a slippery and abusable concept.
Still, it remains an important one. Sometimes there are competing moral impertives, and when we pursue the one that is viewed to be the higher priority, there can be unintended side effects. Now, let’s look at the Catechism of the Council of Trent:
“The power of life and death is permitted to certain civil magistrates because theirs is the responsibility under law to punish the guilty and protect the innocent. Far from being guilty of breaking this commandment [Thy shall not kill], such an execution of justice is precisely an act of obedience to it. For the purpose of the law is to protect and foster human life. This purpose is fulfilled when the legitimate authority of the State is exercised by taking the guilty lives of those who have taken innocent lives.”
Look at the last two sentences. We do discount the commandments, or the instructions of Christ, but we look to the higher purpose of the law, “For the purpose of the law is to protect and foster human life.”
Two competing moral imperitives, not killing, and fosteirng and protecting humanity at large. The higher purpose is served, so there is no intentional breaking of the commandment.
The next sentence is also important, “This purpose is fulfilled when…” The two things to note are that the Church’s position is that this sentence was true
at that time and under those circumstances. Second, that the Church’s understanding of “legitimate authority” has changed.
If you look at the writings of that time, the most expressed belief is that rulers are rulers because they are favored by God. You won, you control, so you are favored by God. When Christian’s acheived power in Rome after several centuries, this seemed reasonable. But in time, the Church, via the living Magesterium, has come to view this as too simplistic and often incorrect. Particularly in the last 150 years, it has stressed the original teachings of Christ and reinforced, including via eccumenical council as well as mutiple encyclicals, that all human persons are given certain inalienable rights by God and no state which seeks to limit or take those rights, is licit. (For example, see CHRISTFIDELES LAICI, #38, which also quotes the Pastoral Constitution of the Second Vatican Council).
So, our current understanding is that no state has the inherent right to kill, since our life is a gift from God. That means that the only licit application of the death penalty is a form of double effect. Like the Council of Trent, our higher moral calling to protect and promote human life leads to the undesired result of killing. However, unlike the time of the council of Trent, the Church now states that the purpose of the law is no longer best served by execution in the vast majority of situations.
I hope that is clearer.