R
Ray_Scheel
Guest
The way I have always seen this is that 2267 has only clarified the sentiment that everyone here agrees with: that considered solely from the perspective of protecting society, if the death penalty is not necessary to prevent that individual from being a continuing threat then there no justification for using it.One of the things that bothers me about this discussion is the conception we have formed regarding punishment in general. What is the one condition allowed by 2267 for the execution of a prisoner? It is the likelihood that he will kill again and if the risk is high enough he may be executed to prevent a future event. What this means is that we may execute someone to prevent a harm that we cannot execute him for actually committing.
It seems to me that this perspective on punishment places no value on redressing the wrong that has been done and in fact appears to reject the notion that this can actually be done. I can understand this view from a secular society but not from a Christian one.
Those reading it to say that capital punishment may only be considered from that perspective are flat out ignoring 2266, which clearly states that punishment “in addition to defending public order and protecting people’s safety, has a medicinal purpose: as far as possible, it must contribute to the correction of the guilty party”, as neither 2266 nor 2267 exclude capital punishment from punishment in the perspective of “medicinal” value.
There is no credibility on the part of those individuals willing to make an argument that requires interpreting one passage of the CCC in a way that clearly dismisses the paragraph immediately preceding it, and support their “argument” by dismissing the teachings of prior Church Councils and notable theologians, and especially when the only source they are willing to consider prior to Vatican II being a sentence from a papal address where the following sentence in that same address clearly contradicts the “conclusion” supposedly based on the sentence they used.
Yes, as would I, but it appears that anyone not already in general agreement with the principle is stuck on the position that any Church teachings about capital punishment not explicitly restated since Vatican II are void, even those restated as recently as 1952 with no subsequent modification expressed on those points since that time…I would like to see someone use the occasion of an execution to talk about the expiation of sin.