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That is your groundlessly asserted interpretation, Ender! Good grief man - just because a text doesn’t explicitly mention something does not give you grounds to claim that the authors of the text ignored that something in formulating their statement!“2267 simply states a position on the advisability of treating murderers according to their deserts.”
2267 makes no statement whatsoever regarding the treatment of murderers “according to their deserts.” It speaks solely in terms of protection; it ignores not only retribution but deterrence and rehabilitation as well.
The oxymoron was used to refer to your position.“Vaguely explicit”? You’re defending your position with oxymorons?
NOTHING vague?? Big claim, not much justification.In regard to those passages in Genesis, however, there is nothing vague about the way the Church refers to them.
Let’s look at some passages in fuller context:
Another kind of lawful slaying belongs to the civil authorities, to whom is entrusted power of life and death, by the legal and judicious exercise of which they punish the guilty and protect the innocent. The just use of this power, far from involving the crime of murder, is an act of paramount obedience to this Commandment which prohibits murder. The end of the Commandment� is the preservation and security of human life. Now the punishments inflicted by the civil authority, which is the legitimate avenger of crime, naturally tend to this end, since they give security to life by repressing outrage and violence.
This sounds perfectly compatible with 2267.
As, then, the Sacred Scriptures prescribe remedies for so dangerous a disease, the pastor should spare no pains in making them known to the faithful.
Of these remedies the most efficacious is to form a just conception of the wickedness of murder. The enormity of this sin is manifest from many and weighty passages of Holy Scripture. So much does God abominate homicide that He declares in Holy Writ that of the very beast of the field He will exact vengeance for the life of man, commanding the beast that injures man to be put to death. And if (the Almighty) commanded man to have a horror of blood,’ He did so for no other reason than to impress on his mind the obligation of entirely refraining, both in act and desire, from the enormity of homicide.
The murderer is the worst enemy of his species, and consequently of nature. To the utmost of his power he destroys the universal work of God by the destruction of man, since God declares that He created all things for man’s sake. Nay, as it is forbidden in Genesis to take human life, because God created man to his own image and likeness, he who makes away with God’s image offers great injury to God, and almost seems to lay violent hands on God Himself !
Again perfectly compatible with the CCC.
Now let’s notice that it isn’t credible to contend that the Church plainly said what she did *not *plainly say, indeed what she plainly did not say.It isn’t credible to contend that the Church didn’'t mean what she plainly said.
From the same section of the Catechism of Trent:
First, he who thinks himself injured ought above all to be persuaded that the man on whom he desires to be revenged was not the principal cause of the loss or injury. Thus that admirable man, Job, when violently injured by the Sabeans, the Chaldeans, and by Satan, took no account of these, but as a righteous and very holy man exclaimed with no less truth than piety: The Lord gave, the Lord hath taken away.
Since I never made the claim, what it logically entails is irrelevant. Once again you attack what you incorrectly attribute to me rather than what I actually said.
I VERY EXPLICITLY EXPLAINED how the claim IS logically entailed by what you actually said! You *ignore *that and then tell ME to respond to your actual comments? You are a very difficult fellow.Yes, quite well. Do you understand the notion of responding to my actual comments?