W
wheels10
Guest
I have a question for those that support the death penalty. Given everything that Jesus teaches us about how to live, would you personally execute this punishment?
I have not supported the death penalty* in this thread* because of the issue of its purpose and scope. Yet I will answer, “Yes.”I have a question for those that support the death penalty. Given everything that Jesus teaches us about how to live, would you personally execute this punishment?
Thank you for your honesty. It is good to know if people support the death penalty that they would actually do it themselves. The message that I receive from Jesus would never allow me to do it. The greatest commandments that Jesus gave us were Love thy neighbour and Love thy enemy. I am unable to see the death penalty meet either of these requirements, can you?Betterrave…you have stated that YOU think that J P 2’s opinion of the death penalty is better…(By the way, whether something is ‘obvious’ is once again, a matter of opinion, so therefore is not, objectively, “obvious,”) Good for you------believe what you want to----I think centuries of teachings that supported the right of the state to execute is “better”. …and that’s the way it needs to be TAUGHT… WE CAN BOTH HAVE THAT DIFFERENT OPINION, AND WE CAN AGREE TO DISAGREE. Thats different from abortion—where Catholics cant, as Catholics, disagree.
John Paul 2 was a great Pope, but he has no expertise in criminal justice. I have a Doctorate in it, and I tell you…he was, respectfully, WRONG about his ideas on criminal justice.
Wheels…if I were working in the pen as an executioner, and Hitler or Osama , or any of the murderers, came to be executed, I could certainly carry out the state’s right to execute the decision of the jury and judge. Just as I could use self defense to take a life, or kill someone in a war, …as taught in centuties of Catholic catachisms, writings and papal statements, as stated above, if you care to read them. Your statements of how Jesus taught us “to live,” I refer you to the centuries of Catholic teachings…and given the teaching that the death penalty was the duty of the state, for CENTURIES, I submit that Jesus’ teachings on “how to live” correspond to MY ideas, and not yours. Read the current Pope’s opinion of the death penalty and what Catholics can believe:
“3. Not all moral issues have the same moral weight as abortion and euthanasia. For example, if a Catholic were to be at odds with the Holy Father on the application of capital punishment or on the decision to wage war, he would not for that reason be considered unworthy to present himself to receive Holy Communion. While the Church exhorts civil authorities to seek peace, not war, and to exercise discretion and mercy in imposing punishment on criminals, it may still be permissible to take up arms to repel an aggressor or to have recourse to capital punishment. There may be a legitimate diversity of opinion even among Catholics about waging war and applying the death penalty, but not however with regard to abortion and euthanasia.”
priestsforlife.org/magisterium/bishops/04-07ratzingerommunion.htm
I have NOT stated that I think that JPII’s view of the DP is better. Please re-read what I wrote. Also, I hold that what I stated to be obvious is objectively obvious. If you wish to dispute this claim, please say why you think that what I called obvious is possibly not obvious.Betterrave…you have stated that YOU think that J P 2’s opinion of the death penalty is better…(By the way, whether something is ‘obvious’ is once again, a matter of opinion, so therefore is not, objectively, “obvious,”) Good for you------believe what you want to----I think centuries of teachings that supported the right of the state to execute is “better”. …and that’s the way it needs to be TAUGHT… WE CAN BOTH HAVE THAT DIFFERENT OPINION, AND WE CAN AGREE TO DISAGREE. Thats different from abortion—where Catholics cant, as Catholics, disagree.
John Paul 2 was a great Pope, but he has no expertise in criminal justice. I have a Doctorate in it, and I tell you…he was, respectfully, WRONG about his ideas on criminal justice.
I will use this word again: obviously if someone is more enlightened than others, it is *not just *because those others were before him. Your rhetorical question here is just the insinuation of a straw man into the argument.Of course I can. Look…how do you tell what Christ’s words mean in daily life… you look at the writings of the Doctors of the Church, so well quoted in earlier posts. You look at traditional catachisms, Popes’ writings, Aquinas, St Augustine, etc, etc. As I have stated, the Popes, as late as Pius XII, stated the church supported the state’s execution of those committing serious crimes. Proportionality…
You can have the opinion that these writers were wrong for those centuries, but that is YOUR OPINION. The facts are as I stated them. That was the teaching of the church in the 60s…I still have my catachism… Now, Pope John Paul 2 disliked the death penalty, for sure !!..and changed the catachism after Evangelium Vitae. What makes him enlightened and the centuries of Popes etc etc wrong…just because they were BEFORE him???
Actually, as I read it, Catholics cannot be opposed in principle to the death penalty; they can wish to see its use minimized. JPII is as clear about this as anyone.And as I stated in my lastpost…this current Pope stated that one can disagree whether the death penalty can be valid…but catholics can NOT as to abortion.
The third part of 2267 is precisely a criminal justice issue as it has to do with an evaluation of the capabilities of modern penal systems. What it is not is a theological issue, none of JPII’s qualifications are particularly relevant to the area of penology, and a lot of Catholics have, justifiably, dissented from his opinion.You have a doctorate in criminal justice, but so what? That qualification pales in comparison to those of JPII, philosopher, theologian, man of prayer, man of political action, victim of an assassination attempt, etc. This is not just a criminal justice issue, it is a deeply philosophical and theological issue.
“Presumably inspired” is pretty weak but you are right in saying that we have to presume what he thought since there is nothing in Church history that relates to his comments on this subject and he certainly provided no justification for them. Nor is this a particularly complex issue; it has been clearly explained over the past two millennia. The fact that you might not like what has been said on the subject does not make it complex.What I object to in this thread is the arrogance of those who fail to consider the complexity of the issue and appear to ignore the depth of reflection that presumably inspired the thinking of JPII.
Back at ya.You have a doctorate in criminal justice, but so what? That qualification pales in comparison to those of JPII, philosopher, theologian, man of prayer, man of political action, victim of an assassination attempt, etc. This is not just a criminal justice issue, it is a deeply philosophical and theological issue. What I object to in this thread is the arrogance of those who fail to consider the complexity of the issue and appear to ignore the depth of reflection that presumably inspired the thinking of JPII.
Is this addressed to me?Once again…read the following and tell me how you can possibly say what you continue to spew !
3. Not all moral issues have the same moral weight as abortion and euthanasia. For example, if a Catholic were to be at odds with the Holy Father on the application of capital punishment or on the decision to wage war, he would not for that reason be considered unworthy to present himself to receive Holy Communion. While the Church exhorts civil authorities to seek peace, not war, and to exercise discretion and mercy in imposing punishment on criminals, it may still be permissible to take up arms to repel an aggressor or to have recourse to capital punishment. There may be a legitimate diversity of opinion even among Catholics about waging war and applying the death penalty, but not however with regard to abortion and euthanasia"
The current Pope wrote that…and if he says there may be a “legitimate diversity of opinion among Catholics”…how can you possibly say that the death penalty is anything but permitted by the current church??
That’s exactly the kind of simplistic arrogance I was talking about. Please re-read my comment and try to think about that possibility with an open mind.The third part of 2267 is precisely a criminal justice issue as it has to do with an evaluation of the capabilities of modern penal systems. What it is not is a theological issue, none of JPII’s qualifications are particularly relevant to the area of penology, and a lot of Catholics have, justifiably, dissented from his opinion.
“Presumably inspired” is pretty weak but you are right in saying that we have to presume what he thought since there is nothing in Church history that relates to his comments on this subject and he certainly provided no justification for them. Nor is this a particularly complex issue; it has been clearly explained over the past two millennia. The fact that you might not like what has been said on the subject does not make it complex.
Ender
Back at ya.
But obviously not based solely on that!PJPII established this as a criminal justice issue when he based his death penalty reasoning on defense of society and the state of the prison system.
Obviously!Reason and facts don’t just fly out the window when you enter the realm of the religious.
But see your comment above!: Reason and facts don’t just fly out the window when you enter the realm of the religious. In other words, there is no dichotomy between “religion” - i.e., a complex, comprehensive philsophical, anthropological, theological, historical, doctrinal, etc. analysis - and “a worldly examination of prisons system” [prison systems?].PJPIII put this discussion squarely into a worldly examination of prisons system.
This is the point that Pius XII addressed:“The most irreligious aspect of this argument against capital punishment is that it denies its expiatory value which, from a religious point of view, is of the highest importance because it can include a final consent to give up the greatest of all worldly goods."
Surely if my position was as simplistic as you say you should be able to demolish it. I rather lean to the alternative conclusion that you haven’t made any headway because my position, based as it is on what the Church has actually written on the subject, is correct … simplicity notwithstanding.That’s exactly the kind of simplistic arrogance I was talking about. Please re-read my comment and try to think about that possibility with an open mind.
I believe in self defense but only to the point of disabling the aggressor, not killing. Yes, I know, based on human understanding this may not appear to be an effective form of defense, but if I strictly followed only my brain, there are many things that I would do differently. I am both a physical and spiritual being and my spirit tells me that killing another human being is not God’s will. What does your spirit tell you?Of course I can. Look…how do you tell what Christ’s words mean in daily life… you look at the writings of the Doctors of the Church, so well quoted in earlier posts. You look at traditional catachisms, Popes’ writings, Aquinas, St Augustine, etc, etc. As I have stated, the Popes, as late as Pius XII, stated the church supported the state’s execution of those committing serious crimes. Proportionality…
You can have the opinion that these writers were wrong for those centuries, but that is YOUR OPINION. The facts are as I stated them. That was the teaching of the church in the 60s…I still have my catachism… Now, Pope John Paul 2 disliked the death penalty, for sure !!..and changed the catachism after Evangelium Vitae. What makes him enlightened and the centuries of Popes etc etc wrong…just because they were BEFORE him???
And as I stated in my lastpost…this current Pope stated that one can disagree whether the death penalty can be valid…but catholics can NOT as to abortion. So, if I can support the death penalty, (see my last post) are you saying the current Pope is in error in his teaching that ?? of course you dont. That’s why you and I can, as opposed to the abortion issue, disagree as good Catholics. A victim of an abortion is innocent…a murderer is , after a trial, adjudged guilty…
You know, if one carries your logic to its end, one couldnt defend himself in self defense, nor could you protect the country in a fighting war…This “love your neighbor” and “love thy enemy” does not extend to (as was the traditional teaching of the church) the death penalty, self defense and prosecuting a just war. “Love thy enemy” does not mean I have to let the enemy kill me or win the war…OR (like Hitler for example) get away with murdering millions without an APPROPRIATE punishment…and I think the proportional punishment for Hitler would have been execution. What would you have done with Hitler, give him life without parole?? …where he would be interviewed ad nauseum??..he would have been the STAR !!! He’d love it…You would have let the killer of millions of Jews live, if convicted?