C
centurionguard
Guest
Then again, maybe not. God not only agrees with it, he mandated it.
Whoever sheds man’s blood, by man his blood shall be shed, for in the image of God He made man. (Gen 9:6)
This was God’s command to Noah and in referencing this particular passage I am not giving my personal interpretation, it is the basis for the Church’s position on capital punishment as taught in the Catechism of Trent.
It may be reasonable to reject the death penalty on the basis that it cannot be fairly or properly applied, but those are prudential reasons and have nothing to do with the moral question. I disagree with the opinion that the death penalty should not be used because of prudential problems but I don’t care to argue the point; I am interested in understanding what the Church teaches. In that regard it seems clear - notwithstanding 2267 - that the Church still recognizes Gen 9:5-6 as the controlling teaching on this point.
Ender
Like many Catholics who are against the Death Penalty despite the Catholic Churches own opinions on the Death Penalty which itself is NOT bound presently by Dogmatic Teaching. Catholic are however free to make their own opinions which incurring sinful disobedience to the Faith in the Catholic Church. Whoever said: human justice was perfect in the eyes of God unless somebody happens to be a person who favors an eye for an eye or tooth for a tooth. In which case what a lovely bunch of barbaric humans we can all possibly become.It may be reasonable to reject the death penalty on the basis that it cannot be fairly or properly applied,