L
LongingSoul
Guest
St Augustine was an eminent Catholic theolgian and philosopher and the Bishop of Hippo at the time. He was the Church. There is no ‘catechism’ other then him and the few other theological writings that have come through time as the Church developed the structure we now know today. Would you be calling St Augustine errant if you could be transported back to the 5th century?Originally Posted by LongingSoul
That quote comes from one of the many letters St Augustine sent to various magistrates conveying the Catholic view of punishment and the death penalty. This one to Donatus who was presiding over the trial of Donatists who had killed some Christians…
“The most reasonable conclusion to draw from this discussion is that, once again, the Catechism is simply wrong from an historical point of view. Traditional Catholic teaching did not contain the restriction enunciated by Pope John Paul II” ." (7)“The realm of human affairs is a messy one, full of at least apparent inconsistency and incoherence, and the recent teaching of the Catholic Church on capital punishment—vitiated, as I intend to show, by errors of historical fact and interpretation—is no exception.”(7)Fr Flannery is trapped by his erroneous conflation of ‘punishment’ and the extreme, exceptional sentence of death as a last resort. This would be similar to a surgeon conflating surgery with the extreme, exceptional solution of amputation of a diseased limb. Surgery is a medicinal approach to restoring and fortifying the health of the whole body. It desires to save the limb for the sake of bodily wholeness unless that limb is poison to the body by its presence. Aquinas stresses that here…(7) Kevin L. Flannery S.J. - Capital Punishment and the Law – 2007 (30 pp)
Ordinary Professor of Ancient Philosophy at the Pontifical Gregorian University
(Rome); Mary Ann Remick Senior Visiting Fellow at the Notre Dame Center for Ethics and
Culture (University of Notre Dame)
"Every part is directed to the whole, as imperfect to perfect, wherefore every part exists naturally for the sake of the whole. For this reason we see that if the health of the whole human body demands the excision of a member, because it became putrid or infectious to the other members, it would be both praiseworthy and healthful to have it cut away. Now every individual person is related to the entire society as a part to the whole. Therefore if a man be dangerous and infectious to the community, on account of some sin, it is praiseworthy and healthful that he be killed in order to safeguard the common good, since "a little leaven corrupteth the whole lump” (1 Cor. 5:6). "(Summa Theologiae, II, II, q. 64, art. 2)
The rider is always how the limb affects the health of the body. Natural law allows for lethal and final amputation under this condition. Natural law which supports ***species survival ***would accommodate such a measure. It doesn’t support the measure per se, it allows it. Again, punishment supports the health of society and allows the extreme solution of capital punishment. God does not take that rider and void it so that man can act arbitrarily with a death penalty. Divine Law presupposes natural law.