L
LongingSoul
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Both these passages of Augustine and Aquinas, reiterate that the death penalty is invoked to serve the common good, not to atone for sin primarily. Aquinas specifically says… Nevertheless the judge puts this into effect, not out of hatred for the sinners, but out of the love of charity, by reason of which he prefers the public good to the life of the individual. … not by reason of which he is exacting retribution as God would.About Matt 5: 38-42, Augustine taught in the Catena Aurea: “For that retribution which tends to correction is not here forbidden, for such is indeed a part of mercy; nor does such intention hinder that he, who seeks to correct another, is not at the same time ready himself to take more at his hands. But it is required that he should inflict the punishment to whom the power is given by the course of things, and with such a mind as the father has to a child in correcting him whom it is impossible he should hate. And holy men have punished some sins with death, in order that a wholesome fear might be struck into the living, and so that not his death, but the likelihood of increase of his sin had he lived, was the hurt of the criminal.”
And Aquinas, following Augustine taught: “When, however, they fall into very great wickedness, and become incurable, we ought no longer to show them friendliness. It is for this reason that both Divine and human laws command such like sinners to be put to death, because there is greater likelihood of their harming others than of their mending their ways. Nevertheless the judge puts this into effect, not out of hatred for the sinners, but out of the love of charity, by reason of which he prefers the public good to the life of the individual. Moreover the death inflicted by the judge profits the sinner, if he be converted, unto the expiation of his crime; and, if he be not converted, it profits so as to put an end to the sin, because the sinner is thus deprived of the power to sin any more.” (Summa Theologica, II-II, Q. 25, A. 6, Obj. 2)
Augustine is saying that we aren’t forbidden from inflicting a punishment in the way a father corrects a child, just that we don’t legislate poking the eye our of someone who has taken anothers eye. Or knocking out the tooth of someone who’s knocked out another tooth. That’s a sure sign of ungodly vengeance. He says some were put to death to serve as a deterrence or to prevent further sinning, not to exact blood for blood vengeance.