S
surritter
Guest
This reply is also meant for DudleySharp…I’m sure I want to use the Church as the guide and it is the Church that points to Gen 9:6, not me. With all the focus given to CCC 2267 it seems that most people are unaware of CCC 2260. I am curious to know how you would satisfy both of those sections. (Nor is 2260 the only reference to Gen 9:6. That is the passage the Church has always referred to as the basis for her position on capital punishment - along with Rm 13:1-4.) I am, though, struck by your implication that there is something wrong with using the Old Testament as a moral guide. The Church certainly has no such reservations.
Ah, but my implication is that we cannot merely use the Old Testament as a moral guide. To read 2260 and its footnote as a stand-alone statement fails to consider that it is meant to set up the historical presentation of this particular moral dilemma. The classic example is the “eye for an eye…” (yes, I know that does not prescribe an eye for an eye, but merely limits the penalty to not exceed the original damage). However, after quoting this, Jesus said, “But I tell you…”
Therefore, should we follow the Old Testament, or should we follow what Jesus said? (Certainly the state has the right and the duty to corral offenders and protect society from them, but the OT and its fulfillment in the NT would say that as a Christian society we are obligated to temper rehabilitation with mercy where possible.)
But back to paragraphs 2260 and 2267. It indeed makes a cross-reference to Gen. 9:6. But please read that in context: It is establishing the historical witness of the respect for human life. We must read on to see how the Church then guides that historical perspective into our application of God’s laws as Catholics. Suppose we read what 2267 actually says: “If, however, non-lethal means are sufficient to defend and protect people’s safety from the aggressor, authority will limit itself to such means, as these are more in keeping with the concrete conditions of the common good and more in conformity with the dignity of the human person…”
If retribution were the primary objective of punishment, surely the Catechism would not make that statement! Instead, it would instruct a society to fulfill the objective of retribution, and then treat the dignity of the offender as a secondary consideration.
So – as has been stated numerous times in this thread – the death penalty seems to have no place in our society today. If we wanted to, we could most assuredly provide a sufficient means to “defend and protect” people from the aggressor.