Perhaps I haven’t made myself clear. When a *Nihil Obstat *and *Imprimatur *are placed at the beginning of a document it means that document DOES NOT CONTAIN ANYTHING THAT CONFLICTS WITH CHURCH TEACHING. That is why those two little terms are so important. Yet, you have taken it upon yourself to state that the current CCC CONTAINS SOMETHING THAT GOES AGAINST CHURCH TEACHING.
2267 contains prudential opinion. This is not “against” Church teaching, it is an application of that teaching to a particular circumstance, but, inasmuch as it is prudential and not doctrinal, we are not obligated to assent to it.
*Their prudential judgment, while it is to be respected, is not a matter of binding Catholic doctrine. To differ from such a judgment, therefore, is not to dissent from Church teaching. *(Cardinal Dulles)
What gives you the authority to do so? Have you contacted Rome to let the Pope and the rest of the Magisterium know that you have decided that an official Church document, complete with a *Nihil Obstat *and *Imprimatur *contains ERROR?
I have simply echoed the observation of a professor at the Pontifical Gregorian University and I suspect his opinion is known to others.
Do you realize what that would mean, if it were indeed true?
Yes, it would mean nothing at all. It is incorrect on a matter of fact, not a matter of doctrine. The Church used to believe the sun circled the Earth. It was incorrect on that matter of fact as well and the condition of the gates of Hell was unaffected by that error.
Please answer the following question: Is the death penalty the only just punishment for murder?
No … but the answer depends on an understanding of what constitutes a just punishment.
*The larger justice owed to society requires even further medicinal elements beyond the manifestation of the transcendent order of justice–we do not wish to punish in a particular case, if doing so would induce worse moral disturbances in society at large.
**If imposing a penalty will bring about more disorder than it seeks to check, and so foreseeably fail to manifest the transcendent order of justice, its imposition is unjust **because it is counter to the very teleology of just penalty. But the teleology of just penalty is a teleology of
penalty. *(Steven A. Long, University of St. Thomas)
What he’s saying here is that the particular retribution owed the individual because of his crime must be tempered by the “larger justice” owed to society. Because of differing circumstances, therefore, there is no particular punishment that is just for every instance of the same crime.
Ender
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