Not exactly. If this were true then Cardinal Ratzinger would not have said that there could be a legitimate diversity of opinion among Catholics on the application of the death penalty. After all, there is no legitimate diversity of opinion allowed on abortion and the reason Catholics may hold different positions on capital punishment is that what the Catechism states in 2267 is prudential opinion, not doctrine. Nor does the Catechism say anything about our having the ability to correct criminals; it doesn’t even address this point. 2267 limits the use of capital punishment solely to the ability to protect society from criminals, not its ability to rehabilitate them.
Aah, that I disagree. The catechism is not teach prudential opinions.
First, in truth, it is the same as abortion. For one, you are killing a human being. Second, you are depriving a person the chance to repent and correct his way of life. After death, the person is damned. They can no longer correct themselves. So in a way, what you do with Capital Punishment is worse than what you would do in an abortion. You are giving the criminal no chance to repent.
And no, rehabilitation is also implied in the catechism. That is what is enclosed in the term “Human Dignity”. A person is to be treated with human dignity which is an intrinsic quality of human life. So whether the person is a murderer, a rapist or a pedophile, the intrinsic worth of that person as a human being is equal to you and I. Thus, we must try and provide proper care to get them back to proper way of living i.e. rehab.
Now even if we look at in the way you put it as excluding rehabilitation, we have enough technology in place to keep criminals from escaping. When was the last time an escaped convict (who deserved the death penalty), cause havoc? Or a terrorist who escaped from prison and caused havoc? None right?
Just take the data from the countries that keep prisoners in life time sentences instead of putting them to death. They don’t escape. Its almost as rare as getting cancer by eating Salad probably.
So God has given human beings enough technology to be able to keep a bunch of inmates secure. The US which is a leading technological giant just doesn’t seem to want to acknowledge it. Countries far lower than it in terms of technology has abolished the death penalty.
About Cardinal Ratzinger’s comments, they were not from an encyclicals or anything that should be regarded as infallible. It is simply from a private musing. We have no reason to adhere to it. So I wouldn’t give it much thought if I were you. Pope’s are allowed to err in their private opinions. In fact, with some books like the Jesus of Nazareth which are theological works, the Pope clearly states that it is his personal work and not his teachings and they might have errors. So I hope you see that you have to know your priorities when it comes to siding. The teachings of the church are priority.
So the Catechism, which is the teachings of the church, CLEARLY state that ‘Today there is no need for Capital Punishment’. That is something you must adhere to and you simply cant dismiss it as just prudential rhetoric.
It is certainly true that the Church opposes the use of capital punishment, but the opposition comes not from the belief that in today’s societies it is immoral but from a belief that in today’s societies it does more harm than good. The opposition is prudential, not moral - and it is an opinion I don’t share.
Ender
You are incorrect.
Under today’s society, it is immoral. Some actions that are not intrinsically immoral, become immoral under the context. For an example, going to McDonalds is not intrinsically immoral. But if I go there and get a Big Mac right after a heart attack, fully well knowing the risks, that is immoral.
It’s similar here. Knowing that we can give a person a second chance to repent and correct themselves, to put him/her to death is not an act of love. It is immoral.
Ask yourself this (you don’t really need to tell me the answer), if the person who is committed the crime was your Son or daughter, or your wife, would you want to end their lives? Or would you want to try and make them repent for what they did and at least try to save their souls?
This is the same with any other criminal. They are our brothers and sisters. We should love them just as much no matter what they have done especially since we have the means to do so safely without causing anyone else further harm.
God Bless
