ddarko,
With the enabling grace of God, the penance that we do – be it prayers, fasting or justly being condemned to death – expiates the temporal punishment due to sins.
“God requires a temporal punishment as a satisfaction for sin to teach us the great evil of sin and to prevent us from falling again. The chief means by which we satisfy God for the temporal punishment due to sin are: Prayer, Fasting, Almsgiving; all spiritual and corporal works of mercy, and the patient suffering of the ills of life” (
Baltimore Catechism No. 3, qq. 804-805).
As executing a murderer is “proportionate to the gravity of [his] offense,” (
CCC, 2266) there is nothing wrong with justly administered capital punishment.
Yes, we can love others and still justly punish them for the wrongs they have committed. Forgiveness does not negate the need for restitution. See paragraphs 1459-1460 in the
Catechism.
What do you mean when you say that the situation today is longer that of which Pope Pius XII discussed? What has changed? I think that Ender made an excellent point in quoting both St. Thomas Aquinas and Pope Pius XII, viz. through capital punishment, the criminal expiates his crime
and is prevented from sinning any longer (which all criminals sentenced to life in prison invariably do).
Capital punishment, if administered justly, is morally good (or at least neutral, but
never evil). Why? God
Himself put men to death because of their crimes (cf. Num. 16:30; 1 Sam. 6:19), and He being all-good, cannot do that which is evil.
Going back to Pope Pius XII, saying that it is no longer necessary to make use of the death penalty apparently shows a forgetfulness that God Himself is sinned against when man murders another man. Capital punishment satisfies the justice
owed to God, and I would imagine it is much better than letting a murderer live so that he may
continue to sin against God while waiting to die in prison.
Again, capital punishment satisfies the justice owed to God, restores the social order, helps man to expiate his own sins (if he accepts his sentence by God’s grace), and prevents him from sinning further against God.
Captial punishment
does not violate the dignity of a justly convicted criminal; every man does have some dignity, although it can be increased or diminished by his moral actions (cf. Romano Amerio,
Iota Unum). Pius XII said that the criminal “deprived himself of the right to life by his crime” (14 September 1952).
Romano Amerio said, “There is in fact no unconditional right to any of the goods of earthly life; the only truly inviolable right is the right to seek one’s ultimate goal, that is truth, virtue and eternal happiness, and the means necessary to acquire these. This right remains untouched even by the death penalty.”
Six years before his death, Pope John Paul II said, “A sign of hope is the increasing recognition that the dignity of human life must never be taken away, even in the case of someone who has done great evil. … [T]he death penalty is both cruel and unnecessary” (St. Louis, MO, 27 January 1999).
A convicted criminal retains some dignity (he remains a rational creature possible of attaining eternal beatitude by his repentance and faith), but as he is
guilty of a crime deserving of death, he should not be confused as an
innocent man who indeed has the inviolable right to life. I see no reason why Pope John Paul II would say that the death penalty is
now “cruel” when God – Who is
eternal –
Himself carried out the death penalty
several times in the Old Testament.
So the 263 popes did not oppose or support Capital Punishment as something moral. It was supported as a method of carrying out something that was MORAL.
Let me see if I have this right: The popes did not support capital punishment as something moral, but instead they supported the use of capital punishment as something moral…
In order for an action to be moral, the object, intention and circumstances
must all be good. If the popes supported the use of capital punishment (object - what is done) to carry out justice (intent - the purpose) of justly-convicted criminals (circumstances), then it necessarily follows that
capital punishment itself is good, otherwise the popes would be supporting and encouraging something
evil.
Finally, I would once again like to point out: “If a Catholic were to be at odds with the Holy Father on the application of capital punishment… he would not for that reason be considered unworthy to present himself to receive Holy Communion” (
Cardinal Ratzinger,
Worthiness to Receive Holy Communion, n. 3; July 2004).
In order words, it is neither wrong nor sinful for me to support the death penalty, which is the traditional doctrine of the Church.