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Ender
Guest
No, they do not. The object (gun control) is not an issue of intrinsic evil, therefore one can be either for or against it without committing a sin. It is only in cases where the object itself is intrinsically evil that it determines the morality of the act. As for circumstances, not much help there either:From this I conclude that gun control is an object that can be chosen. The end and circumstances for which gun control is chosen contribute to placing it within the realm of morality.
1754 The circumstances, including the consequences, are secondary elements of a moral act… Circumstances of themselves cannot change the moral quality of acts themselves; they can make neither good nor right an action that is in itself evil.
Again, we’re not discussing the end use of guns; the issue is gun control. The question of whether stricter or more permissive control of handguns is harmful or beneficial is not a moral question. Everyone would like to see less violence, the disagreement is over how best to achieve it and that simply isn’t a moral question.The end use of guns can be to kill human beings. The 5th Commandment says: “Thou shalt not kill.” It is this end use that the Bishops are concerned about when they advocate for gun control.
Do stricter laws regarding the ownership of guns reduce crimes and violence? How would you go about answering that question: by researching crime statistics or by reading up on theology? Is it possible to regard answering that question to be anything other than a determination of fact? Where is the moral issue in determining fact?Gun control is a serious moral question.
Determining the root causes of violence is an anthropological question, not a moral one.The root causes of violence require the risk of commitments beyond which most of us are willing to go.
The question is not whether we are called or even whether we are willing to respond, it is about determining what will help. Three hundred years ago doctors bled patients thinking this would help. Neither the doctors applying leeches nor the doctors who rejected this treatment behaved immorally: they weren’t disagreeing on whether or not they should help, they were disagreeing about what techniques were helpful. It’s the same situation with regard to gun control; the disagreement is not over whether to help, it’s a disagreement over what actions are helpful.we are called to touch, be present to, people who are sick and in need of salvation.
Ender