How should I understand the CC's view on capital punishment?

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I haven’t looked too thoroughly for any writings that specifically address the intrinsic good in a thing, but they do exist. To pray is to put yourself at the mercy of God in an act of faith. People have struggled with how to pray for … millenia. The Apostles asked Jesus how to pray. If we take an ungodly request to God, we are reacting in some sort of ignorance, but we are still submitting to the power of God and that is an intrinsically good act.

The Sacraments are of the same nature. Someone can approach the Sacraments with an ignorant or malicious heart, but the Sacrament remains intrinsically good. A person may condemn themselves but the Sacrament does not condemn them. St Teresa of Avila even related an incident that demonstrates the intrinsic good of the Eucharist…
The sacraments are of course good in themselves, but they are not actions. The receiving of the sacrament is an action and so receiving them with a bad intent would be wrong. Remember that movie in which someone tried to frame a priest for murder by confessing to him?
 
I haven’t looked too thoroughly for any writings that specifically address the intrinsic good in a thing, but they do exist.
There is a reason things can be intrinsically bad but not intrinsically good. The morality of an act is determined by the nature of the action itself and the intent behind it (and to a lesser extent by the circumstances). If either of these is bad then the act is bad. Something that is intrinsically bad is bad in all circumstances so the intent is irrelevant. An act cannot be intrinsically good - that is, good in all situations - because the intent may be bad, which makes the action bad. If something was intrinsically good then it would have to mean that the intent behind the act wouldn’t matter, but this can never be the case.
Capital punishment is not an enduring institution…
Actually it is, as is shown by the fact that the church has always recognized it as a just punishment, and as we know that morality cannot change with time or place, it will always be a just punishment.
… and its subjection to ‘prudential judgement’ proves that to be the case. It is a sentence with a civil purpose. Not an enduring institution.
The selection of bishops is also subject to prudential judgment but this hardly means that the office of bishop is not an enduring institution.

Ender
 
Okay, so abortion (among other topics) is something that has consistently been condemned in Church teaching since its beginning, and infallibly defined as morally evil. We will not find such a thing for capital punishment. Capital punishment was openly practiced through the entirety of the past two millenniums in Christian lands, and continues to be practiced some today. There didn’t seem to be a huge outcry from the Church with that, or if there was, it was a peep compared to its firmness on other issues. However, taking a life is always an evil thing, and in Catholic theology it only is made acceptable through the principle of double effect.

So how is it that this view developed into a more firm stance against capital punishment today, when the technology to quarantine people is something that has been around for ages? If, let’s say, we fell into a dystopian future, would this cease to be much of an issue once again? How much of this is discretionary?
As I understand, Capital Punishment was also about Justice. This is usually referred to as the medicinal and punitive value of Capital Punishment.

This is not a question merely about whether one can be held securely without chance of escape. It also has to do with how it acts as a social deterrent and to show that the crime is something unacceptable to do.

When a criminal is held with high standards of care, it can make the society feel that there is injustice. It can feel like the person received a ticket to a good life by committing an act of crime. Capital Punishment in this sense avoids this pitfall. It also gives an immediate incentive for the criminal to repent because his/her life is about to end soon.

So Capital Punishment in this sense could still be allowed and the CCC does say that the government has the authority to use it. You can read more about the “medicinal value” of Capital Punishment here

catholicculture.org/commentary/otn.cfm?id=962

EDIT: My personal view on this matter is that this discouragement for society to engage in criminal acts can be established in other ways and incentive to repent can also be offered in other creative ways. In this sense, the world of today is much different. We have access to much knowledge that can help us deal with criminals and “incentivize” their repentance while maintaining the social perception that criminal acts are punished.

So I personally do believe that Capital Punishment can be removed from the system now with some modifications to the prison system.
 
As I understand, Capital Punishment was also about Justice. This is usually referred to as the medicinal and punitive value of Capital Punishment.
What has been almost completely lost in discussions about capital punishment is the entire concept of justice and the nature of punishment itself. The church recognizes that punishment has four valid objectives: retribution, rehabilitation, deterrence, and protection, and of these four the primary objective is retribution - retributive justice.

When the Papal States existed they had their own executioner who was nicknamed Mastro Titta, which was slang for Master of Justice, and it is the obligation of justice that demands the severity of the punishment be commensurate with the severity of the crime. The most reasonable explanation for the command given by God himself in Gn 9:6 (Whoever sheds the blood of man by man shall his blood be shed…) is that, because of the dignity of a man’s life, the only punishment commensurate with the severity of the crime of murder is execution.

Ender
 
What has been almost completely lost in discussions about capital punishment is the entire concept of justice and the nature of punishment itself. The church recognizes that punishment has four valid objectives: retribution, rehabilitation, deterrence, and protection, and of these four the primary objective is retribution - retributive justice.

When the Papal States existed they had their own executioner who was nicknamed Mastro Titta, which was slang for Master of Justice, and it is the obligation of justice that demands the severity of the punishment be commensurate with the severity of the crime. The most reasonable explanation for the command given by God himself in Gn 9:6 (Whoever sheds the blood of man by man shall his blood be shed…) is that, because of the dignity of a man’s life, the only punishment commensurate with the severity of the crime of murder is execution.

Ender
Yes, and I think as the article expresses, the absence in the CCC of this aspect of Capital Punishment may have lead people to think of it primarily as a protective measure. It may also have to do with the pervading mentality in our culture today that sinners and sins should be tolerated as long as they do not pose an immediate threat to us (the “let them be” attitude).

I do personally think that if we were to modify our prison systems to become more like an actual punishment (I am a big fan of the old “send people to Siberia” that Russia used :)), I think we can preserve the full effects of Capital Punishment without actually ending the life.

Given the times we live in where life is treated like dirt, it might not be a bad idea to look in to such a modification and move away from Capital Punishment. But people should be catechized more so that they understand why the Church used it in the past and can defend that usage.
 
OR… if they continue to kill while incarcerated.

It is a question of Justice, not just the protection of life. Is it just to kill a person guilty of a capital offense?

Justice is the reason the state exists. See firstthings.com/article/2008/08/catholicism-amp-capital-punishment-21

This is a great exposition on the purposes of punishment.
Rehabilitation
Defense against the criminal
Deterrence
Retribution
Actually, based on the content of the CCC continuing to kill while incarcerated it wouldn’t qualify as jails and prisons are big into isolation cells where extremely dangerous criminals or criminals that have killed in jail/got into fights/have attacked others. They also have many restraining ways that they use, so then again there are other non lethal ways to be ways to be used so capital punishment would not be permitted. Again, the only way within a jail in which capital punishment would be allowed that it can be thought is similar to mass shooting, a massive riot in which the police has lost total control of the population and someone has a gun and is killing everybody (similar to the mass shooting) and the only way to regain control of the facility would be for the police to shoot at the aggressor. Again besides that situation I cannot think of any other situation that can possibly pass the CCC’s exceptions.

The article is interesting but it is not written from a legal perspective which to me makes it a little lacking as the purposes of.punishment are again from a moral point of view, not from a legal point of view. Also, it does not address the first sentence of the CCC “assuming that the guilty party’s identity and responsibility has been fully determined”. Unless the criminal.is Caught and shot in the act, this assumption is almost impossible to bring it down to reality.
 
Actually, based on the content of the CCC continuing to kill while incarcerated it wouldn’t qualify as jails and prisons are big into isolation cells where extremely dangerous criminals or criminals that have killed in jail/got into fights/have attacked others. They also have many restraining ways that they use, so then again there are other non lethal ways to be ways to be used so capital punishment would not be permitted. Again, the only way within a jail in which capital punishment would be allowed that it can be thought is similar to mass shooting, a massive riot in which the police has lost total control of the population and someone has a gun and is killing everybody (similar to the mass shooting) and the only way to regain control of the facility would be for the police to shoot at the aggressor. Again besides that situation I cannot think of any other situation that can possibly pass the CCC’s exceptions.
In your scenario, the killing is not a punishment, it is an act of self defense.

I don’t think unending solitary confinement would be better than capital punishment. At least with CP, you have the certainty of your death and as Samuel Johnson wrote:
“Depend upon it, sir, when a man knows he is to be hanged in a fortnight, it concentrates his mind wonderfully.”
 
The sacraments are of course good in themselves, but they are not actions. The receiving of the sacrament is an action and so receiving them with a bad intent would be wrong. Remember that movie in which someone tried to frame a priest for murder by confessing to him?
Yes but Ender is saying that capital punishment is not the action but an ‘institution’ basically in the way that the sacraments are an ‘institution’. He says that when Pope JPII said that capital punishment is cruel and unnecessary, that he must be saying that this ’ special nature’ is cruel and unnecessary and that can’t be true because doctrines can’t change. There would never be an occasion where you would say that the sacraments are cruel and unnecessary or that praying was cruel and unnecessary or that justice was cruel and unnecessary. Pope John Paul was very deliberate in showing the nature of capital punishment as having no ‘special nature’.
What has been almost completely lost in discussions about capital punishment is the entire concept of justice and the nature of punishment itself.
Those concepts have not been lost at all. It seems like a problem to you because you are clinging to a defunct pre-Christian theology with regards to capital punishment. When God gave Noah Gen 6:9 is was like a chicken laying an egg. You have this thing and you call it an egg. You see and know it as a hard oval fragile thing that has great importance in protecting what is inside. You treat it with reverence as you transport it from the chook yard to the kitchen. Then comes time to create an omelette and the egg is cracked open. That’s when we really see and know the egg. We now call the contents ‘the egg’. The hard fragile case is now just the shell. It served a purpose in getting the essence of the egg from A to B, but it is no longer necessary and it would in fact be cruel to the diners to try cramming the shell into the omelette as a vital and intrinsic part of the egg. Jesus came to crack eggs and make omelettes. We’ve tasted omelettes and love them to bits. We still value egg shells but only in the role of service in the process that leads to our banquet. We know now what the egg really is (nutritious edible food) and what justice really means (love thy neighbour as you love yourself).
The church recognizes that punishment has four valid objectives: retribution, rehabilitation, deterrence, and protection, and of these four the primary objective is retribution - retributive justice.
What do you make of Cardinal Dulles explanation…

“Retribution by the State has its limits because the State, unlike God, enjoys neither omniscience nor omnipotence. According to Christian faith, God “will render to every man according to his works” at the final judgment (Romans 2:6; cf. Matthew 16:27). Retribution by the State can only be a symbolic anticipation of God’s perfect justice.”
 
In your scenario, the killing is not a punishment, it is an act of self defense.

I don’t think unending solitary confinement would be better than capital punishment. At least with CP, you have the certainty of your death and as Samuel Johnson wrote:
The the exceptions have swallowed the rule in its totality. There is no real circumstance in which any CP can fit into what CCC says. Basically then they are saying we leave it to the government but no real circumstance can be moral. :confused::confused:

Actually from a legal perspective confinement is better. CP costs is much higher than keeping someone imprisoned. You are missing that there is a very long and complicated process before getting to that point which in the end costs states millions of dollars. New York reinstated it in 1995 and it was overturned by the Courts in 2004 because usually it causes more problems than nothing to the State (9 years no one condemned to execution was executed and they spent 170 million in just a handful of people). That is why I. said the article was nice but if they are missing the legal perspective they are off don reality.
 
Quoting from Cardinal Dulles article ( firstthings.com/article/2008/08/catholicism-amp-capital-punishment-21 )
St. Augustine writes in The City of God:
The same divine law which forbids the killing of a human being allows certain exceptions, as when God authorizes killing by a general law or when He gives an explicit commission to an individual for a limited time. Since the agent of authority is but a sword in the hand, and is not responsible for the killing, it is in no way contrary to the commandment, “Thou shalt not kill” to wage war at God’s bidding, or for the representatives of the State’s authority to put criminals to death, according to law or the rule of rational justice.
and
Pope Innocent III required disciples of Peter Waldo seeking reconciliation with the Church to accept the proposition: “The secular power can, without mortal sin, exercise judgment of blood, provided that it punishes with justice, not out of hatred, with prudence, not precipitation.”
I think this would lay to rest any claim the Capital Punishment is a “a defunct pre-Christian theology”

also
In modern times Doctors of the Church such as Robert Bellarmine and Alphonsus Liguori held that certain criminals should be punished by death. Venerable authorities such as Francisco de Vitoria, Thomas More, and Francisco Suárez agreed. John Henry Newman, in a letter to a friend, maintained that the magistrate had the right to bear the sword, and that the Church should sanction its use, in the sense that Moses, Joshua, and Samuel used it against abominable crimes.
and:
The Vatican City State from 1929 until 1969 had a penal code that included the death penalty for anyone who might attempt to assassinate the pope
And Cardinal Dulles writes:
Pius XII, in a further clarification of the standard argument, holds that when the State, acting by its ministerial power, uses the death penalty, it does not exercise dominion over human life but only recognizes that the criminal, by a kind of moral suicide, has deprived himself of the right to life. In the Pope’s words,
Even when there is question of the execution of a condemned man, the State does not dispose of the individual’s right to life. In this case it is reserved to the public power to deprive the condemned person of the enjoyment of life in expiation of his crime when, by his crime, he has already dispossessed himself of his right to life.
In light of all this it seems safe to conclude that the death penalty is not in itself a violation of the right to life. The real issue for Catholics is to determine the circumstances under which that penalty ought to be applied.

So, I think the real question should come down to that last line: The real issue for Catholics is to determine the circumstances under which that penalty ought to be applied.
 
The the exceptions have swallowed the rule in its totality. There is no real circumstance in which any CP can fit into what CCC says. Basically then they are saying we leave it to the government but no real circumstance can be moral. :confused::confused:

Actually from a legal perspective confinement is better. CP costs is much higher than keeping someone imprisoned. You are missing that there is a very long and complicated process before getting to that point which in the end costs states millions of dollars. New York reinstated it in 1995 and it was overturned by the Courts in 2004 because usually it causes more problems than nothing to the State (9 years no one condemned to execution was executed and they spent 170 million in just a handful of people). That is why I. said the article was nice but if they are missing the legal perspective they are off don reality.
When one is trying to create a just society, the cost of CP, should not be the issue. Justice should be.

The state has the right and duty to justly punish crimes. If CP is required for justice, then it should be applied.
 
I think this would lay to rest any claim the Capital Punishment is a “a defunct pre-Christian theology”
No, I wasn’t saying that capital punishment is a “defunct pre-Christian theology”… I’m saying Enders concept of it is. This is the culmination of who knows how many months of discussion I’ve endured with Ender.
So, I think the real question should come down to that last line: The real issue for Catholics is to determine the circumstances under which that penalty ought to be applied.
and that’s been done. The Church will only support capital punishment in the most extreme circumstances of which there are very few examples these days, to the end of protecting society. That’s what the Church is teaching us as Catholics.
 
The state has the right and duty to justly punish crimes. If CP is required for justice, then it should be applied.
But this is why I am so puzzled trying to understand this… The state has no duty to “justly” punish crimes. That is an utopia statement that any lawyer or judge or person that works with Courts knows and can tell you is totally false (in fact as one of.my law school professors used to say, if you are looking for.justice you are in the wrong path and wrong career). CP is not required for justice in 2013 and it hasn’t been for.many years. The CCC says that the guilt has to be fully determined and the responsibility too. That is plain impossible unless the person is caught in the act by police, which still doesn’t fit the CCC because at trial you have three policemen testifying and the three policemen say something completely different. All the state tries to do is punish people within the best of limited abilities i.e. their percentage of failure is quite high, they know it and they don’t put too much effort in improving it. so how do you make CP fitting of it is not for justice and if it first fit any of the requirements in the CCC. That is my difficulty reading all this.
 
and that’s been done. The Church will only support capital punishment in the most extreme circumstances of which there are very few examples these days, to the end of protecting society. That’s what the Church is teaching us as Catholics.
This is what I understand from the CCC, the church only supports it in practically non existing circumstances, the only one I can thing is mass shooters. In these days I have real difficulty finding a case in which the church supports it.
 
and that’s been done. The Church will only support capital punishment in the most extreme circumstances of which there are very few examples these days, to the end of protecting society. That’s what the Church is teaching us as Catholics.
As I said before, while I personally hold that Capital Punishment should probably be removed from the legal system today, we cannot deny that it is a valid method of punishment.

There is a bit of a problem with the CCC on this issue because it leaves out something more about the matter. That is the “medicinal” qualities of it. So the CCC in this sense is missing some teachings of the Church on this issue.

When taken as a whole, we see that Capital Punishment is not about safeguarding lives from the criminal. It also has to do with justice and making the criminal repent.

While I personally agree that today this can be done in alternate ways other than Capital Punishment, and probably should be removed out of prudence considering the tendency to treat life like dirt, you have to be clear on the reasons.
 
Yes but Ender is saying that capital punishment is not the action but an ‘institution’ basically in the way that the sacraments are an ‘institution’.
I have never said this. This may be your interpretation of my position but it is a concept I have never used. I’m not sure why you would think I believe executing someone is not an action.
He says that when Pope JPII said that capital punishment is cruel and unnecessary, that he must be saying that this ’ special nature’ is cruel and unnecessary and that can’t be true because doctrines can’t change.
You again ascribe to me a position I have never taken. I frankly don’t understand JPII’s comment: how can a punishment accepted (even if only in theory) by the church today be considered cruel? Are we saying the church accepts cruelty?
Those concepts have not been lost at all. It seems like a problem to you because you are clinging to a defunct pre-Christian theology with regards to capital punishment.
Let me point out that the understanding of punishment remains unchanged even in the 1997 version of the catechism, although it is presented in such a way as to confuse most who read it. There has also been no change in the concept of justice. The only thing to change has been the (prudential) opposition to the death penalty.
When God gave Noah Gen 6:9 is was like a chicken laying an egg. You have this thing and you call it an egg. … We now call the contents ‘the egg’. The hard fragile case is now just the shell. It served a purpose in getting the essence of the egg from A to B, but it is no longer necessary
Then how do you explain section 2260 which, in referring to Gn 9:6 says:* “This teaching remains necessary for all time”*?
Jesus came to crack eggs and make omelettes.
Once again his comments don’t coincide with your interpretation: “Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets;* I have come** not to **abolish **but to fulfill.*” (Mt 5:17)
What do you make of Cardinal Dulles explanation…
“Retribution by the State has its limits because the State, unlike God, enjoys neither omniscience nor omnipotence. According to Christian faith, God “will render to every man according to his works” at the final judgment (Romans 2:6; cf. Matthew 16:27). Retribution by the State can only be a symbolic anticipation of God’s perfect justice.”
I think he was explaining why JPII opposed capital punishment: because modern states have lost even their symbolic anticipation of God’s justice. Dulles supported JPII’s position against using the death penalty but he recognized that the opposition was prudential and not moral.

Ender
 
No, I wasn’t saying that capital punishment is a “defunct pre-Christian theology”… I’m saying Enders concept of it is.
Apparently you consider the book of Genesis to be an example of pre-Christian theology which begs the question of how that can be if it is the church herself which cites it. It is not that I have cited Gn 9:6; I have been citing church references to that passage. If it is quoted in its entirety in the current catechism how can it be dismissed as “pre-Christian theology”?
This is the culmination of who knows how many months of discussion I’ve endured with Ender.
Apparently without understanding most of what I’ve been saying.
The Church will only support capital punishment in the most extreme circumstances of which there are very few examples these days, to the end of protecting society.
I’ll try this again: the primary objective of all punishment - according to the catechism - is not protecting society. It is retribution - retributive justice. CCC 2266: The primary scope of the penalty is to redress the disorder caused by the offense.
Ender
 
But this is why I am so puzzled trying to understand this… The state has no duty to “justly” punish crimes.
If you assume it is impossible for the state to punish crimes with perfect justice then it seems there are only two alternatives: do the best you can or stop trying. Unless you are suggesting the state should not concern itself with justice then I see no alternative to doing our best and accept the shortcomings. In any event, the church teaches that the state has not just the right but the duty to punish crimes and to do so as justly as it can.CCC 2266 *"Legitimate public authority has the right and **duty *to inflict penalties commensurate with the gravity of the crime."
That the punishment be commensurate with the gravity of the crime is the obligation of justice.

Ender
 
But this is why I am so puzzled trying to understand this… The state has no duty to “justly” punish crimes. That is an utopia statement that any lawyer or judge or person that works with Courts knows and can tell you is totally false (in fact as one of.my law school professors used to say, if you are looking for.justice you are in the wrong path and wrong career). CP is not required for justice in 2013 and it hasn’t been for.many years. The CCC says that the guilt has to be fully determined and the responsibility too. That is plain impossible unless the person is caught in the act by police, which still doesn’t fit the CCC because at trial you have three policemen testifying and the three policemen say something completely different. All the state tries to do is punish people within the best of limited abilities i.e. their percentage of failure is quite high, they know it and they don’t put too much effort in improving it. so how do you make CP fitting of it is not for justice and if it first fit any of the requirements in the CCC. That is my difficulty reading all this.
One of the main purposes of government is to establish Justice. If the state fails in this enterprise, the state can be removed and another set up in it’s place.

Rm 13:1-4
Let every person be subordinate to the higher authorities, for there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have been established by God.
Therefore, whoever resists authority opposes what God has appointed, and those who oppose it will bring judgment upon themselves.
For rulers are not a cause of fear to good conduct, but to evil.b Do you wish to have no fear of authority? Then do what is good and you will receive approval from it,
for it is a servant of God for your good. But if you do evil, be afraid, for it does not bear the sword without purpose; it is the servant of God to inflict wrath on the evildoer
 
One of the main purposes of government is to establish Justice. If the state fails in this enterprise, the state can be removed and another set up in it’s place.

Rm 13:1-4
Again that is a moral point of view. What is moral and what is legal are two completely different things. CP is a legal concept. And I think that is why the CCC is written I’m that way because you have to address it from a legal point of view.
 
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