S
Sunflower15
Guest
I find it interesting that I understand the exact opposite.Just punishment is not a political issue. The reason I support the death penalty is because I believe, based on what the Church has taught throughout history, the obligation of justice requires it. The restrictions placed on executions by 2267 are prudential, based on the belief that in current society they cause more harm than good; they are not moral judgments on the justness of such sentences.
Ender
The Church has taught throughout centuries that we have a right to restrain a criminal from doing more harm to selves and to others, but not to punish per se. [Read that post on the Catechism again]
In other words, not that executions are just but that they may be necessary [prudentially] to deter further harm done.
Mercy has always been a Christian value…more so than justice, especially of the human kind…according to the written law rather than to the spirit of the law. Jesus spend 3 years of ministry trying to get that point across to the Pharisees who followed the law to the letter…even if they were really good at it!
I thought I would find some to debate about capital punishment for guilty criminals, but I never thought that I would actually find someone who in good conscience would feel that it is fine to execute someone who is believed to even possibly be innocent of that crime for which he is being punished.
What type of justice is that? What government or what religion can possibly justify that sort of justice?