C
catharina
Guest
The CCC says this:Please show where in the Bible or the Catechism where it says corporal punishment is morally wrong.
Your statements and conclusions are not of logic but emotion. Being a parent isn’t easy, we need to pray for the grace to make the right choices for our children. It isn’t about always about warm and fuzzy feelings but making hard choices in the best interest of our child. Spanking my child was not an easy choice, especially with my husband’s back ground as an abused child. I don’t parent based on emotions, and I wasn’t spanking her out of anger or frustration. I was trying to break the spiral of out of control emotions that she couldn’t get under control.
Since you are the one holding a view that is not based on the Bible or on the teaching of the Church, there is no reason why I should have to defend my parenting. God Bless.![]()
2223 Parents have the first responsibility for the education of their children. They bear witness to this responsibility first by creating a home where tenderness, forgiveness, respect, fidelity, and disinterested service are the rule. The home is well suited for education in the virtues. This requires an apprenticeship in self-denial, sound judgment, and self-mastery - the preconditions of all true freedom. Parents should teach their children to subordinate the “material and instinctual dimensions to interior and spiritual ones.” [CA 36 § 2] Parents have a grave responsibility to give good example to their children. By knowing how to acknowledge their own failings to their children, parents will be better able to guide and correct them: [1804]
He who loves his son will not spare the rod… He who disciplines his son will profit by him. [Sir 30:1-2] Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord. [Eph 6:4]
One quote is from the OT. The next is from the NT. It takes no great leap of the imagination or will to know that we are called to emulate the teachings of the NT. The very word “discipline” when taken from the Latin gives the meanings of learning and teaching. It gives no sense of “punishment” attached to either task.
My bias (and I have one) was reinfoced quite well in the 30+ years I spent raising hundreds of other people’s children in residential settings. Almost without exception, these children were taken from homes where physical punishment was a part of their daily lives. Also I spent a number of years carrying for infants, toddlers and preschoolers who were in confinement in a pediatric skilled nursing unit. All the parents who told the media “I never meant to hurt 'em so bad” probably meant what they said. When someone gives in to physical force as a learning tool aimed at a very SMALL human being, one has not found the best way to teach God’s love. In the context of the skilled-nursing unit, I’ve bathed a dead baby. Have you? Think hard before you strike anyone; as for striking a child, “smack” yourself instead.