SoCalRC, if you happen to be personally against it, that’s fine. But please, just answer my painfully simple question.
The death penalty is not intrinsically evil. In the Catholic faith, few things are. Look at war, slavery, and infanticide.
We have a few teachings that are very near absolute, but even then the Church does not use the words “intrinsically evil”. For example, murder, direct euthanasia, and direct abortion are always “grave moral disorders”.
Our understanding is that acts can be good or bad depending on their context. Jesus gives us an example of this in the Parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:25-37). A man is beaten, robbed, and left for dead. A priest, seeing the man, crosses to the other side of the road and passes by. In modern eyes, we think of an unwillingness to help or get involved, ala’ the famous Kitty Genovese murder:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitty_Genovese
But given the context of the parable, a “scholar of the law” asking the question, one aspect we miss is that the priest was concerned with purity laws, which we can see in Leviticus and Deuteronomy. A priest would be rendered unclean by contact with a corpse. The priest and the levite where following the letter of one Biblical law at the expense of a higher one. The despised Samaritan answered the higher law.
I use this example, because you will often run into its equivelent in discussing the death penalty in a supposedly Catholic context. The simplest answer is to point you to the Catechism of the Catholic Church (#2266 and #2267). At that point, many people who want to pretend that the death penalty is not a clear teaching in our faith will parse the words and note that the text leaves room for the possiblility of the death penalty.
The first big problem with this is that the Catechism is a collected synopsis of Church teaching. Almost every numbered entry has referrences to other entires and almost every page has footnotes leadings to volumes of Church documents and many, many passages of Scripture. So people are essentially trying to split hairs on a ‘Cliff Notes’ summary.
If you bother to point this out to them, indicating, say, that the quote about the need for the death penalty being “practically non-existant” comes from a Papal Encyclical (EVANGELIUM VITAE), you run into the second big problem- - not only are they using the ‘cliff notes’, they are not even using all of them.
I’ve even heard the remarkably novel argument that the Pope has no authority to judge the application of the death penalty for the United States. That argument is actually beyond heresy, it is technically anathema (excommunication is seperation from the body of the faithful, anathema is seperation from the body of Christ):
“If anyone should say that the Roman Pontiff has merely the function of inspection or direction but not full and supreme power of jurisdiction over the whole Church, not only in matters pertaining to faith and morals… let him be anathema” - Dogmatic Constitution of the Church of Christ, #3
But even more importantly, it wholly ignores Part One of the Catechism, which elaborates on things we collectively profess to be true in the Nicene Creed each Mass. Even the ‘cliff notes’ explains that we are an Apostolic Church with a Gift of a Authority and a Heirarchy setup by God.
We have a USCCB in part, to directly address the need for interpretation in the context of local conditions. So when the USCCB calls for the end of the death penalty:
usccb.org/sdwp/national/deathpenalty/
It is the appropriate Church authority (empowered to act “in persona Christi Capitas” (CCC #875)). There are no rougue or dissenting factions, it is a “collegiate” entity of the Church (CCC #877). Their authority on the matter is clear (CCC #886 and #887) and expressly extended by the one Vicar of Christ (#881, #882, and #883).
The Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith Prefect has, in a letter, indicated that disagreement about the death penalty does not render one unfit for Holy Communion. But Church teaching remains clear, for Catholics the death penalty in the US is immoral. By Papal Authority, the gravity is closely akin to abortion (EVANGALIUM VITAE puts it in the same context as abortion, euthanasia, and murder).
There are Christian sects that argue that we should each interpret such things for ourselves. Catholicism is not one of them. You may recall that Pope Benedict approved a document last year reaffirming the Primacy of the Catholic Church - based principally on our apostolic nature:
vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20070629_responsa-quaestiones_en.html