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Mike_from_NJ
Guest
First of all, Aquinas’s idea that idea that heretics deserve “banishment… from this world by death” is a monstrous concept. It and of itself is a black mark on the Church. Disagreement with the Church deserves no penalty then or now, and most certainly not one of death.Here is a quote from St. Thomas Aquinas concerning the killing of heretics and why it was done.
An inquisition was necessary at times because the laity were already burning people alive for heresy. There would be a lot of chaos unless a formal and institutionalized court was established. Is the Inquisition a perfect system that had no evil people leading it? No. Just like our American courts are not perfect since both are run by sinners who can do evil and they are humans that can make mistakes.
Aquinas’s second statement there where the Church is to show mercy by giving a person multiple chances to renounce any heresy (from the Church’s perspective) builds upon that fallacious idea that only those in agreement with the Church should be allowed to live.
Your statement that the inquisition(s) was/were necessary because the laity were burning heretics has several flaws. One, why would the laity assume it is good and right to burn heretics? Because the Church said it was. Two, is the Church bound to work hand-in-hand with the governments or can they speak out against what they believe is wrong? We know that the Church today will speak out against injustice if they feel wrong is being done. Are you suggesting that the Church set up the inquisitions to stop the burning of heretics? It’s clear the Church was for that abominable practice because they saw it as a crime worthy of death, no matter whether local governments were in agreement or not.
Does the Church feel heretics today should be forced to recant their heresies under penalty of death? If not, why not? Why this change in policy? And if this change in policy was because the practice was wrong, then (bringing this back to the OP) wouldn’t it be fair to say that this is a black mark on the Church?
One final thought: You compared the courts of the inquisitions to American courts. Who do American courts put to death? Murderers. We don’t put people in the electrical chair for philosophical differences. Do you agree with Aquinas when he says that a heretic should be treated harsher than a counterfeiter?