It is a grave duty to stop the evil that the other person is doing if we have the apportunity and ability to do so.
Therin lies the qualification: “ability”. I can try to wrestle a gun from a guy when I am unarmed. I have the ability to do so. But is there any guarantee that I will be successful? Of course not. The qualification is ridiculous. If I have a weapon, does that mean I have the “ability” to stop a bad guy? Maybe, if I can shoot straight under stress. Maybe not. Can I draw my weapon faster than the bad guy can pull the trigger? And can I handle the psycological ramifications of having caused the death of another human being?
Sorry, it’s not as simple as “It is a grave duty to stop the evil that the other person is doing if we have the apportunity and ability to do so.”
If they mean you no harm, then they would not have threatened you with a deadly weapon. What is the purpose of their weapon if not to use harm or threat of harm to perform an evil act?
Ah, then we are obligated to shoot someone who merely threatens us? Your story changes…
How many people have been robbed at gunpoint but left unharmed? Carjacked and left unharmed? I’m not in law enforcement, but it would seem that a thief would want to take the easy way out…take what they want and get away.
You’re claiming that we are under the obligation to shoot the bad guy, or disarm him if we are “able” under the penalty of mortal sin. That’s ridiculous.
If someone is pointing a gun at you and you have done nothing to provoke the situation, then the logical conclusion is that he intends to do you harm and if you can stop him, you SHOULD because Church teaching states that you have a DUTY to do so. Given the fact that you’re life is in potential danger, you have a GRAVE duty to do so. What is the consequence in failing to perform a GRAVE duty? It is a GRAVE sin!
Bull. Why do police tell people to hand over their wallets if confronted with an armed robber? The LOGICAL CONCLUSION, I assume based on their experinece, is that the thief wants to take the easy way out, i.e. rob you and leave quickly.
No, none of us can know for certain what another person’s intent MAY be but we can make REASONABLE judgements based upon their actions. If they threaten us with violence, we can reasonably conclude that they indent to cause us violence.
Not necessarily. Why do police have negotiators, then? If the assumption that every bad guy with a gun is going to shoot someone, why do they try to talk the bad guy into giving up if the reasonable assumption is that he’s going to shoot? Why do they not just act immediately?
Or, you can hand him you wallet and he may not want you to be able to ID him to the police and he may kill you anyway. And he may go off and rob & kill others because of your FAILURE to stop him when you had the opportunity to do so. Not only would your failure cost you your own life but perhaps the lives of others who might not have the opportunity and/or ability when confronted by him.
You take Spiderman and The Incredibles too seriously…
Your failure to stop him if you have the ability and opportuntity to do so is a failure to oppose evil and is a sin of omission. If your life is at risk, then it involves grave matter and failure to perform that duty would be a grave sin of omission.
Using that simplistic logic, if you own a firearm, your failure to patrol the streets at night is a failure to oppose evil is a sin of omission. By not ridding the world of bad guys, you put your own life at risk and the lives of others at risk. You are guilty of a mortal sin of omission.
Scenario: You have a weapon. A bad guy robs you at gunpoint. By your logic, he is defacto intending on harming you. You hand him your wallet (as law enforcement would suggest) and he runs away. You figured that you could not pull out your weapon faster than he could pull the trigger. Your only way of stopping him is shooting him in the back as he’s running away. This is your obligation under the penalty of mortal sin??
That’s one of the more mistaken misinterpretations of church teachings I’ve read here on the CAF. Sorry, but your logic takes the notion of the duty to preserve one’s own life to a ridiculous extreme.