OK, seems to me that you were saying that non-infallible teachings were optional, but I agree with you that they are not.
I don’t remember saying that the teaching was limited to advanced nations.
The basis for the suggestion was that since the justification for punishment is self-defense [institutionalized through the state], and since advanced nations are able to fulfill that necessity without putting people to death, the death penalty ought to be abolished. That is why I and other posters keep referring to advanced nations.
Are you saying that the DP should be abolished even in poor nations who cannot even come close to guaranteeing that someone who is put in prison will never again pose a threat? If so, then you are proposing taking away their right to self-defense, the state’s *obligation *to protect the society.
Do you deny that the Pope has teaching authority?
The pope has the authority to teach that which has been handed down to him, iow, the teachings of the Catholic Church. He has no papal authority to teach anything else.
Why is the current Pope, or the previous two, less authoritative than his predecessors?
They are all equally authorized, and in fact, that shows that this whole thing is a bit of a boondoggle.
If one pope can simply override what a previous pope taught, then the teachings of the Church become unstable, driven by the whims of whoever is pope.
Take the issue of slavery. What was left uncondemned was a system in which prisoners of war were enslaved. Those who did so did not have the ability to make effective POW camps the way we do now. The only other option, then, was to kill them; thus, slavery was a kinder option. The other way that people fell into slavery was more like indentured servitude: when people fell into debt, they enslaved themselves to pay off the debt.
When chattel slavery came into being, it was condemned immediately.
Wait, so you’re back to saying that Catholics must only assent to infallible statements?
That’s not what I said.
I thought we agreed that all Church teachings were authoritative? Which is it?
All Church teachings are authoritative. Not everything every pope says is a Church teaching.
I hope this is not a serious question. It is in the catechism, which is absolutely authoritative.
It is authoritative only insofar as it reflects Church teaching; for example, the first edition required corrections, and the section on the DP was re-written. IIRC, the original was more strongly against the DP, but I am not sure where my first edition CCC is, so I cannot verify this.
Here is what the CCC says (Note the 3rd paragraph, which explains the basis for this stance on the DP): 2267 Assuming that the guilty party’s identity and responsibility have been fully determined, *the traditional teaching of the Church does not exclude recourse to the death penalty, *if this is the only possible way of effectively defending human lives against the unjust aggressor. [And this underlined part is not part of the traditional teaching–it is incomplete.]
If, however, non-lethal means are sufficient to defend and protect people’s safety from the aggressor, authority will limit itself to such means, as these are more in keeping with the concrete conditions of the common good and more in conformity to the dignity of the human person.
Today, in fact, as a consequence of the possibilities which the state has for effectively preventing crime, by rendering one who has committed an offense incapable of doing harm - without definitely taking away from him the possibility of redeeming himself - the cases in which the execution of the offender is an absolute necessity "are very rare, if not practically nonexistent."68
The footnote refers the reader to Evangelium Vitae. Upon reading EV, the footnotes regarding the DP refer one back to the CCC. (very odd)
The Pope’s repeated comments are his teaching on how to apply the catechism, which is also authoritative.
The Pope offers *advice, *but whether or not to use the DP is a prudential judgement to be decided by the State. The use of the term *prudential judgement *signifies that the final decision rests not with the Church but with the competent authority, the State, which must use its judgement tempered by prudence to decide.
As an example, take abortion. Abortion is in no way a subject for prudential judgement; it is intrinsically wrong. The government cannot say, we have some circumstances here which justify permitting abortion.
OTOH, the government can say that circumstances exist in which we must go to war: that is prudential judgement.
The fact that something is a matter of prudential judgement does justify just any decision, the decision must fall in line with prudence.
I am not sure what you are calling absurd. I said that to the extent there is a conflict, the Church’s teachings are the Church’s current teachings. Not sure how that could be absurd.
It would be absurd if we were to have a situation in which Church was subject to change with every change of pontiff.
So you deny that the current Pope or his immediate predecessors have teaching authority?
Of course not, only that every word they speak is Catholic teaching.
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