AlNg:
Father Murray questioned whether sending a person to hell would violate his dignity?
A person can violate their own dignity. But God cannot violate a person’s dignity. I would think a priest would know that.
Okay, then let’s try to reconcile God’s endorsement of the Mosaic Law which sanctioned capital punishment for a number of offenses.
Prescriptions of capital punishment for offenses against the Law would seem to indicate that if persons can violate their own dignity or that of others, then the eternal God himself was positively prescribing that human beings violate the dignity of others in the Holy Writ of the Old Testament.
Was God just NOT very aware of how prescribing death for serious transgression in the Mosaic Law was actually a violation against the dignity of human beings?
Of course not. The revision itself gives three reasons:
- There is an increasing awareness that the dignity of the person is not lost even after the commission of very serious crimes.
Increasing human awareness, unfortunately, does not demonstrate nor explain how God – whose awareness is presumably infinite – would positively endorse the capital punishment of those who committed serious crimes and assorted other transgressions of the Mosaic Law.
Has God’s moral awareness of human dignity, which is – we would suppose – infinite, also “increased,” not 2000 years ago, not 1000 years ago, not 500 years ago, but conveniently only in this current age?
If capital punishment is, today, an inherent violation of human dignity, then it would have also been such a violation 3500 years ago, no?
Or have human beings somehow been accorded a higher level of dignity today that is now potentially violated by capital punishment?
This opens another moral question for discussion. Is not any kind of punishment, even for lesser crimes, a fortiori, also not a violation of human dignity?
What is human dignity and when, exactly, is any action a violation it?
It would be important to know, just in case we do things to violate the dignity of others, who seem more and more insistent about having their dignity, for no matter what they do, properly respected.