Good Morning Ender
If you’re going to simply ignore my citations then debate is useless. I just posted that very part of the catechism along with the endnote it referenced, which completely refutes your assertion, yet you respond as if I had said nothing at all. My citation was part of the catechism. How can you pretend it simply doesn’t exist?
I apologize. I looked back and cannot find anything that refutes the fact that death does not contribute to the correction of the guilty party or serve such a “medicinal” purpose. Please post the reference in response here, if you wish.
No, I clearly do not speak for the church. I do, however, speak what the church herself has spoken.
Yes, and as in the reference to slavery, a person could also promote slavery today based on the Church’s past practices. I am sure that when the Church developed its modern position on slavery, there was some push-back from people who wanted slaves. Today, there is push-back from people who want to put murderers to death. Change is not easy.
I’m not speaking “for” the church; I’m explaining her doctrines. Are you claiming that vengeance is sinful?
Well, we have this:
Matthew 38 “You have heard that it was said, ‘Eye for eye, and tooth for tooth.’[h] 39 But I tell you, do not resist an evil person. If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to them the other cheek also. 40 And if anyone wants to sue you and take your shirt, hand over your coat as well.
and we have Mark 11:25, which says that we are to forgive anyone we hold anything against.
When I am in the mode where I want revenge, I speak for myself that I know I am living in sin. My own spirituality is such that I have a connection with all people, so a new feeling of resentment toward anyone is a fracture in this “wholeness”. If sin is defined as alienation, which I think is a great definition, then it is true that my wanting vengeance is alienating me from some part of creation, namely a single person.
I cannot judge desire for revenge any more than I can judge anger. Both are God-given parts of our nature, and serve us to some degree. However, Jesus calls us to transcend our own nature, not to be a slave to it.
Until we forgive, we are slaves, we are alienated. Forgiveness erases desire for revenge.