I
im_wildrose
Guest
Hi,
I was recently stunned to realize that someone I’ve known for many years supports the death penalty. Even more surprising, however, was why. She feels that placing a convict under penalty of death makes him or her more likely to seek repentance and more likely to get the benefit of spiritual counsel and reception of the Sacraments. She used the example of a convict who is murdered by fellow inmates and doesn’t then have the opportunity to know when death is coming. She used other arguments to defend her position (problems with crimes being ordered and carried out from within prison walls, crime within prisons, the reasoning of St. Thomas Aquinas, etc.) but her basic premise is that it is MORE merciful to give a hardened criminal a sentence of death as well as safer and “better” in general, than not.
I understand that the Church does not forbid the use of the death penalty when it is necessary, but I have been under the impression that it is to be used only when there is a danger to society, and that it is preferable to leave the prisoner alive, working toward conversion and repentance.
I listen to a LOT of Catholic radio and I have never heard her line of reasoning and, honestly, it doesn’t make sense to me. Has anyone else ever heard this before? (Oh, and she is a very devout and serious Catholic which is another reason I was so stunned.)
Deo Juvante, Jen
I was recently stunned to realize that someone I’ve known for many years supports the death penalty. Even more surprising, however, was why. She feels that placing a convict under penalty of death makes him or her more likely to seek repentance and more likely to get the benefit of spiritual counsel and reception of the Sacraments. She used the example of a convict who is murdered by fellow inmates and doesn’t then have the opportunity to know when death is coming. She used other arguments to defend her position (problems with crimes being ordered and carried out from within prison walls, crime within prisons, the reasoning of St. Thomas Aquinas, etc.) but her basic premise is that it is MORE merciful to give a hardened criminal a sentence of death as well as safer and “better” in general, than not.
I understand that the Church does not forbid the use of the death penalty when it is necessary, but I have been under the impression that it is to be used only when there is a danger to society, and that it is preferable to leave the prisoner alive, working toward conversion and repentance.
I listen to a LOT of Catholic radio and I have never heard her line of reasoning and, honestly, it doesn’t make sense to me. Has anyone else ever heard this before? (Oh, and she is a very devout and serious Catholic which is another reason I was so stunned.)
Deo Juvante, Jen