R
Reformed_Rob
Guest
Ok, I’m going to try to be brief here…
If the Church has always been “against the death penalty”…I’m not saying it has or hasn’t, but IF it has…
Then why did Church authorities back in the Middle Ages turn over heretics to the civil authorities to be executed?
Like, you know, one of the ways we do apologetics for the Inquisitions is to say that it wasn’t the Church, it was the civil authorities that executed certain people.
But that brings up a social teaching issue for me…If the Church was against the death penalty back then, why didn’t the theologians and Magesterium say “Now don’t execute these people, that’s not right!”
Maybe they did, I don’t know. Of course, we know that it was the Inquisitor’s job to bring the accused or the heretic back into communion with the Church and with truth. Theirs was a mission of mercy, not condemnation. But the question still remains about the Church’s stance on the civil right to administer the death penalty.
I’m not like doubting the current teaching or being rebellious, I just have wondered for some time. There’s obviously more I could bring up…but that’s perhaps hitting at the core of the issue.
If the Church has always been “against the death penalty”…I’m not saying it has or hasn’t, but IF it has…
Then why did Church authorities back in the Middle Ages turn over heretics to the civil authorities to be executed?
Like, you know, one of the ways we do apologetics for the Inquisitions is to say that it wasn’t the Church, it was the civil authorities that executed certain people.
But that brings up a social teaching issue for me…If the Church was against the death penalty back then, why didn’t the theologians and Magesterium say “Now don’t execute these people, that’s not right!”
Maybe they did, I don’t know. Of course, we know that it was the Inquisitor’s job to bring the accused or the heretic back into communion with the Church and with truth. Theirs was a mission of mercy, not condemnation. But the question still remains about the Church’s stance on the civil right to administer the death penalty.
I’m not like doubting the current teaching or being rebellious, I just have wondered for some time. There’s obviously more I could bring up…but that’s perhaps hitting at the core of the issue.