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SpiritMeadow
Guest
If you expect me to respond don’t take a sentence out of a post and add it to another sentence from another post. I can’t answer you. Tell me what post you refer to in the above. The one below I found and will respond to…This is incorrect if you mean by it that a Catholic must oppose the death penalty. In the early 1200’s, pope Innocent III required the Waldensiens, who opposed the death penalty but wanted reconciliation with the Church, to accept that: *“The secular power can, without mortal sin, exercise judgment of blood, provided that it punishes with justice, not out of hatred, with prudence, not precipitation.” *If your assertion is correct then the Waldensiens were right and the Church was wrong until 1995.
I have no idea what you think this means vis a vis what I said.“Only a morality which acknowledges certain norms as valid always and for everyone, with no exception, can guarantee the ethical foundation of social coexistence”. (JPII Veritatis splendor) The Church has always held that morality does not change with place and time. If what Aquinas said was right when he said it it is every bit as true today.
If there is a reason to refrain from the death penalty it can only be for the prudential reason that it does more harm than good. The Church has always recognized (and does even today) that the state has the moral right to execute criminals for particularly heinous crimes.
Well apparently you are not reading what is posted. That is simply not the statements made by the Vatican and the USCCB. It is not a weighing of harm vs good as you state. That is not the standard. The only acceptable standard is the the infliction of death is the only means available to protect society. And the Pope has said that this is nearly always not the case. Perhaps a review of the documents I cited will assist you in learning the correct position.Ender