Clearly? Obviously not to the people of that time, and place.
Well, to some it was.
And clearly we now recognize that those folks–condemned at the time–were right.
At least most of us do.
Some on this forum don’t, and that is disturbing and terrifying.
Your argument would be better served if you had said: "Clearly any death at the hands of another human being (self defense and war not included) goes against the will of the Spirit. You make it sound like more humane ways of execution are okay in the eyes of the Spirit.
A good point. I do think that the brutality of the method makes it more certain that the Spirit would not approve, yes.
There are three issues to consider here:
- Whether the death penalty is ever legitimate.
- Whether the death penalty for heretics is legitimate.
- Whether burning at the stake is a legitimate method of punishment.
I accept the teaching of the Catholic Church, as developed up to this point. That is to say, that the death penalty may be legitimate, but only when there is no other way to defend the innocent, and that it should be applied as humanely as possible. I also do not believe that the Church should encourage or condone the state’s using the death penalty as a punishment for heresy or other spiritual offenses.
Hence, I answer a cautious “yes” to 1 and a resounding “no” to 2 and 3.
Heresy was considered a capital crime. Burning was an accepted form of execution of that particular capital crime by the civil authorities back in the day. Just as hanging, firing squads, electrocution, and lethal injection for capital crimes in later years. Crucifixion was an accepted form in the days of the Roman Empire.
You are surely not suggesting that whatever the secular authorities happen to do is just OK, are you?
You take offense at the pope saying it was not against the will of the Spirit. Clearly the reformers did not, as was proven by their actions during the Reformation.
Untrue. Calvin sought the execution of Servetus, but wanted him beheaded, not burned. Luther later approved of the execution of “seditious” Anabaptists, and certainly the line between sedition and heresy could be thin. But it did exist.
(Luther did say that burning of witches was acceptable.
Is witchcraft worse than heresy?)
Yes, actually it is, assuming that the person is genuinely guilty of witchcraft–i.e., of using magical powers to harm people and/or of deliberately making an alliance with the forces of evil.
But of course I oppose burning witches as well, so this is a red herring.
I look at Leo’s answer as basically saying: that civil authorities have the right to perform that type of capital punishment, which again was the norm for that time in history. Just as in latter years the Church has stated that civil authorities do have the right to exercise capital punishment. I am positive that people through the years have called any form of capital punishment against the will of the Spirit.
This is not about capital punishment in general. It is about a particularly horrific form of capital punishment being inflicted as a temporal penalty for a spiritual crime. Furthermore, given the Church’s laudable desire to avoid handing people over for execution if at all possible, in practice the only people executed were usually the most sincerely pious heretics, who refused to recant because they were deeply convinced that they were following God.
The effect of the Church sanctioning and participating in the brutal killing of some of the most genuinely pious people in late medieval/early modern Europe was utterly disastrous on a spiritual level. It was clearly against the will of the Spirit. If it wasn’t, then I see no way that any of us can possibly know anything about the Spirit at all.
Are drowning, forced starvation, firing squads where intentional wounding of the victim so that they remain alive laying in pain, beheading, lethal injection where you may fight to stay awake knowing that when you close your eyes you are done, lethal injection where they did not administer the shot correctly, electrocution where not enough voltage was administered, …less ickier to you, because they are not to me.
Some of the methods you describe are as bad as burning; some aren’t, necessarily. But I’m not interested to defend any form of capital punishment. I am interested to maintain the proposition that this particular form is clearly wrong and that the execution of this particular category of “criminals” is clearly wrong. And I clearly have all the authorities of the modern Catholic Church on my side on both those points.