Has anyone heard what the pope has to say about this, if anything?
just wondering… always wondering…
my position is well known by many here… I believe Roeder was guilty of, not murder (by a LONG shot) but “unauthorized capital punishment”.
“murder” is a word used when one is referirng to killing the innocent… Tiller could hardly be called innocent.
The Church is in favor of capital punishment when there is no other way for society to keep a murderer from murdering again… In other words, we must protect the innocent…
… wondering if anyone in the Vatican has attempted to get Pope Benedict’s opinion on this???
or is this something that’s not in the pope’s “job description”?
He’s guilty of murder. And it’s not even a difficult question – not by a long shot.
He killed another human being. That’s gravely immoral. I assume he’s claiming the right of “defense of others” – but there wasn’t anyone in immediate danger at the time (the abortionist was in church; he wasn’t about to perform an abortion). So his claim is patently false.
Killing in the name of “defense of others” requires as a fundamental presupposition the need of the killer to use deadly force to prevent an immediate death of another. Whom was Tiller
immediately about to kill? Answer: no one. He was in church, not his abortion clinic.
If you want to claim that Tiller could legitimately be killed because
at other times in other places he sinned and therefore wasn’t innocent, then almost anyone can be killed at any time, because none of us is innocent (I suppose we’d all be safe immediately after baptism or confession, until we reached the age of reason, and once we become incompetent, but that’s it).
Seriously, you’re really trying to define “murder” as “killing the innocent”? That is most decidedly
not Catholic theology. “Murder” is killing another human being without justification. So what’s the justification? He sinned gravely the previous week? That doesn’t count.
To draw an analogy: I don’t know exact numbers, but there were approximately 6,000,000 people killed during the Holocaust because they were Jewish. But, statistically, not all of those 6,000,000 people were completely innocent; surely some among them were guilty of grave sins, probably including murder. Do you contend that the Nazi regime was guilty of fewer than 6,000,000 murders? Of course not; it killed those 6,000,000 people for being Jewish – plainly
not a legitimate justification. So the regime was guilty of 6,000,000 murders,
even if some of those people were themselves murderers!
To draw another analogy: in
A Fish Called Wanda, Ken runs over Otto with a very slow-moving steam-roller (Otto survives, but let’s assume we all think he won’t). If you were standing there, could you kill Ken to prevent him from killing Otto? Not according to Catholic theology: there are other means available to protect Otto without having to kill Ken (jump up on the steam-roller, take the key, etc.). Shooting him would be immoral – specifically, it would be the grave sin of murder (killing a human being without justification, since the claimed justification – protecting a third person – was not actually present).
Your claim that Tiller could be executed because he was an abortionist – and that his killer isn’t guilty of murder because Tiller did bad things – is totally outside Catholic theology. It basically boils down to, “There are some humans it’s okay to gun down, even if they aren’t threatening anyone at the time.” That’s totally wrong. Tiller’s killer committed the mortal sin of murder of a fellow human being.
And, if Tiller would’ve repented later in life but can’t now because he’s dead, his killer will answer for it at the last judgment (yes, Tiller will have some explaining to do himself, but that doesn’t justify murdering him; the ends simply do not justify the means).
Capital punishment is limited to the state when it has no other means to protect its members; Tiller’s killer isn’t the state, so he doesn’t get that excuse. Even if he did, he had other options available to him. He deliberately chose the most extreme means available to him, when he could’ve chosen other means instead that did not require Tiller’s death.
And, by the way: the pro-life cause has been set back another 5-10 years by this incident. And it gets worse every time someone who claims to be “pro-life” defends murder.
(Caveat: None of us knows what really happened in the real-life case; perhaps the person accused of killing Tiller isn’t actually the one who did it; perhaps he was insane or incompetent; perhaps Tiller wasn’t actually an abortionist; perhaps whoever committed whatever sin was able to obtain forgiveness from God before dying; who knows? My points are limited to the what-if assumptions as stated in the OP).