Except for your last comment below,
Originally Posted by Voco proTatiano
The OT theology has G_d as a vengeful judge, NT theology sees G_d as a Loving Father. The Former was quick to wrath, the latter patient unto the last day.
Yes, if you look in the OT, you can find wisdom leading to the New Covenant, likewise in the new testament, you can find a longing for the older order.
Reading the Pentateuch, however, which is the repository for Jewish LAW, and by implication, the forerunner of ours. G_d is portrayed as a stern judge, sometimes seen as vengeful.
(JPII 2000) “Imprisonment as punishment is as old as human history.”
This is taken out of context, and is generally false.
Imprisonment was generally used as a holding measure prior to judgement and sentence.
You are wallowing in deliberate falseness to cling to any other idea.
(CCC 1898) "Every human community needs an authority to govern it. … The authority required by the moral order derives from God: “Let every person be subject to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have been instituted by God. Therefore he who resists the authorities resists what God has appointed.”
So G_d appointed Adolf Hitler, General Franco, Benito Mussolini, Pol Pot, Robert Mugabe, and Saddam Hussain.
Perhaps then GWB should be arrained for complicity in the murder of G_ds appointed ruler of Iraq?
Of course this is a ridiculous argument. It cannot be pushed to logical extremes. It only represents a general truth. The generality of the institution is necessary, but that puts no blessing on how the institution behaves.
An opinion, even of a pope, does not constitute Church teaching. It is incorrect to imply that JPII’s prudential judgment on the use of the death penalty is a binding moral obligation; it is a recommendation, nothing more.
A prudential judgement, is a judgement on what is prudent.
It does not bind you to be prudent, but it condemns you as foolish if you choose to be imprudent.