E
Everyman
Guest
Growing up an American evangelical, I was taught that capital punishment was a necessary consequence for those that committed crimes so heinous that they gave up their own right to live.
Now that I’m in RCIA, I’ve been told that the Church believes executing a criminal is to be placed right alongside sins like abortion, murder, euthenasia, etc.
But recently in an article by Avery Cardinal Dulles, he makes the case that being against capital punishment is only a modern popular opinion. Traditionally, the church, from Augustine to Aquinas, affirmed that crimes like murder demanded the justice of execution.
So it’s not the case that the Church is officially against it, right? What do you guys think about it?
Now that I’m in RCIA, I’ve been told that the Church believes executing a criminal is to be placed right alongside sins like abortion, murder, euthenasia, etc.
But recently in an article by Avery Cardinal Dulles, he makes the case that being against capital punishment is only a modern popular opinion. Traditionally, the church, from Augustine to Aquinas, affirmed that crimes like murder demanded the justice of execution.
So it’s not the case that the Church is officially against it, right? What do you guys think about it?