T
Tim_D
Guest
The quote in my post is directly taken from what Pope Francis said; it has nothing to do with my “interpretation.”I am not going to accuse the Holy Father of heresy. Your interpretation therefore is wrong. Let me see if I can explain why it must be. What do you mean by mortal sin? In the case of slavery, it is a mortal sin by its nature. The treatment of humans as animals is grave matter. This simply cannot be this “the same” that the Holy Father is saying because the consistent teaching of the Holy Father is that the death penalty is not grave matter. If it were, then God would be gravely sinful, as He authorized the death penalty in the Old Testament.
So is God a grave sinner, or is this phrase “the same” referencing something other than the death penalty being a mortal sin. As he sets up the phrase in apposition to it, "…for a time, it was normal. Today, we say that the death penalty is inadmissible.”
You seem intent on tying this phrase "the same"backwards to the grave nature of slavery. Again, this makes God something less than God. I refuse to consider the Holy Father heretical based on some agenda twisting of his words.
The silly thing is that it is unnecessary. There is no reason to try and stretch the death penalty to be a mortal sin when the Holy Father said it was inadmissible. That alone should be enough for Catholics without exaggeration.
If 1) “slavery is a mortal sin” 2) “we know that it is a mortal sin” 3) and the “same goes for the death penalty,” then it logically follows that the death penalty is a “mortal sin.”
These are not my words, it is not a result of selective editing; it is a direct quote from Pope Francis. The fault is not mine if Pope Francis cannot speak in a manner that does not sow confusion. To blame me for “twisting his words” is to pardon him for his poor syntax. The fact that Pope Francis has a history of saying things that leave people confused and perplexed is evidence that he is not the best public representative to expound upon the Catholic faith. Your pseudo-chivaliric attempt to defend his inadequacies does not help clarify matters in the least.