R
Ron_Conte
Guest
In order to know if an act is moral or not, one must know the type of act. Concerning killing, one must know more than the mere fact that a human person was killed. Murder is the direct and voluntary killing of an innocent human being; it is intrinsically evil and always wrong, regardless of intention and circumstance.
Killing may be justified as self-defense, but in this case, the definition of the act is in the second source of morality, the act itself, and not in the third source, circumstances. In moral theology, circumstance is anything other than intention and the definition of the act itself. Things that pertain directly to the defintion of the act, such as that the person is innocent and the killing is direct and voluntary, are not circumstances, but facts essential to define the act itself.
Intrinsically evil acts are always wrong, because they are opposed to the goodness that is God Himself. God is truth, and so lying is always wrong. God created man in His own image, so killing an innocent human being is always wrong.
When the act itself is not intrinsically evil, then the morality depends upon intention and circumstance, as well as on the act itself.
Killing may be justified as self-defense, but in this case, the definition of the act is in the second source of morality, the act itself, and not in the third source, circumstances. In moral theology, circumstance is anything other than intention and the definition of the act itself. Things that pertain directly to the defintion of the act, such as that the person is innocent and the killing is direct and voluntary, are not circumstances, but facts essential to define the act itself.
Intrinsically evil acts are always wrong, because they are opposed to the goodness that is God Himself. God is truth, and so lying is always wrong. God created man in His own image, so killing an innocent human being is always wrong.
When the act itself is not intrinsically evil, then the morality depends upon intention and circumstance, as well as on the act itself.