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Brennan_Doherty
Guest
Hi JR,I’m wondering if Cardnal Dulles is really arguing the abolition of the death penalty or the inconsistency in many modern societies and minds, that are against the death penalty because it’s inhumane.
I believe the Cardinal states the problem well. When you argue the death penalty from a purely humanistic point of view, you can do anything you want with other moral issues.
But when you look at it from the perspective of scripture and Church teaching, then you are committed to applying those same moral principles to ther issues, the biggest being abortion.
I don’t think that the Cardinal is arguing so much in defense of the death penalty, but in defence of Christian morality. The European Union is an example of a society where the death penalty was abolished, but abortion is almost mandated.
In many Middle Eastern countries the death penalty is their daily bread, while abortion is strictly condemned.
When you fall of the evangelical track, you have inconsistencies which are difficult to reconcile.
If one reads both the statements of Trent and the statement of the CCC, they don’t contradict each other. Neither abolishes the death penalty. Both call for a judicious application. The only new element that the CCC has added is the fact that today we have better and more resources to protect the innocent than ever before.
Both documents are very consistent with the scriptures and the interpretation that the Church has applied to the scriptures. Whereas, the “humanitarian” movement is guided by a false sense of morality, because it’s a fabricated sense of morality.
I’m not sure if I’m making sense. I hope so.
JR![]()
I agree that when you argue from a humanistic point of view, the death penalty makes no sense. Because if people actually believe in eternal life, then the death of the criminal is not his ultimate death. And then one can consider if it is better (as has been argued above) to have a set date for execution, and this could very well lead the criminal to think long and hard about his eternal destiny.
I also think the arguments concerning justice and expiation are strong. That it actually damages society if criminals do not receive just sentences. That actually cheapens life. To have just punishments for crime is actually healthy for society. I also think it can be fair for the family of the victim, who I don’t think are necessarily vengeful people, but want to have a sense that genuine justice has been done.
And the criminal can help expiate his crime by being like the thief on the cross and accepting the punishment for his crime.
Pope John Paul II’s prudential judgment (and Cardinal Dulles does refer to it as “prudential”) that we rarely if ever need to impose the death penalty because we have the means to incarcerate someone for life does seem to be new.
I don’t know of any previous Church teaching that argued that you should only use the death penalty if you can’t incarcerate for a long enough time. It does seem that the teaching would have to be developed further along the lines of what to me seem the strongest arguments for the death penalty: justice, expiation, and the conversion of the sinner.
God bless.