USCCB: Join with Pope Francis, Bishop Dewane and Catholics across the country! Pledge to end the death penalty

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THEOLOGICAL BACKGROUND OF THE PLEDGE
The death penalty represents the failure of our modern society to fulfill the theological and moral demands of justice. Justice demands that society begin with the recognition that each human person is created in the image and likeness of God and must work in all its endeavors towards the benefit of the human person. (1) This respect for human dignity is the foundation for the Church’s vision of society and makes it necessary to “consider every neighbor without exception as another self, taking into account first of all their life and the means necessary for living it with dignity.” (2) This understanding of human dignity imposes both theological and ethical norms that define Jesus’ call to discipleship. As a model for living in the world, discipleship calls all to not only follow the teaching of Jesus, but to live in a way that makes the mercy of God known.

The state sanctioned execution of over 1400 people since 1977, as well as the nearly 3,000 people currently on death row, is an affront to our understanding of human dignity. In addition, by the 158 people and counting who have been exonerated due to their innocence since 1973 and the cruel and unusual effects arising from a botched execution demands that we end the death penalty and uphold the dignity of all life. The prolonged nature of the death penalty process can perpetuate the trauma for victims families and prevents the opportunity for healing and reconciliation called for in the message of Jesus Christ.

This challenge to extend radical mercy towards those on death row is evident in Jesus’s exhortation: “Let anyone among you who is without sin be the first to throw a stone at her,” (Jn 8:7). Within this encounter, the full demands of discipleship become clear. Righteousness is not achieved through upholding the law, but through our acts of mercy. True discipleship comes from our actions that lead the other to conversion and that allow our hearts to be open to God’s grace: “Neither do I condemn you. Go your way, and from now on do not sin again,” (John 8:11). It is clear that mercy, particularly towards those in need of forgiveness, is not just an act of kindness but is at the heart of the gospel message.

The use of the death penalty denies our call to true discipleship. The teaching of the Church on this matter must be upheld: “If bloodless means are sufficient to defend human lives against an aggressor and to protect public order and the safety of persons, public authority must limit itself to such means, because they better correspond to the concrete conditions of the common good and are more in conformity to the dignity of the human person.” (3) The death penalty does not align with this understanding of human dignity and needs to be abolished in the United States.

(1) Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, Compendium of the Social Doctrine of The Church. 6th ed. Washington, DC: United States Conference of Catholic Bishops Publishing, sec 132.

(2) Second Vatican Council, Gaudium et spes. Vatican Website, December 7, 1965, sec 27.

(3) Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2nd ed., sec 2267.

catholicsmobilizing.org/action/pledge/background
 
What an absolutely marvelous initiative!

I am delighted to see how the Bishops in the United States are ever more and more engaged on this critical issue.

May God bless them and guide them in their efforts…and give their efforts success and victory.
 
I am onboard with this, except that we need a reform of the prison system first. There are murders within US prisons. People serving life sentences for murder then murder again while in prison. This is a failure of the state to keep murderers from murdering. Bloodless means were not sufficient to defend human lives against an agressor. We are not there yet in my eyes. The death of Father Geoghan woke me up to the fact that a reform of the prison system is needed before we abolish the use of the death penalty.
 
Join with Pope Francis, Bishop Dewane and Catholics across the country! Pledge to end the death penalty. twitter.com/USCCB/status/863126280975380483

usccb.org/

The pledge is here
catholicsmobilizing.org/action/pledge
Sure (Don’t know what I can do since I’m Australian, thankfully we don’t have the death penalty) but I would also like to ask, where is the pledge to end abortion? and euthanasia? of the three, abortion and euthanasia demand special attention due to the nature of those crimes and the scale on which they occur today.

As Pope Benedict said, there can be legitimate diversity of opinion even among Catholics about waging war or applying the death penalty, but not in regards to abortion and euthanasia.

God Bless

Thank you for reading
Josh
 
Thomas, thank you for posting this. I wouldn’t have found out about this pledge afterwards.

josh,the bishops are still vocal against abortion and euthanasia too. This pledge doesn’t detract from those efforts, it just adds to the overall respect of life.

Exdrinker, I agree it is unfortunate that our prisons aren’t best at being correctional facilities in their current state and violent crimes within them are an unfortunate reality for sure. Do you know about any organization that’s got ideas on how to improve the system?
 
Exdrinker, I agree it is unfortunate that our prisons aren’t best at being correctional facilities in their current state and violent crimes within them are an unfortunate reality for sure. Do you know about any organization that’s got ideas on how to improve the system?
I do not but would love to support such an organization.
 
:clapping::clapping::clapping::clapping::clapping::clapping::clapping:
 
THEOLOGICAL BACKGROUND OF THE PLEDGE
While I accept that there may be prudential objections to the use of capital punishment, I do not believe there are theological reasons for opposing it.
The death penalty represents the failure of our modern society to fulfill the theological and moral demands of justice. Justice demands that society begin with the recognition that each human person is created in the image and likeness of God and must work in all its endeavors towards the benefit of the human person.
Justice has a simpler definition:*Hence the act of justice in relation to its proper matter and object is indicated in the words, “Rendering to each one his right,” *(Aquinas)
That is, we are to be judged according to our deeds. As for justice demanding of a society that it recognize man is created in the likeness of God, it is useful to note where we are told this (Genesis 9:6), where that fact is noted by God himself as the reason the life of a murder is taken in recompense for his crime.*Whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed; for God made man in his own image. *
If justice requires us to recall that man is made in God’s image we might want to take seriously God’s words that this is the very reason a murderer should lose his own life. It seems we have taken God’s instruction that “Because the life of the victim was sacred, the life of the murderer is forfeit” and modified it to satisfy our modern sensitivity: “Because the life of the murderer is sacred, his life is secure.” This is not upholding justice, it is abandoning it.
(1) This respect for human dignity is the foundation for the Church’s vision of society and makes it necessary to “consider every neighbor without exception as another self, taking into account first of all their life and the means necessary for living it with dignity.”
If this is so it seems that the church is very late in coming to this conclusion. Are we to assume her respect for human dignity was deficient for the first twenty centuries of her existence, and only in the last few decades has she finally understood what is required of her in this regard?*Only in the last 40 years of its history has the church come out against state-sponsored executions, except in highly delimited circumstances. …a departure from previous teaching, which stretches back almost two millennia… *(Archbishop Wilton Gregory, 2008)
Ender
 
While I accept that there may be prudential objections to the use of capital punishment, I do not believe there are theological reasons for opposing it.
What you accept or what you believe is not material.

What matters is that the the Magisterium has the competence to pronounce itself on this matter…and to do so in a way that requires the acceptance of the faithful.
 
What you accept or what you believe is not material.

What matters is that the the Magisterium has the competence to pronounce itself on this matter…and to do so in a way that requires the acceptance of the faithful.
The Magisterial has pronounced a teaching on this, that capital punishment is indeed permitted and there are positive effects of capital punishment

ewtn.com/expert/answers/capital_punishment.htm

Capital punishment is permitted but the question is whether it is good. Catholics are actually theological free to support either position.
 
The Magisterial has pronounced a teaching on this, that capital punishment is indeed permitted and there are positive effects of capital punishment

ewtn.com/expert/answers/capital_punishment.htm

Capital punishment is permitted but the question is whether it is good. Catholics are actually theological free to support either position.
Thank you for the reference but I was teaching this aspect of applied moral theology more than three decades ago…and before Colin had received his licentiate.
 
I am onboard with this, except that we need a reform of the prison system first. There are murders within US prisons. People serving life sentences for murder then murder again while in prison. This is a failure of the state to keep murderers from murdering. Bloodless means were not sufficient to defend human lives against an agressor. We are not there yet in my eyes. The death of Father Geoghan woke me up to the fact that a reform of the prison system is needed before we abolish the use of the death penalty.
This is where I am at, though I signed the pledge. No, we cannot safely incarcerate anyone. Yet, for the sake of the culture of life, I will support the Holy Father.
 
The Magisterial has pronounced a teaching on this, that capital punishment is indeed permitted and there are positive effects of capital punishment

ewtn.com/expert/answers/capital_punishment.htm

Capital punishment is permitted but the question is whether it is good. Catholics are actually theological free to support either position.
I think the question is not objective nature of Capital punishment but the specific question of Capital punishment in the world today. For example, I do not think anyone would say God was immoral for instituting Capital punishment for the protection of His chosen people. I would think few would deem a totalitarian regime which shot people for the slightest violation against the state as moral.

So forgetting hypothetical situation, real, unreal, past an future, what is moral today, at this time. The Church teaching on this seems pretty uniform.
 
If this is so it seems that the church is very late in coming to this conclusion. /…/
Not at all
*Only in the last 40 years of its history has the church come out against state-sponsored executions, except in highly delimited circumstances. …a departure from previous teaching, which stretches back almost two millennia… *(Archbishop Wilton Gregory, 2008)
Let us do justice by situating the quote of His Excellency Archbishop Gregory you cite, giving it now in the broader context he gave it and subsequently expanded it via the thought His Eminence Avery Cardinal Dulles

Let us also give thread readers the chance to read for themselves a truly masterful text delivered by His Excellency to Emory University

catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?recnum=8506

*/…/ Over the last 30-plus years, the interventions of the U.S. bishops on the question of the death penalty follow a pattern similar to that of the Catholic Church in other regions. The intent has been the same, namely, to limit, restrain or end the use of society’s ultimate punishment /…/

We bishops of the United States conclude therefore that the imposition of the death penalty under the conditions of contemporary American society is not justified in view of the traditional purposes of punishment

Like other death penalty opponents, Catholic leadership has pointed to the systematic flaws in the application of capital punishment, including the well-documented economic and racial inequality that inheres in the trials and sentencing of capital offenders. We bishops have also pointed to the alarming number of mistaken convictions of men and women on death row who were later exonerated /…/

It is clear to many observers that the Catholic Church has undergone a development in its teaching on the death penalty. Only in the last 40 years of its history has the church come out against state-sponsored executions, except in highly delimited circumstances. Such a departure from previous teaching, which stretches back almost two millennia, is bound to invite controversy within the ranks of the Catholic faithful

One of the most prominent intra-Catholic debates in recent years was initiated at a conference at the University of Chicago in 2002. Two prominent American Catholic participants, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia and Cardinal Avery Dulles, took up the historical, moral and legal dimensions of the issues which we have been discussing /…/

Justice Scalia takes the position that the church, which has always permitted the use of the death penalty, has changed its historic position in the already-mentioned passages of the catechism and in John Paul II’s Evangelium Vitae. Such alterations in traditional moral teaching, he argues, were imprudent to say the least /…/

Unlike Justice Scalia, Avery Dulles finds no rupture in the development of Catholic teaching on the death penalty. The Jesuit cardinal distinguishes between theological affirmations, which allow for the death penalty in certain instances, and their practical application to contemporary contexts. By virtue of their office, the church’s pastors receive the guidance of the Holy Spirit to apply the principles of justice to public policy on matters like the death penalty. When they do so on behalf of their faithful and the common good, they make a prudential application of these principles to the contingent circumstances of contemporary society

After recounting the history of the church’s position, Cardinal Dulles argues that when it comes to the death penalty each of the traditional ends of punishment carry a different weight. For example, defending against the particular criminal carries a greater weight than deterrence against criminals committing a similar crime in the future

/…/ **It is clear to me that Avery Dulles, who follows the lead of my brother bishops, has the stronger case. The statements of the supreme pontiff and those of the American hierarchy over the last 40 years are by no means inconsistent with historical Catholic teaching on just punishment and the need to safeguard human life and social goods

As Dulles argues, opposition to the death penalty is contingent on context.** The state has the right to defend against unjust aggressors and in some limited cases may apply punishment by execution. The church’s pastors have recognized that to civil authorities belongs the duty to defend all human life when it is wantonly or unjustly endangered. The particular aspect of capital punishment that has changed in contemporary society from centuries past is the claim that the punishment for capital crimes necessarily requires execution as a deterrent to other potential offenders /…/

While John Paul II greatly influenced the development of the Catholic position on capital punishment, he also wrote and spoke passionately against the use of the death penalty in his homilies and speeches. On several occasions he pleaded for clemency for individuals on death row in the United States

His challenge to our society in extending mercy even where it appeared to the public as unwarranted was articulated well during his 1999 homily at the papal Mass in St Louis, Mo. The Polish pope invited worshippers to join the “new evangelization,” which “calls for followers of Christ who are unconditionally pro-life: who will proclaim, celebrate and serve the Gospel of life in every situation … even in the case of someone who has done great evil.” He then called for “a consensus to the end of the death penalty, which is cruel and unnecessary” /…/

The moral requirement to protect the innocent stands alongside the imperative to stem the cycle of violence that keeps individuals and communities enslaved to vengeance. As Mohandas Gandhi once said, “An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind”*
 
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