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Ender
Guest
Again? This is tiresome. Do you really have nothing more useful to say?Really? You find it irrelevant? How very sad
Ender
Again? This is tiresome. Do you really have nothing more useful to say?Really? You find it irrelevant? How very sad
Can you please give a simple response without the insults? That’s not really asking very much. So, here is the question I asked:*Are you saying that what was immoral yesterday may become moral today, or that what is immoral here may be moral somewhere else?Given how many times the matter has been explained to you, as a simple search of your posting history indicates? No.
Father:Really? You find it irrelevant? How very sad
Even if I agreed that the Church endorsed burning at the stake for heretics for centuries (which I don’t, I think at the very least that’s very much exaggerated and misrepresented) I would simply reply that two wrongs don’t make a right.Sorry no.
If burning at the stake for heretics
Was good enough for the church for
Centuries, cp is good enuf now.
The church would find someone a heretic and turned that person over to the state for a good torching. Thus the church had no problem with capital punishment. It was moral then and if i am not mistaken the church has the the final say on faith and morals. So if it was ok then its ok now.Even if I agreed that the Church endorsed burning at the stake for heretics for centuries (which I don’t, I think at the very least that’s very much exaggerated and misrepresented) I would simply reply that two wrongs don’t make a right.
So an argument that goes “But he was worse” even if true is not an argument in favor of what’s being proposed.
So to make the argument, it would have to be why you think the death penalty should be practiced.
I hope this has helped
God Bless You
Thank you for reading
Josh
The church had no problem putting protestants to death.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_by_country
So according to Wikipedia the US is the only western country that still has the death penalty…it looks like most…if not all Catholic countries have either done away with it…have not used it in years…or have severely restricted its use…of course we could argue that the US isn’t a Catholic country…but neither is England but they done away with it decades ago…so what is the reason there is so much opposition here in the US…
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_incarceration_rate
The US has the most people incarcerated than any other country…and the new AG has said just the other day he is paving the way for more prosecuting of non violent drug offenders and tougher sentencing…now…having said all this I’m still in two minds about capital punishment…when it comes (mainly) to terrorism…the US was founded by Protestant puritans who went by the OT …an eye for an eye…maybe this thinking is still part of the American psyche
I wonder, was that moral - in absolute terms and/or for the time period?The church had no problem putting protestants to death.
That’s the sort of intelligent anti Catholic response you’d expect from a 3rd grader…The church had no problem putting protestants to death.
Far from a third grader. And very Catholic. Fact is, the Church had no problem with the death penalty and used it quite liberally. If it had no problem with it then, then I have no problem with it now.That’s the sort of intelligent anti Catholic response you’d expect from a 3rd grader…![]()
That the church not only recognized the validity of capital punishment but employed it herself is historically true. It is also true that, as what is objectively moral does not change with time or place, if its use was moral then it is moral today. Whether its use today is prudentially wise is an entirely different question.Fact is, the Church had no problem with the death penalty and used it quite liberally. If it had no problem with it then, then I have no problem with it now.
the passage from the Catechism of Trent isnt talking about Just servitude (in the past called Just Slavery for example being made to work as a punishhment for a crime) but slavery (unjust slavery) right?Thankfully that is not where the Successors of the Apostles, as the College of Bishops, are today as the Church’s Magisterium…nor where they have been for some generations, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
This illustrates quite well, however, how and why there were many good reasons that the Bishops of the Catholic world, gathered in synod, petitioned the Vicar of Christ to grant the Church a new universal catechism, seeing as the Roman Catechism was over 400 years old and was in urgent need of updating…including among many points the morality of employing the death penalty in a contemporary context, well articulated as the confrontation between the Gospel of Life and a culture of death.
The catechism’s expression that touches upon the Church, society and capital punishment – for which the Church has had to beg forgiveness relative to the past – is well placed side by side to the issue of morality and slavery, as it was in the 16th century and expressed in Trent’s catechism.
*The unjust possession and use of what belongs to another are expressed by different names, according to the diversity of the objects taken without the consent and knowledge of the owners. To take any private property from a private individual is called theft; from the public, peculation. **To enslave a freeman, or appropriate the slave of another is called man-stealing *** /…/
It goes without saying that the very institution of slavery is immoral and those who traffic in human beings or are the victims of human trafficking are to be rightly and instantly emancipated from being a hostage.
Or the place of women in society, which was particularly lamentable in the era of Trent.
*…to pay particular attention to their domestic concerns should also be especial objects of their attention. The wife should love to remain at home, unless compelled by necessity to go out; and she should never presume to leave home without her husband’s consent.
Again, and in this the conjugal union chiefly consists, let wives never forget that next to God they are to love their husbands, to esteem them above all others, yielding to them in all things not inconsistent with Christian piety, a willing and ready obedience*
Which gives us great reason to thank God for The Catechism of the Catholic Church.
I am interested in your use of “at least”. What other crimes do you feel may warrant imposition of the death penalty?The primary justification for capital punishment is that it is the just penalty for (at least) the crime of murder.
That is, it is not protection that permits it, but justice that demands it.
Ender
I try to avoid that conversation; I see it as a distraction. If the point cannot be made that capital punishment is valid for murder then it is obviously invalid for lesser crimes, and the discussion is moot. If it is valid for murder, though, then the point about the morality of the punishment is proved and the discussion is over. An argument about which lesser crimes deserve the death penalty really makes no sense unless and until it is determined that the punishment is ever deserved.I am interested in your use of “at least”. What other crimes do you feel may warrant imposition of the death penalty?