"Catholics, in seeking to form their judgment as to whether the death penalty is to be supported as a general policy, or in a given situation, should be attentive to the guidance of the pope and the bishops. Current Catholic teaching should be understood, as I have sought to understand it, in continuity with Scripture and tradition. " Avery Cardinal Dulles
catholiceducation.org/en/religion-and-philosophy/social-justice/catholicism-amp-capital-punishment.html
In light of this, how can it be said that bishops should be silent on the issue? How can it be said that Catholics do not need to listen to the bishops on the subject, or reject their guidance?
For the time being my focus on this forum is going to turn from defending my position on capital punishment to defending my personal integrity against the charges that have been leveled against me. …Now, you have access to the article. You can compare what Dulles wrote with what I claimed he wrote. You therefore have everything available to you to substantiate your charge of deception on my part. So: substantiate it or retract it.
Ender
I did not charge you with deception. My post is still there for comparison.
I will add one more possibility I did not add originally. Cardinal Dulles could have used “teaching” in a non-traditional sense, one that does not address to doctrine. However, the document presented only use the word four times.
"Those who recognize the signs of the times will move beyond the outmoded doctrines that the State has a divinely delegated power to kill and that criminals forfeit their fundamental human rights. The* teaching* on capital punishment must today undergo a dramatic development corresponding to these new insights. "
" The United States bishops, in their majority statement on capital punishment, conceded that “Catholic* teaching *has accepted the principle that the State has the right to take the life of a person guilty of an extremely serious crime.”
"Finally, some hold that the death penalty is incompatible with the* teaching *of Jesus on forgiveness. "
The fourth usage is above.
The balance of our duty to be attentive to our pope and bishop is that actual application of doctrine is, in this case “prudential judgment”. This means that it is not a matter of heresy to disagree with a bishop. In fact, it is a more serious matter to think all capital punishment is murder, or that it is objectively immoral. That *would *be contrary to Catholic doctrine.