The addition to the argument by the post-1980 Popes of some requirement of “protection” from the individual criminal (as if emphasizing that whether Mr X broke out of the pen is the most important criteria of whether cap pun is allowed)and which according to them is the linchpin in the issue----- is a matter of prudential judgment…a judgment which I do not make because I follow the teachings of the church for centuries—It is justice and the duty of the state to enact the ultimate penalty, not whether the prison can hold the bad guy!
I don’t recognise any dividing line between post-1980 Popes and pre-1980 Popes as being legitimate. The Church is the same Church now as it was 2000 years ago. When a living Pope speaks he speaks for the whole Church and I certainly don’t believe that Augustine and Aquinas would be warring with the current Pope if they were alive today.
Around the world the death penalty has gradually been dropped from law as not humane or reflective of human dignity. Up until recently this has happened independently of much Church contribution. The Church obviously recognises this falling out of favour as a genuine movement of the Holy Spirit and her teachings have taken on some urgency so that people are not harbouring any false beliefs about it.
She acknowledges that the State has the right to decide on capital punishment within general law if needed to serve justice according to the common good.
Since human justice must serve the common good, if a punishment is harmful to that, it is right and proper to abandon it in favour of a more fitting punishment otherwise it no longer serves true justice.
In the past it was accepted as necessary not just by biblical cultures but by many non biblical cultures through history. By natural law it has served a role in human justice. Aquinas said… "
The Old Law is distinct from the natural law, not as being altogether different from it, but as something added thereto. For just as grace presupposes nature, so must the Divine law presuppose the natural law. " - Summa Theologica.
What is happening here is that the strong movement to abolish capital punishment from general law around the world is arising from the natural needs of justice and the Church as is and always has been her place, is confirming that this movement is indeed one of true justice in the eyes of God.
People mistakenly feel that capital punishment is a divine command because they are not remembering that the Old Law* presupposed *natural law. The Old Law did not
create natural law.
The argument that abolishing capital punishment is some sort of unfortunate suspension of Divine Law rather than completely in keeping with Divine Law, is misguided. The Church emphasises the exception of peoples protection as the only grounds for considering it because natural law allows for it on that basis. That can be understood through reason. The Church emphasising beyond that that the dignity of the human being is the goal of justice.
Pope Benedict XVI shows this in a 2009 address…* “It cannot be overemphasized that the right to life must be recognized in all its fullness. Governments must enact laws and public policies that take into account the high value that a human being has at every moment of existence. In this context, I joyfully welcome the initiative by which Mexico abolished the death penalty in 2005, and the recent measures adopted by some Mexican states to protect human life from its beginnings.”
Pope Benedict XVI, July 10, 2009*