Neither you, nor I, nor anyone else for that matter, is righteous enough to say that another does not deserve to live. You cannot identify yourself as true to the faith, because you have decided in your own that the Catechism is wrong. Do not deny it. That is EXACTLY what you have done. You have declared yourself holy enough to pass judgment on all who disagree with you, and have the nerve to hide behind a misinterpretation of what you believe the Catechism says. Worse yet, you expect all to submit to exactly what you say. If we disagree, we are ignorant of the Church. It is time for you to get of your high horse, and admit that you cannot simply ignore a paragraph of the Catechism for no other reason than it does not allow you to deem others unworthy of life.
Dear CWBetts,
The issue is not whether or not anyone is “righteous” enough to inflict the death penalty upon a fellow human, but whether God has authorised a mere fellow human to so inflict it when necessary to redress an outrage against the divine majesty. Now clearly when God originally instituted the death penalty He was fully cognizant of the fact that, as regards man, there was none righteous in the sense that none was without sin. Nevertheless, this did not present an insuperable problem for Him as Genesis 9: 6 makes abundantly clear: it is manifestly obvious that He had to delegate the function of executioner to man, notwithstanding his sins and moral imperfections. As St. Paul remarks in the Epistle to the Romans the human executioner “does not bear the sword in vain; he is
the servant of God to execute his wrath on the wrongdoer” (Rom. 13: 4, emphasis mine). It should also be remembered that the governing authorities, of which the executioner is a mere servant, “have been instituted by God” (Rom. 13: 1). By parity of reasoning when a judge in a court of law passes sentence upon the defendant in the dock he does so as a servant of the state, not as a perfectly righteous man, not even, necessarily, as a man of moral rectitude, but that is no bar as regards his
office as judge. In an imperfect world someone has to legislate, andminister the law and, yes, pass sentence, including capital punishment, on the wrongdoer.
With respect to your comment about my being “eager to execute”, nothing could be further from the truth. In common, I suspect, with all Christian exponents of capital punishment, I regard it as a real tragedy when a man or woman must forfeit their lives to satisfy the demands of divine justice. How could any Christian take a perverse delight in seeing a man sentenced to death, why the very thought is inconceivable. However, if the prospect of the death penalty is instrumental in leading a condemned man to seek the Sacrament of Pennance and the remission of his mortal sins then I rejoice exceedingly. Is it not almost next to certain, assuming that man’s repentance was sincere, that he will after death enter into the life everalasting, or Purgatory at any rate?
Warmest good wishes,
Portrait