… This is my principle objection to 2267: it focuses solely on one of the three secondary objectives of punishment and completely ignores the primary objective - which is justice. …
Of course; the death penalty certainly serves as proper justice for a grave offense. I’ll never deny that.
Second, in your comment on the first sentence of 2267 you mentioned the caveat and implied that it could be seen as just and reasonable. I disagree and your own citations should confirm that the restriction in 2267 was never part of traditional teaching. That statement is simply false.
I tend to lean towards your observations, personally. There is and never was a need for any caveat or any clarification above and beyond what has been traditionally taught.
Truth does not change, of course. But whether and how Trent (or any human expression) of the truth corresponds to “Truth” is open to question.
Trent was the inspired teaching of the Holy Spirit and given through the infallible Magisterium of the Church. It is not a “human expression”; the statement that deviates is the more likely candidate, and that honor goes to John Paul II’s remark that the death penalty is “rarely justified” - something neither explicitly or implicitly taught in any prior Catechism.
So…is the Church today in error?
Yes, but not on a matter of faith or morals. I explained this earlier.
The simple fact is that we are not arguing the morality of the death penalty in and of itself.
Yes, we have been. That has been either explicit or otherwise implied throughout this whole debate, and anytime the death penalty is debated.
I do not know a simpler way to put it. What we are arguing is that in modern society, it is by and large unneeded. Life in prison without parole sufficiently redresses the crime. Executions result in excessive spending of tax dollars, which could be better spent on truly preventative programs, and society is duly protected from violent offenders. How is any of this inconsistent with Catholic teaching.
I provided factual links that address the fact that prisons do not rehabilitate grave offenders nor do they protect society. Recidivism is strong and anyone can see that American society (particularly in urban areas where the majority of violent crime, and prisons, exist) has become more violent in recent decades. Simple truths such as these prove that the death penalty is not at fault, but rather the soft approach to crime and punishment in violent places.
Executions do not need to result in any major expense; supporting hundreds of thousands of violent criminals yearly, paying for their nutrition and health care and entertainment, is infinitely more expensive than simple and traditional means of execution. Costly chemicals and lengthy processes are not required; rifle cartridges cost pennies apiece to produce and rope is also inexpensive to manufacture and is reusable. Common sense alone dictates that it is cheaper to execute violent, grave offenders than to keep them alive at the expense of the poor and the rest of the society they violate. Moreover, it is unjust.
I know you will get on your justices soap-box, so let me answer you preemptively. Absolute justice is not consistent with revealed Truth. Let me say it again, because you have a habit of ignoring my statements. Absolute justice is not consistent with revealed Truth. If it were, then there would be no salvation possible. We are guilty of personal sin. We were born under the curse of original sin. In His mercy, God provided salvation for us, not based on our merit, but on His grace. In other words, absolute justice demands that we all spend an eternity in hell. So before you yell and scream about what you think other people deserve, you must first accept your own guilt. This is why Jesus said, “Let he among you who is without sin cast the first stone.” The government has the responsibility to protect its citizens. This is the justification for war and the death penalty. Punishment can be achieved without killing the offender.
Get down from your own soapbox for a moment.
If it were true that mere incarceration was enough, society would be much more peaceful than it is today. The easily observed truth about modern society tells a different tale. Prisons are inhumane, dangerous, and ineffective. The traditional method of punishing grave criminals and protecting society, the death penalty, is much more effective and can be implemented with nowhere near the cost of maintaining prisons and coddling violent offenders.
There are plenty of people to fill our pews. We need to get Western civilization back on track before we will have the luxury of being able to focus mostly on society’s dangerous elements. When we have a properly Catholic civilization again, maybe then we can worry about alternative means to rehabilitate criminals - but then again, once we have a properly Catholic civilization again, violent crime will be orders of magnitude less than what it is now. If we want to redress crime without resorting to the death penalty, focus more on ending the foolish separation of church and state and on bringing the Faith to millions of innocent ears which need to hear it. That is the only bloodless method that will work.