Home Angela Grobben's Human Rights Europe Catholics must no longer support capital punishment

Live Feed

Fittedin
Angela Grobben's Human Rights: My name is Charity Lee: My name is Charity Lee. In 1980, when I was only six years ol... http://t.co/VhKAG6Vr

Sunday, 15 April 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
About the Project: Angela Grobben: Human Rights Correspondent A life long human rights campaigner Angela's organisat... http://t.co/0pkXFeTy

Sunday, 15 April 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Angela Grobben's Human Rights: Bill Pelke & The Journey of Hope: Journey of Hope…from Violence to Healing The ... http://t.co/wsyQWq1V

Sunday, 15 April 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
About the Project: Patron : Michael Mansfield QC   Called to the Bar in 1967 Michael Mansfield has a BA Hons. degre... http://t.co/hXJPb2ed

Wednesday, 04 April 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
About the Project: FIP Supporters: Gareth Peirce – Solicitor specialising in defence work. She has represented too ... http://t.co/3Jt0cqLm

Wednesday, 04 April 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
About the Project: Trustee : Andrew David Barclay (Dave), BSc, MSc, DSc, FFSSoc.     Expertise and Cases Dave ... http://t.co/lprjOtUG

Wednesday, 04 April 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
News: Unfit for Purpose:   The Betrayal AccountabilityThe Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) had an opportunity to as... http://t.co/NnQQasAP

Monday, 20 February 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
News: Unfit for Purpose: Independence An Independent EyeLast year an important anniversary passed without note. Th... http://t.co/RgClKjCT

Monday, 20 February 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Angela Grobben's Human Rights: Please help Ashot to stay in the UK: Urgent Action Appeal Please ... http://t.co/JZd6AwKa

Thursday, 02 February 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Lynette White: In The Name of God, Go!: In The Name of God, Go! “You have sat too long here for for any good you h... http://t.co/E1rUtVpn

Tuesday, 31 January 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Columbia: Eyes on the Prize:   Mainstream AgainConservative hegemony over Colombia had waned at gunpoint thanks to ... http://t.co/Nr1qMZFR

Wednesday, 18 January 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Columbia: The Assassination and its Aftermath:   The Assassination The Liberal Party's candidate for the Presidency... http://t.co/w8ci7MNv

Wednesday, 18 January 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Columbia: Conspiracy Theories – Ospina's Difficulties:   The Cast of Incredible SuspectsThere was no shortage of ... http://t.co/ckI4nDO7

Wednesday, 18 January 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Columbia: Conspiracy Theories – A Fertile Breeding Ground:   The Patsy?Jorge Eliécer Gaitán Ayala, the People's... http://t.co/z5DCgbVA

Wednesday, 18 January 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Columbia: An Absurd Conspiracy Theory:   The Agent?The People's Champion Jorge Eliécer Gaitán Ayala was dead, mur... http://t.co/oWBb909p

Wednesday, 18 January 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Columbia: Conspiracy Theories – Castro's Revenge:   A Convenient PresenceFidel Castro Ruz overthrew the corrupt d... http://t.co/KqbrCyQ8

Wednesday, 18 January 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Columbia: The Formative Years of the People's Champion: Viva Gaitán! It was a crime that spawned an industry of con... http://t.co/3jGcg8MJ

Thursday, 12 January 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Columbia: The People's Champion Comes of Age: A Pivotal Event Lawyer and Liberal Party politician Jorge Eliécer Gai... http://t.co/S8sIRGAT

Thursday, 12 January 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Columbia: The Day Colombia's Path Took A Terrible Turn: Bad Rep Some struggles have gone on so long that fighting ... http://t.co/tozAoCO8

Thursday, 12 January 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Columbia: Crass Stupidity: An Outrage Unsurprisingly the Santa Marta outrage – a strike by banana workers in the C... http://t.co/1YcRceJK

Thursday, 12 January 2012 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Angela Grobben's Human Rights: Seasons Greetings from the Journey of Hope...from Violence to Healing:    Season's ... http://t.co/yFyrVR7T

Saturday, 31 December 2011 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
News: House Rules: What are the House Rules? We've established the following House Rules.1. Opinions expressed i... http://t.co/OrXIJ7Gd

Tuesday, 06 December 2011 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Lynette White: I Write What I Like: “I write what I like,” Assassinated anti-apartheid activist Steve BikoAbysmal... http://t.co/I77TScPR

Friday, 02 December 2011 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
News: Conspiracy Theories : Fiddling While Colombia BurnedDr. Jorge Eliécer Gaitán Ayala had looked almost certain ... http://t.co/UE7CJONz

Friday, 11 November 2011 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Test the DNA in Hank Skinner's Case! http://t.co/NmJELmbp #signon

Sunday, 30 October 2011 via web

Fittedin
News: The Forgotten Victims #Knox Case: Tragedies – the Primary VictimsThere are no winners – just tragedies and ... http://t.co/0rAQxqmL

Saturday, 08 October 2011 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Angela Grobben's Human Rights: Anti-Roma Demonstrations Spread Across Bulgaria:   Anti-Roma Demonstrations Spread... http://t.co/aXdfXjir

Sunday, 02 October 2011 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Angela Grobben's Human Rights: Catholics must no longer support capital punishment: VATICAN CITY: Dead wrong: Cathol... http://t.co/araW4wlG

Saturday, 01 October 2011 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Angela Grobben's Human Rights: Decades without daylight: 'West Memphis Three' describe life in prison: Editor's... http://t.co/fkrlXWVw

Friday, 30 September 2011 via AutoTweet Connector

Fittedin
Angela Grobben's Human Rights: JON VENABLES & ROBERT THOMPSON , when children kill...: Friday 12th February 1993.... http://t.co/BwbQvixk

Wednesday, 28 September 2011 via AutoTweet Connector

 

01

Oct

Catholics must no longer support capital punishment PDF Print E-mail
Written by Source: National Catholic Reporter   


VATICAN CITY:

Dead wrong: Catholics must no longer support capital punishment


The Catholic Church's position on capital punishment has evolved considerably over the centuries.

And as a result, "it is not a message that is immediately understood -- that there is no room for supporting the death penalty in today's world," said a Vatican's expert on capital punishment and arms control.

Because the church has only in the past few decades begun closing the window -- if not shutting it completely -- on the permissibility of the death penalty, people who give just a partial reading of the church's teachings may still think the death penalty is acceptable today, said Tommaso Di Ruzza, desk officer at the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace.

St. Thomas Aquinas equated a dangerous criminal to an infected limb thereby making it "praiseworthy and healthful" to kill the criminal in order to spare the spread of infection and safeguard the common good.

However, over the centuries, justice has evolved from being the smiting arm of revenge toward a striving for reform and restoration, much like today's medical science, where amputation is no longer the only recourse for curing an infection.

Modern-day popes have reflected that change in attitude.

As far back as the 19th and early 20th centuries theologians pondered the seeming paradox between the Fifth Commandment, "You shall not kill," and the church's dark history of condoning state-held executions to deal with heresy and other threats and crimes.

Catholic fashion with a conscience

Pope Paul VI took concrete action in distancing the church from this form of punishment, first by formally banning the use of the death penalty in Vatican City State, although no one had been executed under the authority of the Vatican's temporal governance since 1870.

Pope Paul also spoke publicly against planned executions and called for clemency for death-row inmates. Pope John Paul II also would punctuate his Angelus and general audience talks with impassioned appeals to spare the life of a prisoner on the verge of execution.

It was the Polish pope who "earnestly hoped and prayed" for a global moratorium on the use of capital punishment and the abolition of the death penalty worldwide.

Pope Benedict, too, continues to send appeals for clemency in high-profile cases via telegrams either through a country's bishops or nuncio, and he has praised a U.N. resolution calling upon states to institute a moratorium on the use of the death penalty.

The 1992 Catechism of the Catholic Church recognized "as well-founded the right and duty of legitimate public authority to punish malefactors by means of penalties commensurate with the gravity of the crime, not excluding, in cases of extreme gravity, the death penalty." At the same time, it said, "bloodless means" that could protect human life should be used when possible.

The "extreme gravity" loophole was tightened with changes made in 1997, which reflected the pope's 1995 encyclical, "Evangelium Vitae." It specifies that the use of the death penalty is allowed only when the identity and responsibility of the condemned is certain and if capital punishment "is the only possible way of effectively defending human lives against the unjust aggressor."

However, given the resources and possibilities available to governments today for restraining criminals, "cases of the absolute necessity of the suppression of the offender 'are very rare, if not practically nonexistent,'" it says.

Pope Benedict, then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, had a major role in drafting the 1992 Catechism and, especially, its 1997 revised passages. When he told journalists about the changes in 1997, he said while the principles do not absolutely exclude capital punishment, they do give "very severe or limited criteria for its moral use."

"It seems to me it would be very difficult to meet the conditions today," he had said.

When a journalist said the majority of Catholics in the United States favor use of the death penalty, Cardinal Ratzinger said, "While it is important to know the thoughts of the faithful, doctrine is not made according to statistics, but according to objective criteria taking into account progress made in the church's thought on the issue."

Di Ruzza said the divergence of many Catholics in the United States from the church's current position is a sign that "the universal church must also accompany the particular churches a little bit" and help guide them on this "journey of purification," which is more a process of "maturity rather than a revolution or change in tradition."

Without reading Popes John Paul and Benedict's clear condemnations of the death penalty, the catechism will "unfortunately have the risk of being ambiguous or taken out of context," he said.

The church upholds the inherent dignity of all human beings, even the most sin-filled, and believes in hope, conversion and mercy, he said.

There is always room for conversion, he said, and forgiveness does not mean being naive about the real evil the human being is capable of committing.

The death penalty does not solve much; a victim still feels loss and crime is not deterred, he said.

Communities must strive to promote the common good, and it's dubious "that you can kill someone for the good of all," he said.

"The beauty of forgiveness must also be truly discovered; it's this that saves us," said Di Ruzza.

Otherwise, "by killing the just or the unjust without understanding that they have dignity, we will find ourselves after 2,000 years in the same courtyard shouting, 'Kill him!,' like they did with Jesus."

"God forgave us. He did not call us to death. Jesus let us overcome death" so as to more fully embrace life, he said.

(source: National Catholic Reporter)

 

Comments  

 
+1 #1 Arianna Ballotta 2011-10-13 11:20
You simply can't be a Catholic and, at the same time, be in favor of capital punishment. It's as simple as that. Or have Catholics forgotten about Jesus' teachings?
Quote
 

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

 

Like Fitted In?