Progressive Catholics and capital punishment https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiGE_eWmyFbhOodWUEOAmTbmxoK68qkTBBxm3jTU5GzVMic-4VwgCS8BU9yS2WPbugqzhW1qgGgfq7gCVpo7GSpxoE5JiBwVV8HAhbgKxLAZH-Hqd3JPA3k86CsisptgXHhn2vUFzBldegIsNJnAZcVVdc8XXNutaiJAxzpw9KsMhOlzZiNCf4MYCz-1Hup/s418/0023.JPG The debate over capital punishment between conservative and progressive Catholics typically exhibits the following dialectic. The conservative will set out a case from natural law, scripture and tradition, and social science for the thesis that capital punishment is at least in principle licit and in practice still needed in some circumstances – as Joseph Bessette and I do at length in our book <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Man-Shall-His-Blood-Shed/dp/1621641260/ref=pd_sim_14_6?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_i=1621641260&pd_rd_r=9SQGPQ0HAX9Y392GRR12&pd_rd_w=yz0mr&pd_rd_wg=zFiiQ&psc=1&refRID=9SQGPQ0HAX9Y392GRR12" rel="nofollow">By Man Shall His Blood Be Shed</a>. The progressive will reply with an impassioned but vague appeal to human dignity, a cherry-picked statement from the recent magisterium, and a tendentious empirical claim (for example, that capital punishment does not deter, or is implemented in a racist manner), and top things off with in an ad hominem attack (such as accusing the conservative of being bloodthirsty or having a political motive). The conservative will then complain that the progressive has attacked a straw man and simply ignored rather than answered his key points. The progressive will at this point either ignore the conservative or simply repeat his original, question-begging reply at higher volume. The latest iteration of the progressive’s routine is Jack Hanson’s <a href="https://www.nybooks.com/online/2024/10/20/last-rites-death-penalty-catholic-church/" rel="nofollow">article on Catholicism and capital punishment</a> in The New York Review of Books. A recent execution provides the occasion for the article, but there is otherwise nothing new in it. And though it cites me as the Exhibit A “hard-liner” among Catholic academics who defend capital punishment, it offers no response to the key arguments Bessette and I develop in our book. The conservative’s case Because so many of our critics ignore rather than respond to those arguments, we’ve had to reiterate them many times in the seven years since our book appeared. It is tiresome to have to do so yet again, but at least a brief summary is necessary for context. There are three relevant sets of considerations, deriving from natural law, scripture and tradition, and social science. The traditional natural law rationale for the death penalty is straightforward. Wrongdoers deserve punishment, and what they deserve, specifically, is a punishment that is proportional to the offense. And governmental authorities have the right to inflict such punishments. Now, some offenses are so extremely grave that nothing less than execution would be a proportional punishment. So, such offenders deserve the death penalty, and the state has a right to inflict it on them. This is not to say that the state must inflict the death penalty whenever it is deserved, only that it may do so, at least in principle. And there may in some cases be good reasons why it should not do so. As Aquinas teaches, perfect justice is not attainable in this life, and when inflicting punishments, governments need to focus primarily on what is essential to preserving public order. But though considerations of retributive justice are not sufficient to determine what punishments should be inflicted, they are necessary. An offender can deserve death as a matter of retributive justice, so that if the state inflicts death on him, it does no injustice – even in cases where there are considerations other than justice that should lead it to refrain from inflicting this penalty. The point is that the death penalty cannot be regarded as intrinsically wrong. It does not amount to murder, any more than arresting and imprisoning a bank robber amounts to kidnapping, or any more than fining someone caught speeding amounts to stealing. A murderer has forfeited his right to life, just as a robber has forfeited his freedom and someone who violates traffic laws has forfeited the money that goes to paying the fine. If the death penalty is ever wrong, it can only be wrong because of the circumstances under which it is inflicted, and in particular because there is insufficient reason under the circumstances to give the offender what he deserves. What, then, of the circumstances that prevail in a country like the United States? Is there sufficient reason to inflict on some offenders the penalty of death? Bessette and I argue in our book that there is. We argue that some offenders remain so dangerous even when locked up for life that governing authorities ought to retain the option of execution. For example, without the prospect of capital punishment, some offenders facing life imprisonment have no incentive not to murder fellow prisoners or prison guards. Or, if they escape, they will have no incentive not to murder innocent people in the course of trying to evade police, if the worst they face is a return to life imprisonment. In general, we argue, capital punishment does have significant deterrent effect. It is necessary for governments to keep it on the books and utilize it at least in the case of the very worst offenders, in order to protect society from them. This is just a summary in a few paragraphs of a natural law line of reasoning that Bessette and I develop and defend in detail in the book. As we argue, in order to deny that the death penalty can be licit at least in principle, one would have to give up the principle that offenders deserve punishments proportional to the offense. One problem with doing so is that divorcing punishment from desert has implications that by anyone’s lights would be unjust. Another problem is that there is no way to give up the principles of desert and proportionality consistently with Catholic orthodoxy. For these principles are deeply embedded in scripture and tradition, informing both the Church’s understanding of punishment and her teaching on salvation and damnation. This brings us to the second set of considerations in favor of capital punishment, which have to do with the teaching of scripture, the Fathers and Doctors of the Church, the popes prior to Francis, and tradition in general. As Bessette and I show in detail, there are many passages in scripture, in both the Old and New Testaments, that sanction the death penalty, and that have always been understood by the Church (and indeed by everyone else, such as Jewish interpreters) to sanction the death penalty. This includes the Fathers of the Church, some of whom pleaded for clemency and thought it better for the state not to exercise its right to inflict the death penalty, but none of whom denied that scripture did indeed give the state that right. The Church teaches that neither the Fathers nor the tradition of the Church can be mistaken when they agree on some matter of scriptural interpretation. Since the Fathers and the Church have always agreed that scripture allows for capital punishment at least in principle, there is no way to interpret scripture any other way consistent with orthodoxy. A Catholic is free to hold (as some of the Fathers did) that it is better in practice not to utilize capital punishment. But a Catholic is not free to deny that scripture teaches that the death penalty can at least in principle be just. This has for 2,000 years been the consistent teaching of the Church and of the popes who have addressed the issue. Popes such as St. Innocent I, Innocent III, Leo X, St. Pius V, St. Pius X, and Pius XII not only upheld the legitimacy of the death penalty, but in some cases (such as Innocent I, Innocent III, and Leo X) condemned as heterodox the view that capital punishment is always wrong. St. John Paul II too explicitly taught that the death penalty can in some cases be justifiable, and held only that it is the taking of innocent life that is inherently wrong. Here too, Bessette and I back up our claims with a detailed presentation and analysis of the relevant texts. The main reason Pope Francis’s change to the Catechism and his other many remarks on the death penalty have been so controversial is not because of his opposition to it, but because of the way he has expressed his opposition to it – namely, in a manner that seems to imply that capital punishment is intrinsically or of its very nature wrong. The language of the change to the Catechism, which states flatly that the death penalty “is an attack on the inviolability and dignity of the person,” implies this, certainly on a natural reading. The recent CDF document Dignitas Infinita condemns capital punishment <a href="http://edwardfeser.blogspot.com/2024/04/two-problems-with-dignitas-infinita.html" rel="nofollow">in even stronger terms</a>, claiming that it “violates the inalienable dignity of every person, regardless of the circumstances” (emphasis added). This clearly implies that it something about the act of execution in itself, and not just its circumstances, that makes it immoral. This position flatly contradicts the consistent teaching of scripture and tradition. If Pope Francis is right, every previous pope who has spoken on the matter is wrong – wrong about capital punishment, wrong about scriptural interpretation, wrong about the nature and implications of human dignity. On the other hand, if all those previous popes were right, then it is Pope Francis who is wrong. Either way, we are in a situation where some pope or other has erred. Catholic theology leaves open the possibility that this can happen when a pope is not speaking ex cathedra. And since, as the Church teaches, the main job of a pope is faithfully to hand on traditional teaching, the most obvious way this might happen is if he were to contradict traditional teaching. Now, the very idea that scripture could be mistaken about a matter of faith or morals, or that the Church could for two millennia have consistently been misinterpreting scripture and teaching a grave moral error, is flatly incompatible with the Church’s claims about her own indefectibility. But a single pope teaching error in some of his non-ex cathedra pronouncements it is not contrary to those claims – indeed, it has happened before, albeit only very rarely (as in the cases of Pope Honorius and Pope John XXII). The logically unavoidable implication of this is that IF Pope Francis really does mean to teach that the death penalty is intrinsically wrong, then he is in error. There is simply no other possible conclusion, consistent with the Catholic Church’s claims about her own indefectibility. The third set of considerations relevant to the debate about Catholicism and capital punishment derives from social science. Catholic opponents of the death penalty routinely make a series of empirical claims, to the effect that modern prison systems suffice to protect society without ever having to resort to execution, that the death penalty has no deterrence value, that it is applied in a racially discriminatory way, that there is a significant risk of innocent people being executed, and so on. Usually these claims are just asserted, without supporting argument. And usually, the counterarguments are simply ignored rather than rebutted. But in our book, Joseph Bessette and I address these arguments too, systematically and in depth. We show that there is in fact strong evidence that the death penalty has deterrence value, that there are cases where life imprisonment is not sufficient to protect others from the offender, that the death penalty is not in fact implemented in a racially discriminatory way in the U.S., that there is not in fact a significant risk of innocent people being executed, and so on. (As it happens, the claim that there is such a risk of executing the innocent is one that Bessette has rebutted also in https://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2024/10/96181/ .) The key questions in the debate over Catholicism and capital punishment, then, are these: Can the view that capital punishment is always and intrinsically immoral be reconciled with a sound philosophical theory of punishment? Can it be reconciled with scripture, the Fathers and Doctors of the Church, and two thousand years of consistent magisterial teaching? Are there strong social scientific arguments for the judgment that capital punishment is never necessary today in order to protect society? In our book, Bessette and I present a detailed case that the correct answer to each of these questions is No. Hanson’s case Now, Hanson, as I have said, cites me as representative of Catholic academics who defend capital punishment. So, what does he have to say in response to the arguments Bessette and I develop in our book? Nothing. He tells his readers only that those arguments have been “refuted by more capable theologians like David Bentley Hart and Paul J. Griffiths.” Hanson does not tell us what makes Hart and Griffiths more capable. (One suspects that “agreeing with Jack Hanson” has something to do with it.) He also does not tell his readers that <a href="https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2017/11/28/hot-air-versus-capital-punishment-a-reply-to-paul-griffiths-and-david-bentley-hart/" rel="nofollow">I have replied to Hart’s and Griffith’s objections</a>, and demonstrated that in fact those objections are intellectually dishonest and notable more for their vituperative excess than for scholarly rigor. Hanson does have some arguments of his own. First, he suggests that there is a significant risk of executing innocent people. In fact there is not, as Bessette, who is a social scientist with special expertise in these matters, shows in <a href="https://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2024/10/96181/" rel="nofollow">the Public Discourse article</a> referred to above (which addresses, among other cases, the specific one Hanson puts special emphasis on). Second, Hanson suggests that given “the notion of the ‘sanctity of life,’ which guides [the Church’s] hard-line stance against abortion,” it is “hypocrisy” for a Catholic to oppose abortion but support capital punishment. Though this sort of objection is common, the problem with it is so obvious that I am continually amazed that death penalty opponents need it pointed out to them. The problem is that there is (as everyone acknowledges in every other context) a crucial difference between the innocent and the guilty. Is it hypocrisy or an assault on human freedom to condemn kidnapping while supporting the imprisonment of kidnappers? Is it hypocrisy or an assault on private property to condemn theft while supporting the imposition of fines for certain offenses? Of course not. The reason is that the kidnapper takes away the freedom of an innocent person, whereas imprisonment is about taking away the freedom of a guilty person. Similarly, the thief takes the property of an innocent person, whereas an offender who is forced to pay a fine is a guilty person. Punishments like imprisonment and fines uphold rather than undermine freedom and private property, because they protect the freedom and private property rights of innocent people from those who would violate those rights. For exactly the same reason, there is no hypocrisy whatsoever in opposing abortion while supporting capital punishment, because abortion involves taking the lives of the innocent while capital punishment involves taking the lives of the guilty. And insofar as the death penalty protects society from those who have murdered before, and deters others from committing murders, it upholds the sanctity of life. This is a point the Church herself has emphasized in the past. The Roman Catechism promulgated by Pope St. Pius V teaches that for the state to implement the death penalty is precisely for it to obey the commandment against murder: Another kind of lawful slaying belongs to the civil authorities, to whom is entrusted power of life and death, by the legal and judicious exercise of which they punish the guilty and protect the innocent. The just use of this power, far from involving the crime of murder, is an act of paramount obedience to this Commandment which prohibits murder. The end of the Commandment is the preservation and security of human life. Now the punishments inflicted by the civil authority, which is the legitimate avenger of crime, naturally tend to this end, since they give security to life by repressing outrage and violence. Third, Hanson argues that “by sanctioning the taking of a life, we prevent any possibility that the condemned might someday reconcile with the world and with God.” As Bessette and I discuss in our book, this is an objection Aquinas considers in Summa Contra Gentiles III.146, and he dismisses it as “frivolous,” for two reasons. For one thing, says Aquinas, we have to balance the potential repentance of the offender against the very real harm the innocent may suffer if we do not protect them from evildoers by means of capital punishment. For another thing, the prospect of execution in fact often prompts evildoers to repent and get themselves right with God while there is still time. If an offender is so hardened in evil that even knowledge of his imminent death will not lead him to repent, then, Aquinas argues, it is likely that he would never repent anyway. In a fourth line of argument, commenting on Genesis 9:6 (which famously states that “whoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed”), Hanson writes: For one thing, the Genesis passage stands in some tension with the Gospel’s teachings on sin and casting stones. For another, Roman Catholicism typically emphasizes allegorical, rational, and, above all, ecclesial interpretations of the Bible; direct appeals to the literal inerrancy of Biblical texts are rather a hallmark of Protestant theology in general and Reformation polemics against the Roman Magisterium in particular. There are many problems with this, starting with the fact that Hanson does not explain exactly how Genesis is in “tension” with what the Gospel says about sin and casting stones. Is he saying that we should never punish criminals, since none of us is without sin? Presumably not. But in that case, if we can punish them with fines or imprisonment, why not with execution, if that is necessary to protect society? There is also the fact that Genesis 9:6 is by no means the only scriptural passage that sanctions capital punishment. Many other such texts can be found, not only in Old Testament books such as Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy, and Psalms, but also in New Testament passages such as Romans 13:4, which tells us that the governing authority “does not bear the sword in vain; he is the servant of God to execute his wrath on the wrongdoer.” Obviously, then, the New Testament writers, who were in the best position to know, did not regard capital punishment as at odds with the Gospel. Theologian E. Christian Brugger, author of <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Capital-Punishment-Catholic-Tradition-Second/dp/0268022410/ref=sr_1_3?dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.dx-DyO4YdAGjcsMCEPhWHvxf1GuwKIt7Uyifm5zgtAjm4-DqF6UI6C2k6acIqzSd53o5yaYTlVDgaPat56NM7pIq-doh2IYDl1dFaOoxYhV9owYX3HHcNDo1bKGAgDufWNcVujxvyNRZ7QJWsewn2KTN46cBknJyrsZtogcsuy5p8zcwh41KK54VIMyOEwFhdocIvVVgztRHSS4msV7bYMByLC-8aBYljno686ulRbw.AJg1Sg2FjL-kwmaLXmRK1dx1ZmFqxjR7AkWozVWPJlA&dib_tag=se&keywords=christian+brugger&qid=1730070054&sr=8-3" rel="nofollow">the most systematic Catholic critique of capital punishment</a>, concedes that Genesis 9:6 is a “problem” for his side, and that there was a “consensus” among the Fathers of the Church that scriptural passages like Romans 13:4 teach that civil authorities have the right to inflict capital punishment for sufficiently grave crimes. Now, the Council of Trent and the First Vatican Council teach that where the Fathers are united on some matter of scriptural interpretation, no Catholic is at liberty to disagree with them. Even if there were no other problems with attempts to reinterpret the relevant scriptural passages (and as Bessette and I show in our book, there are in fact many such problems), the consensus of the Fathers would suffice to show that these reinterpretations cannot be accepted. Nor is Hanson correct to dismiss scriptural inerrancy as somehow a Protestant rather than Catholic notion. On the contrary, popes such as Leo XIII and Pius XII emphasized that it is central to Catholic orthodoxy to hold that scripture is divinely inspired and thus free of error. The First Vatican Council teaches that the scriptures “contain revelation without error…being written under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit,” and pronounces an anathema on anyone who would deny that they are divinely inspired. The Second Vatican Council teaches that since they are divinely inspired, “the books of Scripture must be acknowledged as teaching solidly, faithfully and without error,” and the Catechism of the Catholic Church incorporates this passage into its own teaching on scriptural authority (107). Hanson’s position on scripture is also self-defeating. In order to get around scriptural teaching on capital punishment, he suggests that such teaching is not free of error, or is incompatible with other scriptural teaching, or has been misinterpreted. Yet he also appeals to scripture when it suits him, as when he refers to Christ’s remark about not casting the first stone. But if we are free to reject scriptural teaching and its traditional interpretation in the one case, then why not also in the other? How can Hanson’s appeal to scripture carry any more weight than the appeals made by more conservative Catholics? Here we see a problem that, <a href="https://edwardfeser.blogspot.com/2021/11/geachs-argument-against-modernism.html" rel="nofollow">as Peter Geach pointed out</a>, inevitably undermines modernist theologies. They claim to preserve the core of divinely revealed teaching while jettisoning only what is inessential, but by means of arguments which if followed out consistently would make the whole of the purported revelation suspect. In what seems intended as a separate, fifth line of argument, Hanson appeals to the standard progressive Catholic narrative about how a purportedly arid and abstract Neo-Scholastic theology gave way, after Vatican II and under the influence of ressourcement thinkers like Congar and de Lubac, to a more enlightened and humane modern theology. Neo-Scholasticism, he suggests, is in some vague way linked to capitalism, Vichy France, fundamentalism, and other things sure to generate a Pavlovian response among the bien-pensant. Exactly what all this has to do with whether capital punishment is intrinsically wrong or still needed today is never made clear. The point, though, is obviously to insinuate that Catholic defenders of capital punishment derive their arguments from suspect sources and are motivated by a suspect political agenda. Rhetorically, this will no doubt be effective with some readers, at least those who already agree with Hanson. Logically, of course, it is completely worthless, being a crude deployment of fallacies such as Appeal to Motive and the Genetic Fallacy. If someone is going to show that the arguments from natural law, scripture and tradition, and social science that I summarized above are wrong, then he needs to demonstrate either that they rest on false premises, or that the conclusions don’t follow from the premises. The sources of and motivations behind the arguments are completely irrelevant, even if they were as Hanson claims they are (which they are not, since there are, after all, lots of people who support capital punishment but have no sympathy with or even knowledge of Neo-Scholasticism). A sixth and final objection raised by Hanson is also of a fallaciously ad hominem nature. Those who have criticized Pope Francis’s statements on capital punishment, Hanson alleges, show “evident bad faith” and are really guided by “political preferences” rather than theological concerns. The first thing to say about this is that once again, Hanson is simply diverting attention from what matters, which is whether the arguments given by Catholic defenders of capital punishment are cogent. The motives they may have for giving these arguments are irrelevant, even if they were the motives Hanson attributes to them (which they are not). The second thing to say is that here again, Hanson’s position is self-defeating. For the weapon he deploys against conservatives can be turned against him. That is to say, conservatives could with no less justice (indeed, with greater justice, I would argue) suggest that it is politics rather than theology that fundamentally motivates the thinking of progressive Catholics like Hanson. In particular, they allow their progressive political preferences to trump what scripture, the Fathers and Doctors of the Church, and two thousand years of consistent magisterial teaching say about the topic of capital punishment. They praise Pope Francis’s change to the Catechism, not out of any sincere respect for papal authority, but precisely because they think it finally undoes the teaching of earlier popes whom they disliked and had no qualms about criticizing. To be sure, I am not presenting this as an argument against the progressive Catholic position on capital punishment. That position is easily refutable on other grounds, namely the arguments I summarized above. And an Appeal to Motive would be a fallacy whoever deploys it, conservative or progressive. The point is rather that if Hanson wants to raise this sort of objection, then it could with equal justice be flung back at him. And if he would object to having it flung at him, then to be consistent he ought not to fling it at conservatives. The final thing to say is that the pope’s critics have in fact been very clear and consistent about their motives, and they have nothing to do with politics. They have to do instead with the worry that in appearing directly to contradict the teaching of scripture, tradition, and all of his predecessors, Pope Francis is doing grave harm to the credibility of the Church’s magisterial authority. The critics are concerned that the pope is giving aid and comfort to Protestant, atheist, and other critics of the Church, who allege that her claim to preserve intact the deposit of faith has been falsified. They are concerned that he gives similar aid and comfort to heretics within the Church who would like to use the change in teaching on the death penalty as a stalking horse for other and even more radical doctrinal changes. Hanson is free to argue that these concerns are overblown, and to rebut the arguments of the pope’s critics. But he has no right to pretend that those concerns and arguments do not exist. Catholic critics of capital punishment say that they are moved by respect for human dignity. But it does not respect the dignity of those one disagrees with to ignore what they actually say, or unjustly and uncharitably to attribute bad motives to them. https://edwardfeser.blogspot.com/2024/10/progressive-catholics-and-capital.html