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SOURCE: http://www.wnd.com/2002/02/12707/
Scalia v. the pope: Who's right
on death penalty?
Posted By Patrick J. Buchanan
On 02/08/2002 @ 1:00 am
Supreme
Court Justice Antonin Scalia certainly set the cat down among the pigeons the
other day at his alma mater Georgetown University. Challenging the views of the
pope and the U.S. bishops, the justice urged any Catholic judge who could not
in conscience impose a death sentence to get off the bench.
“[T]he
choice for the judge who believes the death penalty to be immoral,”
said Scalia, “is resignation, rather than simply
ignoring duly enacted constitutional laws and sabotaging the death penalty.”
Within
hours of the story hitting the wires, Wolf Blitzer was on the phone. Could I
come over to CNN and explain how the justice, a devout Catholic, could openly
defy the teachings of his church?
Delighted.
For Scalia had not contradicted or defied any Catholic doctrine. Rather, it is
the Holy Father and the bishops who are outside the Catholic mainstream, and at
odds with Scripture, tradition and natural law. For an exposition of Catholic
doctrine, one should pick up the essay by Cardinal Avery Dulles in the April
issue of First Things. As Dulles notes, Catholicism has supported the death
penalty for 2000 years:
“In
the Old Testament, the Mosaic Law specifies no less than 36 capital offenses
calling for execution by stoning, burning, decapitation or strangulation.
Included in the list are idolatry, magic, blasphemy, violation of the Sabbath,
murder, adultery, bestiality, pederasty and incest. The death penalty was
considered especially fitting as a punishment for murder, since in his covenant
with Noah, God had laid down the principle, ‘Whoever sheds the blood of man, by
man shall his blood be shed. …’
“In
the New Testament, the right of the State to put criminals to death seems to be
taken for granted. … At no point … does Jesus deny that the State has authority
to exact capital punishments. In his debates with the Pharisees, Jesus cites
with approval the apparently harsh commandment, ‘He who speaks evil of father
or mother, let him surely die.’ … When Pilate calls attention to his authority
to crucify him, Jesus points out that Pilate’s power comes to him from above –
that is to say from God. … Jesus commends the good thief on the cross next to
him, who has admitted that he and his fellow thief are receiving the reward of
their deeds.”
In
Christian tradition, “the Fathers and Doctors of the Church are virtually
unanimous in their support for capital punishment,” adds Dulles, citing St.
Augustine in “The City of God”: “[I]t is in no way contrary to the commandment
‘Thou shalt not kill’ … for the representatives of the State’s authority to put
criminals to death. …” To support the State’s right to execute, St. Thomas
Aquinas invoked Scripture, tradition and reason alike.
“In the
High Middle Ages and early modern times, the Holy See authorized the
Inquisition to turn over heretics to the secular arm for execution,” writes
Dulles. “In the Papal States, the death penalty was imposed for a variety of
reasons.” Until 1969, Vatican City provided for the death penalty for any who
might attempt to assassinate the pope.
As the
death penalty has been supported by the Catholic Church since the first
Pentecost, whence comes this episcopal Catholic opposition?
“The roots
of opposition … are not in Christianity,” continues Dulles. “The mounting
opposition to the death penalty in Europe since the Enlightenment has gone hand
in hand with a decline in faith in eternal life. In the 19th century, the most
consistent supporters of capital punishment were the Christian churches, and
its most consistent opponents were groups hostile to the churches. When death
came to be understood as the ultimate evil rather than as a stage on the way to
eternal life, utilitarian philosophers such as Jeremy Bentham found it easy to
dismiss capital punishment as ‘useless annihilation.’
“The
movement to abolish the death penalty in formerly Christian countries may owe
more to secular humanism than to deeper penetration into the gospel. When Pope
John Paul declared in 1995 that, ‘the direct and voluntary killing of an
innocent human being is always gravely immoral,’ he was careful to insert the
word, ‘innocent.’”
As Europe
has become less Christian, secular opposition to the death penalty has been
imposed from above by European elites.
Thus,
Scalia was right about church doctrine, and right about the law. No judge
morally opposed to the death penalty should sit in a capital murder case. To do
so would be an act of moral arrogance and judicial nullification of democratic
rule.
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