Some relevant points.
1. The official position on the Church--that is, the position of the magisterium--has long been that it is not "in principle" immoral for the state to impose the death penalty.
2. An important part of the justification for this position was that, in the words of the Angelic Doctor,
By sinning man departs from the
order of reason, and therefore falls away from human dignity, insofar as
man is naturally free and exists for his own sake, and falls somehow into the
slavery of the beasts, so that he may be disposed of according to what is
useful to others. . . . Therefore, although it be evil in
itself to kill a man who preserves his human dignity, nevertheless to
kill a man who is a sinner can be good, just as it can be good to kill a
beast. . . .
As E. Christian Brugger has explained:
"Though
the Catholic tradition has always affirmed the absolute immunity of innocent
human life from intentional attacks and destruction, moral culpability for
gravely wrong acts has traditionally been understood to forfeit that
status. The tradition is quite clear
that the lives of those who deliberately commit serious crimes are not
inviolable . . . . [Thomas] Aquinas says that
a grave sinner 'falls' from human dignity and may be treated as a beast, Pius
XII that a dangerous criminal, 'by his crime, . . . has
already disposed himself of his right to live.' In both cases, the life of the malefactor
through the malefactor’s own deliberate act(s) becomes violable."
3. So, the man-becomes-beast justification--the one-can-forfeit-one's-dignity justification--is no longer available as a (partial) buttress for the traditional teaching of the Church that it is not in principle immoral for the state to impose the death penalty.
4. Indeed, the position of John Paul II--and of such traditionailst stalwarts as Germain Grisez, Joseph Boyle, and John Finnis--is that it is in principle immoral for the state to impose the death penalty. Yes, the position of John Paul II is more radical that the official position of the Church. JP II taught that to execute a human being
is to fail to respect “the inalienable dignity of human life”; it is to treat
him as if he lacks inherent dignity.
Why did John Paul
II teach that it is always morally forbidden to kill
any human being, innocent
or not, intentionally? Brugger has explained that to kill someone
intentionally is necessarily to want to kill him (though it is not necessarily to want to be in
the situation in which one feels constrained to want to kill him), and to want
to kill a human being, no matter what “beneficial states of affairs [killing
him] promises, . . . is contrary to the charity we are
bound to have for all.” By contrast, to kill someone with foresight
but not intent is not necessarily to want to kill him; indeed, it may be that
one would rejoice if one’s action did not result in killing anyone, even if it
is virtually inevitable that one’s action will yield death.
So, according to
John Paul II, as interpreted by Brugger, one may never kill a human being
intentionally: “[T]he intentional destruction of a person’s life” is
necessarily a failure of love; it is necessarily “contrary to the charity we
are bound to have for all”; as such, it is necessarily a failure to respect
“the inalienable dignity of human life.” To respect the inalienable dignity of a human
being—to treat a human being as if he has inherent dignity, not as if he lacks it—is to treat him lovingly; to fail to treat him
lovingly—to act “contrary to the charity we are bound to have for all”—is to
fail to respect his inherent dignity. (“[W]hereas ‘Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself’ represents the
Greek of the Septuagint (Leviticus 19:18) and of the New
Testament, the Hebrew from which the former is derived means rather ‘You shall
treat your neighbor lovingly, for he is like yourself.’”) Because to execute a human being is
necessarily to kill him intentionally, one may never execute a human
being. For government to execute a human
being is necessarily for it to treat him as if he lacks inherent dignity. According to this “unconditionalist”
principle, there are no
conditions in which it is morally permissible to execute a human being—or, more
generally, to kill a human being intentionally. The moral impermissibility of such action is unconditional: No matter
what conditions obtain—even if, for example, in a particular society capital punishment
has been shown to have a significant deterrent effect—to kill a human being
intentionally is beyond the moral pale.
5. So, make your choice: (1) The official position of the Church, which Brugger argues (and I agree) can no longer be justified. (2) John Paul II's radical position. (3) Some other position.
But what one should no longer do is proceed in blissful ignorance of the fact that the official position of the Church and the position of John Paul II are not the same.
If I had to choose between the two positions, I would choose JPII's position, which in my judgment has an integrity that the official position of the Church utterly lacks, now that the man-becomes-beast rationale has been excommunicated.
[For citations and fuller argument, which I provide in my recent essay on Capital Punishment and the Morality of Human Rights, click here.]
_______________
Michael P.
Friday, May 27, 2005
William Saletan accuses President Bush of hypocrisy in opposing stem cell research even though it supposedly would save lives but supporting the death penalty on grounds that it saves lives (presumably through either general or specific deterrence). Over on my personal blog, I offer some thoughts on why Saletan has a point, albeit less of one than he believes. Or, perhaps more precisely, I offer some thoughts from Avery Cardinal Dulles that I think shed useful light on the issue.
I'm more than ready to criticize the Bush administration for being dogmatic, overconfident, and arrogant in waging the "war on terror." But the anti-Bush arguments in the "Petitioner or Prophet?" op-ed that Michael P. posted seem pretty nit-picking to me. Let's set aside how much one can glean from the number of references to God in State of the Union addresses; let's focus on the nature of the references. Professor Domke and Mr. Coe characterize Bush's references as "declarations of divine wishes," reflecting a "certainty about God's will [that] is troubling" -- while other other presidents' references have been simply more innocuous "requests for divine guidance."
First, what is the divine will that the writers think it's troubling for Bush to assert? It's "that freedom is the right of every person and the future of every nation," and that this "is God's gift to humanity." Ah, right. Bush arrogantly brushes aside the powerful counterargument that God is against freedom and doesn't want all persons to have it. And that counterargument is found -- where exactly?
Second, what's the big difference between Bush's statements and those of FDR and JFK that the writers approve? FDR treats freedom as just as bedrock and unassailable a value as Bush does. (Plus, I'll eat my hat if Bush hasn't also essentially "requested divine guidance" at various times in his speeches.) If anything, one could argue that Bush's phrasing is facially more humble, at least than JFK's was. Bush says that freedom comes from God, not from America. Kennedy spoke of freedom, and America's unique commitment to it ("the burden and glory"), and then enlisted God in aid of that specially American endeavor, without asking first whether God was in favor of it.
Saying (as Bush does) that a political value comes from God, not from you or your own nation, can reflect or produce arrogance (since the value is of divine origin, there are no limits to what can be done to pursue it). But it might also reflect or produce humility (we're not the source of all goodness; since the origin of that value is higher than any of us, it stands in judgment of our own actions as well). I don't think that one can tell which of these two is at work in a particular case just by looking at the words. And thus I don't think it's per se troubling to invoke "God's will" as the source of a political value. Dr. King and other civil rights leaders didn't say "We strive for freedom, and hope that God will guide us." They said "Freedom is God's will"; and their appeal, far from being "troubling," was deeper and more powerful for it.
To reiterate: There's a strong (even airtight?) case that the administration has been pervasively arrogant in prosecuting the war on terror. But:
(1) I doubt that all or even most of that arrogance comes from religious certainty (does anyone think Dick Cheney's or Donald Rumsfeld's overconfidence about policing Iraq came from spending hours on their knees before God?); and
(2) The case for arrogance should be made on the basis of the administration's actions, not merely its invocation of God in support. Perhaps Professor Domke makes the fact-based case in his book; but the op-ed seems to me to reflect an excessive focus on interpreting the minutiae of rhetoric.
Tom B.