On Thursday
August 2, 2018, the New York Times reported the following:
Pope
Francis has declared the death penalty wrong in all cases, a definitive change
in church teaching that is likely to challenge Catholic politicians, judges and
officials who have argued that their church was not entirely opposed to capital
punishment.
Before, church doctrine accepted the
death penalty if it was “the only practicable way” to defend lives, an opening
that some Catholics took as license to support capital punishment in many
cases.
But Francis said
executions were unacceptable in all cases because they are “an attack” on human
dignity, the Vatican
announced on Thursday, adding that the church would work “with determination”
to abolish capital punishment worldwide.
The article went to say
that this change would be made to “The Catechism of the Catholic Church,” and
it seems, from all evidence, that it is now the authoritative teaching
coming from the Roman Magisterium.
Within hours Social media
was all a buzz with complaints from the usual suspects, especially very
conservative Roman Catholics of what is called, in the street lingo of online
theological gang rumbles, the “Trads,” that the Pope had taught error. Once again it was proved right that an acceptable definition of a modern western Roman Catholic
is “One for whom the pope is infallible, and usually wrong.” Also in the buzz
was one opinion by a somewhat well-known neo-Anglican that Pope Francis had single-handedly
overturned previous infallible Church teaching based on his authority as pope,
and that this was “huge.”
As one who has no dog in
the internal papal infallibility fight (in terms of trying to describe and
define it by artful tactics designed to affirm it in principle when forced
to deny it in practice, thus remaining among the faithful), it is of no
particular interest to me how the Trad gangs, when meeting by their motorcycles
in their leather jackets and sharpening their switchblades, settle the issue. I
know that Social Media is not likely to spare me the unpleasant sight of the rumbles as they
ensue, nor from the hue and cry of those seeking the head of Pope Francis on a
spike. Nonetheless, as a Christian who admires much about the current Pontiff,
I consider his statement to be the only moral position that is in any way that of the Spirit of Christ.
Some of you have read the debate between my younger brother, David Bentley Hart and one Edward Feser,
in which my brother firmly rejected the idea that any Christian has any
business trying to argue for and support Capital Punishment, as Edward Feser
had tried to do. My brother hit the nail on the head, so to speak, as he was
wrapping up his position.
I do not believe that anyone can
possibly truly absorb the moral and spiritual teachings of the New Testament
and conclude anything other than that there can be no genuinely Christian
support for the death penalty. And the history of the early Church bears
luminous witness to this. In later centuries, admittedly, as Christendom
progressively displaced the earlier, purer, and more perilous forms of
Christian life, things did indeed become more confused. Loyalty to Christ and
loyalty to the civil order were now no longer antithetical to one another,
which meant that neither loyalty could remain uncompromised by the other.
This brings me to what I regard as a more important consideration than
what Pope Francis may, or may not, have done to Papal Infallibility – whatever it
is when all is said and done. As someone who respects the man and his episcopal
office, I am more concerned by the probability that this is the moving of the Holy
Spirit. No, I do not mean to imply that the Holy Spirit has contradicted
Himself, but rather that He would assert His own Lordship over what the Trads
call “the Church.” I know that sounds like chaos to those who need the security
of an authority system that, like dominoes lined up, cannot endure the fall of
so much as one detail. Personally, I would not feel my faith to be secure if it
rested on innumerable details, all of which must be infallible in order for the
essential and undeniable truths of revelation to stand.
No. For me this brings up
something my other brother wrote, my older brother, Addison Hodges Hart, who
precedes me in the way of senility, but not so far along that path before he
had written a good book that speaks clearly to this matter, indeed, that speaks
to it in the very title itself, Strangers and Pilgrims Once More, subtitled, Being Disciples of Jesus
in a Post-Christendom World.
Far
too long, really since the days of the late Roman Empire ,
the Church has played the part of chaplain to kings, princes, and in modern
times democracies and republics. This has been true more in the western Church
over the centuries, but has been the case in the Eastern Church as well except
under Muslim rule, or Communist oppression. My own beloved Anglicanism has
certainly not been free from the charge of Erastianism, although I find that
criticism to be quite lame in the historical context of Christendom as a whole. Whether one
was in London or in Rome , up until very modern times, the order
of the day was Erastian.
And, the problem with the Church playing the role of State Chaplaincy is that it weakens its prophetic role. Instead of speaking against the evils of the the world’s governments, as St. Augustine did so fearlessly (likening the various princes and governments of his time to large scale gangsterism), calling them to account for their sins, like John the Baptist addressing Herod in the spirit of Elijah who addressed Ahab, the subordinate Chaplaincy Church blesses the state, and takes part in all of its endeavors. That includes wars whether they can be described by anybody as Just or Unjust, substituting some matters of good and evil as black and white with a politically suitable gray scale.
And, the problem with the Church playing the role of State Chaplaincy is that it weakens its prophetic role. Instead of speaking against the evils of the the world’s governments, as St. Augustine did so fearlessly (likening the various princes and governments of his time to large scale gangsterism), calling them to account for their sins, like John the Baptist addressing Herod in the spirit of Elijah who addressed Ahab, the subordinate Chaplaincy Church blesses the state, and takes part in all of its endeavors. That includes wars whether they can be described by anybody as Just or Unjust, substituting some matters of good and evil as black and white with a politically suitable gray scale.
What
Pope Francis represents in his bold declaration against Capital Punishment is liberation
for the Church from its chaplaincy role, and a rediscovery of the authority and
freedom to prophesy against the evils of kings, princes, and states of every
kind. He may well be following the Spirit. “Now the Lord is that Spirit: And
where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty (II Cor. 3:17).”
2 comments:
As a member of the RCC, the prior teaching was stated correctly (i.e. death penalty is okay so long as containment is not an option). The Pope has essentially made a statement saying, "Okay folks we've reached the point in the world where containment is now always an option." In fact the paragraph with the changed text starts in the English with "Today..." In theory if the future becomes some sort of Mad Max post-apocalyptic dystopia then the death penalty may once again be reasonable and a morally licit option. I don't entirely understand the excitement since for a Catholic in most of the world (especially the Western world) since the publication of the first edition of this Catechism (1992) nothing has changed--the death penalty was wrong then and it is now.
It seems more likely that he is speaking in Absloute terms.
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