Ab. Fisichella: ‘Death penalty
against human dignity’
Pope Francis greets Archbishop Fisichella in January 2018 - (Vatican Media) |
Following Pope Francis’ decision to revise the CCC to say
the death penalty is inadmissible, Archbishop Rino Fisichella says the move
clarifies a content of the faith and safeguards the dignity of the person.
By Devin Watkins
Archbishop Rino Fisichella, President of the Pontifical
Council for Promoting the New Evangelization, says Pope Francis’ change to the
Catechism regarding the death penalty is true progress in continuity with
previous Church teaching.
Pope Francis revised the Catechism of the Catholic Church
(CCC 2267) on Thursday, declaring that “the death penalty is inadmissible
because it is an attack on the inviolability and dignity of the person.”
Clarifying content of the faith
Writing in the Vatican’s Osservatore Romano, Archbishop Fisichella said the change is “a true dogmatic progress with which the content of the faith is clarified”. He said this particular point of the faith “has steadily matured to the point of making one understand the unsustainability of the death penalty in our time.”
Archbishop Fisichella highlighted three reasons given in the
new text of the CCC for the change.
The most important, he said, is the recognition of every
person’s dignity, which is never lost, even when they commit very serious
crimes.
He also notes the “positive” change in the awareness of the
Christian people. States, he added, now have more effective systems of
detention, “which exclude the danger and trauma of violence being done to
innocent people” and allow for the possibility of a guilty person’s conversion
and redemption.
Decisive step
Archbishop Fisichella said the CDF’s letter accompanying the announcement notes this change is “in continuity with the previous Magisterium”.
“To guard the sacred deposit of faith does not mean to
mummify it,” he writes, “but to conform it ever more to its own nature and
allow the truth of faith to answer the questions of each generation.”
Calling the move a development in the “understanding of the
Gospel”, he said Pope Francis has taken “a decisive step in the interpretation
of a long-established doctrine”.
Contrary to Christian revelation
Archbishop Fisichella said the Church recognizes the “mixed feelings in the face of such violent and inhumane crimes” that can lead to the decision to pass the death penalty.
“In defending the abolition of the death penalty, one
does not forget the suffering of the victims involved, nor the injustice that
has been perpetrated. Rather, it is expected that justice take its own decisive
step, not taken out of rancour and vengeance, but from a sense of
responsibility beyond the present moment.”
Voluntarily suppressing a human life,” he concluded, “ is
contrary to Christian revelation.”
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