At noon today in Rome (6:00am EST), the Holy Father, Pope Francis received in audience a delegation from the International Commission against the Death Penalty. His Holiness spoke unscripted remarks with them, but provided them with a copy of the text of the speech he had prepared for their encounter.
Illustrious ladies and gentlemen:
I greet all of you cordially and wish to express my personal gratitude for the work that the International Commission against the Death Penalty carries out in favour of the universal abolition of this cruel form of punishment. I also appreciate the commitment that each of you has demonstrated to this cause in your respective countries.
I have addressed a letter to whoever was your President on March 19, 2015 and I have expressed the commitment of the Church to the cause of this abolition in my speech before the United States Congress on September 24, 2015.
I have shared some ideas on this topic in my letter to the International Association of Criminal Law and the Latin American Association of Criminal Law and Criminology, on May 30, 2014. I have further developed these ideas in my address to the five major world associations dedicated to the study of criminal law, criminology, victimology and prison issues, of October 23, 2014. The certainty that every life is sacred and that human dignity must be guarded without exceptions, has led me, from the beginning of my ministry , to work at different levels for the universal abolition of the death penalty.
This has been reflected recently in the new wording of n. 2267 of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, which now expresses the progress of the doctrine of the last Pontiffs as well as the change in the conscience of the Christian people, which rejects a penalty that seriously harms human dignity (cf Discourse on the occasion of the XXV anniversary of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, October 11, 2017). A penalty contrary to the Gospel because it implies suppressing a life that is always sacred in the eyes of the Creator and of which only God is true judge and guarantor (see Letter to the President of the International Commission against the Death Penalty, March 20, 2015).
In past centuries, when the instruments available to us for the protection of society were lacking and the current level of development of human rights had not yet been achieved, recourse to the death penalty was sometimes presented as a logical and just consequence. Even in the Papal State, this inhuman form of punishment has been resorted to, ignoring the primacy of mercy over justice.
That is why the new wording of the Catechism implies also taking responsibility for the past and recognizing that the acceptance of this form of punishment was a consequence of a mentality of the time, a mentality that was more legalistic than Christian, one that sacralized the value of laws lacking in humanity and mercy. The Church could not remain in a neutral position in the face of the current demands for the reaffirmation of personal dignity.
The reform of the text of the Catechism in the point dedicated to the death penalty does not imply any contradiction with the teaching of the past, because the Church has always defended the dignity of human life. However, the harmonious development of the doctrine imposes the need to reflect in the Catechism that, notwithstanding the gravity of the crime committed, the Church teaches, in the light of the Gospel, that the death penalty is always inadmissible because it's focus is against the inviolability and the dignity of the person.
In the same way, the Magisterium of the Church understands that the perpetual penalties, which remove the possibility of a moral and existential redemption in favour of the condemned and that of the community, are a form of death penalty in disguise (cf. Speech to a delegation of the International Association of Criminal Law, October 23, 2014). God is a Father who always awaits the return of the son who, knowing that he has made a mistake, asks for forgiveness and starts a new life. No one, then, can be deprived of his life or the hope of his redemption and reconciliation with the community.
As it has happened in the heart of the Church, it is necessary that a similar commitment be assumed in the concert of the nations. The sovereign right of all countries to define their legal system can not be exercised in contradiction with their obligations under international law, nor can it represent an obstacle to the universal recognition of human dignity.
The resolutions of the United Nations on moratoria concerning the use of the death penalty, which aim to suspend the application of the death penalty in member countries, are a path that must be traveled without implying rejection of the initiative of universal abolition.
On this occasion, I would like to invite all States that have not abolished the death penalty but who do not apply it, to continue their compliance with this international commitment and that the moratorium be applied not only to the execution of the sentence but also to the imposition of death sentences. The moratorium cannot be experienced by the condemned as a mere prolongation of the wait for their executions.
To the States that continue to apply the death penalty, I urge you to adopt a moratorium with a view to the abolition of this cruel form of punishment. I understand that to reach abolition, which is the goal of this cause, in certain contexts it may be necessary to go through complex political processes. The suspension of executions and the reduction of crimes punishable by capital punishment, as well as the prohibition of this form of punishment for minors, pregnant women or people with mental or intellectual disabilities, are minimum objectives to which leaders around the world must commit.
As I have done on previous occasions, I would like to call attention to extrajudicial summary or arbitrary executions, which are a regrettably recurrent phenomenon in countries with or without legal death penalty. These are deliberate homicides committed by state agents, which are often passed off as a result of confrontations with alleged criminals or presented as unintended consequences of the reasonable, necessary and proportional use of force to protect citizens.
Self-love is a fundamental principle of morality. It is therefore legitimate to enforce the right to life itself, even when it is necessary to inflict a mortal blow on the aggressor (Catechism, no. 2264).
Legitimate defence is not a right but a duty for the one who is responsible for the life of another (Catechism, no. 2226). The defence of the common good requires placing the aggressor in the situation of not being able to cause harm. For this reason, those who have legitimate authority must reject any aggression, even with the use of weapons, whenever this is necessary for the preservation of one's own life or that of the persons in their care. As a consequence, any use of lethal force that is not strictly necessary for this purpose can only be considered an illegal execution, a crime of the State.
Any defensive action, to be legitimate, must be necessary and measured. As Saint Thomas Aquinas taught, such an act, in regard to the preservation of one's own life, has nothing illicit, since it is natural for all beings to preserve their existence as much as possible. However, an act that comes from good intention can become illicit if it is not proportionate to the end. Therefore, if one, to defend his own life, uses more violence than is necessary, this act will be unlawful. But if he rejects aggression moderately, the defence will be lawful, since, according to law, it is lawful to repel force with force, moderating defence according to the needs of threatened security (Summa theologiae, 2-2, q. 64, a.7).
Finally, I want to share with you a reflection that is linked to the work you do, to your struggle for truly human justice. Reflections in the legal field and the philosophy of law have traditionally dealt with those who injure or interfere in the rights of others. Less attention has sparked the omission to help others when we can. It is a reflection that can not wait any longer.
The traditional principles of justice, characterized by the idea of respect for individual rights and their protection from all interference in them by others, must be complemented by an ethic of care. In the field of criminal justice, this implies a greater understanding of the causes of behaviour, its social context, the situation of vulnerability of offenders to the law and the suffering of victims. This way of reasoning, inspired by divine mercy, should lead us to contemplate each specific case in its specificity, and not to deal with abstract numbers of victims and victimizers. In this way, it is possible to address the ethical and moral problems that arise from conflict and social injustice, to understand the suffering of the specific people involved and to reach other types of solutions that do not deepen those sufferings.
We could say it with this image: we need a justice that besides being a father is also a mother. The gestures of mutual care, characteristic of love that is also civil and political, are manifested in all the actions that seek to build a better world (cf Laudato si ', 231). The love of society and the commitment to the common good are an excellent form of charity, which not only affects relations between individuals, but also macro-relations, such as social, economic and political relations (Benedict XVI, Caritas in veritate, 2).
Social love is the key to an authentic development: In order to shape a more human, more dignified society, it is necessary to revalue love in social life - political, economic, cultural -, making it the constant and supreme norm of the action (Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church, no. 582). In this context, social love moves us to think about great strategies that encourage a culture of care in the different areas of life in common. The work that you do is part of that effort to which we are called.
Dear friends, I thank you again for this meeting, and I assure you that I will continue working together with you for the abolition of the death penalty. The Church is committed to this and I hope that the Holy See will collaborate with the International Commission against the Death Penalty in the construction of the necessary consensus for the eradication of capital punishment and all forms of cruel punishment.
This is a cause to which all men and women of good will are called and a duty for those of us who share the Christian vocation of Baptism. Everyone, in any case, needs the help of God, who is the source of all reason and justice.
Therefore I invoke the light and strength of the Holy Spirit upon each of you, through the intercession of the Virgin Mother. With all my heart, I bless you, and please, I ask you to pray for me.
(Original text in Spanish)
Prepared Speech of His Holiness, Pope Francis
for the meeting with members of the
International Commission against the Death Penalty
Illustrious ladies and gentlemen:
I greet all of you cordially and wish to express my personal gratitude for the work that the International Commission against the Death Penalty carries out in favour of the universal abolition of this cruel form of punishment. I also appreciate the commitment that each of you has demonstrated to this cause in your respective countries.
I have addressed a letter to whoever was your President on March 19, 2015 and I have expressed the commitment of the Church to the cause of this abolition in my speech before the United States Congress on September 24, 2015.
I have shared some ideas on this topic in my letter to the International Association of Criminal Law and the Latin American Association of Criminal Law and Criminology, on May 30, 2014. I have further developed these ideas in my address to the five major world associations dedicated to the study of criminal law, criminology, victimology and prison issues, of October 23, 2014. The certainty that every life is sacred and that human dignity must be guarded without exceptions, has led me, from the beginning of my ministry , to work at different levels for the universal abolition of the death penalty.
This has been reflected recently in the new wording of n. 2267 of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, which now expresses the progress of the doctrine of the last Pontiffs as well as the change in the conscience of the Christian people, which rejects a penalty that seriously harms human dignity (cf Discourse on the occasion of the XXV anniversary of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, October 11, 2017). A penalty contrary to the Gospel because it implies suppressing a life that is always sacred in the eyes of the Creator and of which only God is true judge and guarantor (see Letter to the President of the International Commission against the Death Penalty, March 20, 2015).
In past centuries, when the instruments available to us for the protection of society were lacking and the current level of development of human rights had not yet been achieved, recourse to the death penalty was sometimes presented as a logical and just consequence. Even in the Papal State, this inhuman form of punishment has been resorted to, ignoring the primacy of mercy over justice.
That is why the new wording of the Catechism implies also taking responsibility for the past and recognizing that the acceptance of this form of punishment was a consequence of a mentality of the time, a mentality that was more legalistic than Christian, one that sacralized the value of laws lacking in humanity and mercy. The Church could not remain in a neutral position in the face of the current demands for the reaffirmation of personal dignity.
The reform of the text of the Catechism in the point dedicated to the death penalty does not imply any contradiction with the teaching of the past, because the Church has always defended the dignity of human life. However, the harmonious development of the doctrine imposes the need to reflect in the Catechism that, notwithstanding the gravity of the crime committed, the Church teaches, in the light of the Gospel, that the death penalty is always inadmissible because it's focus is against the inviolability and the dignity of the person.
In the same way, the Magisterium of the Church understands that the perpetual penalties, which remove the possibility of a moral and existential redemption in favour of the condemned and that of the community, are a form of death penalty in disguise (cf. Speech to a delegation of the International Association of Criminal Law, October 23, 2014). God is a Father who always awaits the return of the son who, knowing that he has made a mistake, asks for forgiveness and starts a new life. No one, then, can be deprived of his life or the hope of his redemption and reconciliation with the community.
As it has happened in the heart of the Church, it is necessary that a similar commitment be assumed in the concert of the nations. The sovereign right of all countries to define their legal system can not be exercised in contradiction with their obligations under international law, nor can it represent an obstacle to the universal recognition of human dignity.
The resolutions of the United Nations on moratoria concerning the use of the death penalty, which aim to suspend the application of the death penalty in member countries, are a path that must be traveled without implying rejection of the initiative of universal abolition.
On this occasion, I would like to invite all States that have not abolished the death penalty but who do not apply it, to continue their compliance with this international commitment and that the moratorium be applied not only to the execution of the sentence but also to the imposition of death sentences. The moratorium cannot be experienced by the condemned as a mere prolongation of the wait for their executions.
To the States that continue to apply the death penalty, I urge you to adopt a moratorium with a view to the abolition of this cruel form of punishment. I understand that to reach abolition, which is the goal of this cause, in certain contexts it may be necessary to go through complex political processes. The suspension of executions and the reduction of crimes punishable by capital punishment, as well as the prohibition of this form of punishment for minors, pregnant women or people with mental or intellectual disabilities, are minimum objectives to which leaders around the world must commit.
As I have done on previous occasions, I would like to call attention to extrajudicial summary or arbitrary executions, which are a regrettably recurrent phenomenon in countries with or without legal death penalty. These are deliberate homicides committed by state agents, which are often passed off as a result of confrontations with alleged criminals or presented as unintended consequences of the reasonable, necessary and proportional use of force to protect citizens.
Self-love is a fundamental principle of morality. It is therefore legitimate to enforce the right to life itself, even when it is necessary to inflict a mortal blow on the aggressor (Catechism, no. 2264).
Legitimate defence is not a right but a duty for the one who is responsible for the life of another (Catechism, no. 2226). The defence of the common good requires placing the aggressor in the situation of not being able to cause harm. For this reason, those who have legitimate authority must reject any aggression, even with the use of weapons, whenever this is necessary for the preservation of one's own life or that of the persons in their care. As a consequence, any use of lethal force that is not strictly necessary for this purpose can only be considered an illegal execution, a crime of the State.
Any defensive action, to be legitimate, must be necessary and measured. As Saint Thomas Aquinas taught, such an act, in regard to the preservation of one's own life, has nothing illicit, since it is natural for all beings to preserve their existence as much as possible. However, an act that comes from good intention can become illicit if it is not proportionate to the end. Therefore, if one, to defend his own life, uses more violence than is necessary, this act will be unlawful. But if he rejects aggression moderately, the defence will be lawful, since, according to law, it is lawful to repel force with force, moderating defence according to the needs of threatened security (Summa theologiae, 2-2, q. 64, a.7).
Finally, I want to share with you a reflection that is linked to the work you do, to your struggle for truly human justice. Reflections in the legal field and the philosophy of law have traditionally dealt with those who injure or interfere in the rights of others. Less attention has sparked the omission to help others when we can. It is a reflection that can not wait any longer.
The traditional principles of justice, characterized by the idea of respect for individual rights and their protection from all interference in them by others, must be complemented by an ethic of care. In the field of criminal justice, this implies a greater understanding of the causes of behaviour, its social context, the situation of vulnerability of offenders to the law and the suffering of victims. This way of reasoning, inspired by divine mercy, should lead us to contemplate each specific case in its specificity, and not to deal with abstract numbers of victims and victimizers. In this way, it is possible to address the ethical and moral problems that arise from conflict and social injustice, to understand the suffering of the specific people involved and to reach other types of solutions that do not deepen those sufferings.
We could say it with this image: we need a justice that besides being a father is also a mother. The gestures of mutual care, characteristic of love that is also civil and political, are manifested in all the actions that seek to build a better world (cf Laudato si ', 231). The love of society and the commitment to the common good are an excellent form of charity, which not only affects relations between individuals, but also macro-relations, such as social, economic and political relations (Benedict XVI, Caritas in veritate, 2).
Social love is the key to an authentic development: In order to shape a more human, more dignified society, it is necessary to revalue love in social life - political, economic, cultural -, making it the constant and supreme norm of the action (Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church, no. 582). In this context, social love moves us to think about great strategies that encourage a culture of care in the different areas of life in common. The work that you do is part of that effort to which we are called.
Dear friends, I thank you again for this meeting, and I assure you that I will continue working together with you for the abolition of the death penalty. The Church is committed to this and I hope that the Holy See will collaborate with the International Commission against the Death Penalty in the construction of the necessary consensus for the eradication of capital punishment and all forms of cruel punishment.
This is a cause to which all men and women of good will are called and a duty for those of us who share the Christian vocation of Baptism. Everyone, in any case, needs the help of God, who is the source of all reason and justice.
Therefore I invoke the light and strength of the Holy Spirit upon each of you, through the intercession of the Virgin Mother. With all my heart, I bless you, and please, I ask you to pray for me.
(Original text in Spanish)
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