|
First Things
Correspondence
(August/September 1998)
Copyright (c) 1998 First
Things 85 (August/September 1998): 2-7.
On the Death Penalty
I read James Nuechterlein’s essay "An
Unwonted Uncertainty" (April) with appreciation of his intellectual
uncertainty. As one who has studied and served in the fields of medicine, the
military, and law enforcement, I would only carry his fine thoughts a little
further.
In my book Death in the Balance: The Debate over Capital Punishment
(1989), I point out that the death penalty is closely related to two other
social issues that have received widespread attention in the past three
decades: abortion and gun control. All three issues raise fundamental questions
about life and death, especially the sanctity of life.
Relatively little consistency is to be found among the partisans on
these issues. Many who support capital punishment oppose abortion and gun
control. On the other hand, opponents of the death penalty often favor
abortion.
If the sanctity of life were the only concern, left and right sides
would have to unite in opposing the death penalty and abortion and in backing
strict gun control. But such a position would receive little support across
the political spectrum. Instead, the opposing sides stand by their long-stated
attitudes, one group accusing the other of sentimental idealism and dreamlike
compassion, the other charging its opposition with lack of heart and a
tough realism that has little room for compassion .
Donald D. Hook
Milton, DE
James Nuechterlein’s tentative note was a rare, and to that extent welcome,
word in First Things from a proponent of the death penalty. But he needlessly
cedes the moral high ground by his statement that, should we who support
the death penalty be wrong, "the judgment for error on this life or
death issue will weigh on us more heavily than it will on those who have
erred in the gentler direction." It would seem to follow that opponents
of the death penalty have little reason to reexamine the evidence against
their position. At the worst, they will have erred on the side of gentleness,
and who needs to worry about that? Whereas we supporters of the death penalty
must remember "every moment" that we "might be quite terribly
wrong."
But the very arguments Mr. Nuechterlein makes earlier in his piece would,
if consistently followed, allow him to repudiate this uneven placement
of the burden of conscience. Mr. Nuechterlein states that the death penalty
is an "indication of reverence" for innocent human life. Yet
understood rightly, such an indication of reverence is not merely symbolic
and dispensable, and those who want us to dispense with it are not the
true advocates of gentleness. Consider the atrocities committed by many
on death row—the tortures, sometimes tape-recorded by the torturers, the
brutal murderers of innocent persons. If the state does not execute these
criminals, they must either be freed or maintained for the rest of their
days at the expense of those whose lives they disdain and whose fellow-citizens
(not to mention children or parents) they have tortured and slaughtered.
Would such a policy really represent "the gentler direction"?
In framing the issue in such terms, we have once again allowed the victims,
and the state’s duty to execute justice for their horrific deaths, to slip
silently out of the picture .
Those who have, like Mr. Nuechterlein, seen the point of the death penalty
must never forget that misguided "gentleness" to human predators
is inhumane to the innocent and an abrogation of the government’s responsibility
to "bear the sword" for the "punishment of evildoers."
The death penalty is not just an option the ruler may decide to exercise
if he feels inclined to be harsh; it is an obligation of government in
a just society. Such life or death considerations should also give food
for conscientious thought to the opponents of the death penalty. For if
we are right, they will have contributed to the undermining of civilized
rule and the objective failure to value innocent life aright.
Lydia McGrew
Kalamazoo,MI
It seems to me that in his piece on capital punishment James Nuechterlein
has left out the best arguments of all in opposition to that practice,
those of Jesus Christ. How about Matthew 5:44, "But I say to you,
love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you"; Matthew 6:12,
"And forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors";
and Matthew 7:2, "For with the judgment you make you will be judged,
and the measure you give will be the measure you get"? One could cite
many other verses from both the Old and New Testaments, but it should suffice
to say that, as Christians, we are bound to love all our neighbors, all
the time. There are only two justifications for killing, self-defense and
to prevent a murder. All other killing is, for a Christian, hypocrisy.
Raymond H. Fischer
Portland, OR
With respect to Karla Faye Tucker and the relationship of her case to
the general subject of capital punishment: Had her plea of "conversion"
been accepted, what a door would have been opened! Such a religious revival
would have animated the nation’s prisons and especially the death rows
as would have put the Great Awakening to shame. A clamor not only for Bibles
but also for specific conversion programs and teachers thereof would have
resounded from every death-celled monster in the nation. And in response,
the right to become a born-again Christian (or something) and thereby ineligible
for capital as well as any other punishment would have been found by many
a liberal judge to be a vital part of the Bill of Rights, and the furnishing
of every convicted criminal with a specialist in conversion would soon
have become as essential a requirement of due process of law as the right
to legal counsel.
Texas is to be congratulated for having refused to accept this novel
plea, and for having by inference endorsed Ambrose Bierce’s definition
of penitent:
"Penitent, adj. Undergoing or awaiting punishment."
Park Chamberlain
Woodside, CA
James Nuechterlein’s poignant description of his transition from a fervent
anti- to a hesitant pro-capital punishment position exactly captures the
ambivalence which thoughtful Christians feel on this issue. I agree with
Mr. Nuechterlein that most secular arguments against capital punishment
are not finally persuasive. He does not mention, however, the one argument
that does seem to me decisive: Christians believe that God has a plan of
redemption for each human soul. For man to willfully cut short a human
life is to risk preempting God’s plan and timetable. Whether God’s plan
or timetable can be deflected is irrelevant; the attempt to do so is blasphemous.
Ian A. Hunter
University of Western Ontario
London, Ontario
James Nuechterlein has rationalized his way into deciding it is okay
for the state to "whomp" people into eternity under certain circumstances.
(Why is it people who are anti-abortion so often can’t seem to get that
same logic to work for people after they’ve been born?) I will join him
in supporting capital punishment—and in some cases a part of me wants to
so much—when . . .
- When the line between the guy who is executed and the guy who isn’t
is much more closely delineated. We frequently let people live who are
much more culpable than the ones we kill. Mr. Nuechterlein talks about
"just." There is nothing remotely "just" about capital
punishment as practiced anywhere in the world today.
- When the barbarity of keeping someone locked up for decades in conditions
that would have the Animal Rights people frothing at the mouth were the
inmate a rabbit is ended.
- When there is zero possibility of an innocent person being executed.
- When someone convinces me that Christ’s orders to his people about
how they are to behave don’t apply when voting for or against capital punishment.
Society may not be under Christ’s orders, but we are, and I therefore
as a Christian must oppose capital punishment no matter how much I want
the "bad guy" to get it. Some things, like killing and divorce
and wars, are always wrong, even when they are the only sane and viable
alternatives left.
- And thus, finally, I will join him in supporting capital punishment
when that is the only sane and viable alternative left for dealing with
people who do terrible and cruel things. We have many other alternatives
at hand, but the majority keep voting to kill, while stretching the whole
affair out and executing medically so we appear "civilized."
Arthur E. Greer
Houston, TX
James Nuechterlein replies:
I thank Donald D. Hook, Lydia McGrew, and Park Chamberlain for their
useful comments. Raymond H. Fischer quotes from the Gospel of Matthew to
argue that followers of Christ must oppose the death penalty. But if Christians
are to insist on that kind of literal translation of Jesus’ words into
public policy prescriptions, then they must—given Mr. Fischer’s examples—oppose
all forms of criminal punishment. To Ian A. Hunter I would simply
suggest that, assuming divine foreknowledge, capital punishment is not
at all inconsistent with the belief that "God has a plan of redemption
for each human soul." As for Arthur E. Greer’s rant, I can only say
that it’s the kind of argument that brings welcome ease to my occasional
doubts about the death penalty.
Karol Wojtyla and Vatican II
I greatly appreciated Thomas Guarino’s substantial review of Rocco Buttiglione’s
Karol Wojtyla: The Thought
of the Man Who Became Pope John Paul II (April). There is, however,
another dimension of Buttiglione’s book which needs attending to: i.e., Vatican
II as a philosophical construct.
Buttiglione writes: "To interpret the Council is par excellence
to do the work of Christian philosophy. But that does not imply
an effort only of aggiornamento of Christian culture but much more
progress in the general self-understanding of man, a step forward in the
philosophical consciousness of all humanity" (emphasis added).
In more than one place Buttiglione suggests that The Acting Person,
written in 1969, derived its basic methodology and insights from Wojtyla’s
participation in Vatican II (1962-1965). Therefore, the serious prospect
arises that acquaintance with the philosophical handling of The Acting
Person lends access to the philosophical substructure and meanings
of the Council’s reflections.
It is generally appreciated today that The Acting Person is a
fusion of Thomism and phenomenology. Even though Wojtyla was trained in
the conceptualist Thomism of Garrigou-Lagrange, Buttiglione points out
that he also draws on the more modern interpretation of Thomas’ thought,
as in the "existentialist Thomism" of Gilson, Fabro, and De Finance.
Much the same innovative flexibility is apparent in Wojtyla’s use of phenomenology
deriving from Husserl, Scheler, and Sartre. In this essentially anthropological
style of reflection, the Thomistic ontology, embracing the order of things
in Truth and the order of things in Being, provides the metaphysical ground
for the dynamic, descriptive phenomenology centered on the field of consciousness
of the acting person. The methodology here involves a complementary dialectic
of deduction and induction. Wojtyla’s reflections, accordingly, provide
the key to Vatican II’s own reflections on the corporate consciousness
of the Church, as the People of God, where the Person of Christ functions
as the "paradigmatic person" of all its authentic ecclesial actions.
It was my research into Vatican II, not any interest in Wojtyla’s work,
that first alerted me to the correlated use of Thomism and phenomenology
at the Council. My book Vatican II and Phenomenology (1985) interpreted
the Council’s methodology as a fusion of Aquinas and Husserl. As I became
better acquainted with Wojtyla’s thought, I managed to correlate my own
insights with his Scheler-inspired focus on values and their emotive dimensions.
This was a major thesis of my 1991 book, Vatican II, Theophany, and
the Phenomenon of Man. More pertinently, however, the Council manifested
itself to me as a great sacramental epiphany of the Cosmic Christ projecting
a vision of humanity transfigured in the ecclesial consciousness by the
lumen gloriae. This quasi-incarnational presentation of God’s salvific
plan and mankind’s eschatological destiny is the "cosmo theandric"
ground of the Church’s contemporary resolve to build a "new civilization
of love." This is her practical task for the third millennium.
Fr. John F. Kobler, CP
Immaculate Conception Monastery
Chicago, IL
Grisez’s Influence
Although Richard John Neuhaus rightly observes (While We’re At It, April)
that Germain Grisez is one of the most impressive moral thinkers working
today, he holds back from describing him as among the most "influential"
in light of resistance to Grisez’s thought by non-Catholics and dissenting
Catholic theologians.
Father Neuhaus needn’t have held back. Grisez’s influence has been profound.
Informed readers of Veritatis Splendor have taken note of the respects
in which Grisez’s pathbreaking work on the theory of human action shaped
key aspects of that encyclical. Moreover, Grisez has plainly had a powerful
impact on the thinking of some of the most brilliant and, by anybody’s
account, influential younger Catholic theologians, philosophers, and legal
scholars—start the list with Oxford’s John Finnis, Princeton’s Robert George,
and Notre Dame’s Gerard Bradley.
Indeed, Grisez’s influence stretches beyond Catholic and even Christian
circles. David Novak, arguably the most influential Jewish ethicist in
the English-speaking world, completed his doctorate at Georgetown under
Grisez’s supervision. Although Novak obviously does not share Grisez’s
Catholic faith or important aspects of his theological program, it is easy
to see Grisez’s influence in the philosophical sophistication and analytical
rigor of Novak’s work.
David Russo
Charleston, WV
The Population Picture
In While We’re At It (February), Richard John Neuhaus accuses Father
Robert Drinan of failing to understand the world population picture. Father
Neuhaus’ quotation from Bishop James McHugh even accuses him of "hiding
behind a misrepresentation of the demographic data."
Much more probably, those who assume that the world population explosion
will surely soon be over are the seers who fail to understand and, therefore,
misrepresent the data. Projections of continued substantial fertility decline
in the developing world have credibility only if larger proportions
of couples in high-fertility nations gain effective access to family planning
services. If they are denied that access, population could easily keep
growing until soaring death rates cast their cruel veto.
Family planning programs should offer a variety of voluntary contraceptive
options, including natural family planning techniques for couples who object
to artificial contraception on religious or other personal grounds. Increased
family planning aid from the U.S. and other rich nations would mean far
fewer abortions and far fewer maternal and child deaths in the world. Such
aid deserves the support of Catholics, other Christians, and all persons
of good will.
Fr. Neuhaus also accused Fr. Drinan of "puffing a book filled with
apocalyptic warnings." To allow your readers to judge the fairness
of that accusation, please let me tell them: The book Fr. Drinan favorably
reviewed in National Catholic Reporter and Bishop McHugh later rebuked
is Ending the Explosion: Population Policies and Ethics for a Humane
Future (1996).
As the beleaguered author of that book, perhaps I might, after due penitence,
be forgiven for preferring Fr. Drinan’s praise to Fr. Neuhaus’ and Bishop
McHugh’s rebukes. Even if the rebukes of me are partly justified, both
critics err in suggesting that Ending the Explosion "promotes population
control by any means so long as they are respectful of human freedom."
While indeed urging that all means must respect human freedom, the book
also insists that other aspects of human dignity must be honored as well.
Contrary to what Bishop McHugh possibly surmised, neither the book nor
its author promotes abortion or "sterilization of people with disabilities."
I do respectfully disagree with current papal teaching against artificial
contraception. Even so, the policies advised in Ending the Explosion
do not to me seem far afield from some words said by His Holiness Pope
John Paul II: "It is the responsibility of the public authorities,
within the limits of their legitimate competence, to issue directives which
reconcile the containment of births and respect for the free and personal
assumption of responsibility by individuals."
William G. Hollingsworth
College of Law
University of Tulsa
Tulsa, OK
RJN replies:
The preponderance of scientific evidence, I believe, does not support
the assumption that there is a "world population explosion,"
and thoroughly discredits Malthusian claims about "soaring death rates
[casting] their cruel veto." Whatever his personal intentions, and
whatever he might surmise about Bishop McHugh’s surmisings, Professor Hollingsworth’s
argument supports the U.S. devoting hundreds of millions of dollars to
population control policies that include coercive measures in flagrant
contradiction of Catholic teaching and human dignity. For a thorough examination
of the science and mythology of "population explosion," see Nicholas
Eberhardt’s "Population Policy: Ideology as Science" (FT, January
1994). For a discussion of current U.S. population policy and alternatives
to it, see the March 1998 issue of Life Insight (NCCB Pro-Life Secretariat,
3211 Fourth St., N.E., Washington, D.C. 20017).
Communists, Anarchists & the Spanish Civil War
In "Apologies on the Cheap" (Public Square, April), Richard
John Neuhaus lists some of the good things General Franco and the Nationalists
did. Citing Paul Claudel and Paul Johnson, he contrasts these with a very
bad thing he says the Stalinists did during the Spanish Civil War: killing
twelve thousand clergy and religious and destroying many churches. I’m
writing to clear up this misunderstanding. The Communists did not commit
these particular murders; rather, they avenged them.
In The Spanish Civil War, Burnett Bolloten notes that anarchism
was especially strong in Catalonia and several other parts of Spain. Bakunin,
the apostle of anarchism, preached militant atheism because he didn’t want
to concede that God’s intelligence and will were far superior to his own.
It was the Anarchists and a few revolutionary Marxists not loyal to Stalin
who desecrated churches and killed people precisely because of their religious
witness. The names, dates, and places of martyrdom are known for 6,832
religious personnel.
The Communists ended up fighting another civil war in Catalonia against
the Anarchists and their allies, just like they did in Russia. This war
also ended with the Communists soundly defeating the Anarchists and promptly
filling graveyards and prisons with their enemies on the left. Is it irony
or rough justice that some of those who murdered defenseless religious
people were themselves firmly dealt with by triumphant Stalinists?
William L. Simonich
Grayslake, IL
Balasuriya and Heresy
In While We’re At It (April), Richard John Neuhaus comments on the reconciliation
of Sri Lankan theologian Tissa Balasuriya with the Roman Catholic Church.
While Father Neuhaus acknowledges that Balasuriya’s apology was "something
less than a clear admission of error," he urges those concerned about
that to "stifle their suspicion" because "the important
thing is that a prodigal has returned" and "salvation is forever."
(Presumably the latter refers to Balasuriya’s destiny now that he has been
reconciled with his church.)
There is a problem here. Balasuriya was excommunicated "for espousing
heresy in his writings," and, since his apology was "something
less than a clear admission of error," it seems that he continues
to hold to his heretical views, even while regretting the harm his views
have caused.
Now, the Bible makes it clear that one’s salvation is fundamentally
dependent upon what he believes (see, for example, John 3:16-18, Romans
10:8-11, Hebrews 11:6); thus, a heretic, who denies one or more salvific
doctrines, cannot be saved. Presumably, the Roman Catholic Church admits
this, else why would Balasuriya have incurred excommunication in the first
place? Yet Fr. Neuhaus suggests that since Balasuriya has been reconciled
with his church, he will be saved, even though he may continue to hold
to heretical beliefs.
I have long suspected that the Roman Catholic Church doesn’t really
care what one believes, as long as he is a member of the Church and does
not challenge its authority. (It seems that historically the Church has
not usually excommunicated even the most off-the-wall heretics until and
unless they began to pose a threat to the Church’s authority.) Fr. Neuhaus’
admonition regarding Balasuriya goes a long way toward confirming this
suspicion.
John Tors
Toronto, Ontario
RJN replies:
I am not privy to the internal conversations between Father Balasuriya
and Rome, as I assume Mr. Tors is not. The theologian’s clarification satisfied
Rome that he is not teaching heresy. My simple suggestion was that we should
not presume to second-guess those who have the competence to make the decision
they made. Permit me to suggest that Mr. Tors’ suspicion is more in the
nature of a weary anti-Catholic slander. In any event, in Catholic teaching
excommunication is the judgment of the Church that someone has removed
himself from communion, which is always subject to the ultimate judgment
of God, who alone knows the state of a person’s soul.
Vietnam Revisited
An intriguing phrase about Vietnam in the brief notice of my book The
Irony of Virtue: Ethics and American Power (April) prompts some words
of reflection and, I hope, healing.
The reference to my "stormy path to Niebuhrian ‘realism’ that he
staunchly defended during the Vietnam years" is accurate, but to some
it may suggest that I uncritically supported America’s tragic war in Southeast
Asia. That was not the case.
At that time, most Americans, and certainly our government, saw the
contest between communism and the West as a zero-sum game. The reigning
containment doctrine that worked in Europe was extended to Asia. It succeeded
in the Korean War, widely seen as the precedent for Vietnam. In Southeast
Asia our motives were honorable, but our strategic appraisal was flawed.
In 1968, I was drawn into the Vietnam debate at the Democratic Party
Convention in Chicago. I wrote the foreign policy and defense portions
of the platform, including the Vietnam plank that was adopted without amendment.
Ted Sorensen wrote the minority plank.
Even before Chicago erupted, it was clear to President Lyndon Johnson
that the central moral and political question was how to extricate ourselves
from the quagmire with honor. Both "doves" and "hawks"
wanted to get out, but they differed radically on means. In my view, the
former wanted to cut and run regardless of the consequences while the latter
wanted to salvage what freedom and hope we could.
After his election in 1968, Richard Nixon made a significant but largely
unacknowledged clarification of the Vietnam dilemma. He modified pre vailing
zero-sum Cold War assumptions by developing a more realis-
tic strategic assessment. Though Moscow and Beijing supported Hanoi’s conquest
of the South, President Nixon concluded that South Vietnam was not as vital
to containing Communist expansion as was South Korea. He wanted to help
defend Saigon, but felt the commitment of U.S. combat troops to a less-than-vital
area was not a prudent use of American blood and treasure.
In the end, left-wing charges of imperial arrogance do not hold up.
But widespread misperceptions, strategic miscalculations, and the less
than candid disclosure of two Presidents exacted a toll on our national
psyche and split our historical memory. To heal that split, erstwhile "hawks"
and "doves" might well acknowledge their flaws.
Despite many failings, our involvement was not a total foreign policy
disaster. Johnson’s and Nixon’s steadfastness assured allies in Europe
and the Pacific that an America that would not abandon far-off Vietnam
would hardly abandon them. Further, holding the line as long as we did
bought time for Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, and the Philippines
to marshal their energies against Communist subversion, a point made forcefully
by Singapore’s Lee Kuan Yew.
But perhaps most significant, Vietnam helped us dispel what Denis Brogan
once called "the illusion of American omnipotence"—and I would
add, the illusion of American innocence.
Ernest W. Lefever
Chevy Chase, MD
Catholics and Capital Punishment
In "A Position Not, or Not Yet, Mandated" (Public Square,
April), Richard John Neuhaus states that "proponents of capital punishment
. . . contend that the death penalty is necessary to protect society."
"Before Evangelium Vitae (EV) their position was in
the mainstream of magisterial Catholic doctrine, and it is certainly a
position that is still permissible and within the bounds of the Church’s
teaching." This is misleading because it is incomplete. EV’s
enhanced requirement that the death penalty can be used only "in cases
of absolute necessity . . . when it would not be possible to defend society"
refers not to some generalized protection of society by imposing retribution
or by deterring potential offenders. Rather it refers only to the protection
of society from this convicted criminal. "Among the signs of
hope," EV stated, "there is evidence of a growing public
opposition to the death penalty, even when such a penalty is seen as a
kind of legitimate defense on the part of society. Modern society in fact
has the means of effectively suppressing crime by rendering criminals
harmless without definitively denying the chance to reform" (emphasis
added).
The final text of the Catechism of the Catholic Church makes
it explicitly clear that a Catholic can no longer argue for the death penalty
from an undifferentiated need "to protect society": "[T]he
traditional teaching of the Church does not exclude recourse to the death
penalty, if this is the only possible way of effectively defending human
lives against the unjust aggressor. If, however, nonlethal means
are sufficient to defend and protect people’s safety from the aggressor,
authority will limit itself to such means. . . . Today . . . as a consequence
of the possibilities which the state has for effectively preventing crime,
by rendering one who has committed an offense incapable of doing harm
. . . the cases in which the execution of the offender is an absolute
necessity are very rare, if not practically nonexistent" (emphasis
added).
A Catholic could still argue for the death penalty in limited cases,
such as a prisoner serving a life sentence who murders a guard or another
inmate. What sense would it make to give him another life sentence? Or
would it be consistent with his dignity to wall him up permanently in a
cell, with food and wastes passed through an aperture and with no direct
contact ever with any other human being? Other cases could be argued, such
as a condition of unrest in which the authorities would lack the means
to keep a murderer securely imprisoned. The death penalty could be argued
to be absolutely necessary in such cases, although even there it is debatable.
But the criterion is protection of society from this criminal.
Before EV, I and others supported the use of the death penalty
because it seemed to be necessary to restore the balance of justice and
because it promoted respect for innocent life by inflicting a punishment
for murder that was qualitatively different from the punishment for other
crimes. But the Vicar of Christ has raised the discussion to a new level,
making the old arguments obsolete. John Paul authoritatively challenges
the claim of the state to assume the jurisdiction of God over life and
death. After discussing the death penalty, EV states, "If such
great care must be taken to respect every life, even that of criminals
and unjust aggressors, the commandment, ‘You shall not kill’ has absolute
value when it refers to the innocent person" (emphasis in original).
If we owe such respect to the life of the guilty, so much the more, and
absolutely so, with respect to the innocent. But this works the other way,
too. If we would maintain the absolute inviolability of innocent life,
we must begin by safeguarding even the life of the guilty from termination
except according to the very restrictive law of God.
Charles E. Rice
Notre Dame Law School
Notre Dame, IN
RJN replies:
While Professor Rice makes his point very effectively, I think I will,
at least for the time being, stay with my earlier statement of the matter.
While, as I wrote, we are witnessing a development of doctrine with respect
to capital punishment, I am not as sure as Prof. Rice that the process
of discernment and teaching has been authoritatively concluded in the way
he suggests. This is a subject to which I and others will likely return
in these pages.
Email this to a friend
copyright
© 1995-2012
Leadership U. All rights reserved.
Updated: 13 July 2002
|