In a let­ter to the President of the International Commission Against the Death Penalty, Pope Francis expressed the Catholic Church’s oppo­si­tion to the death penal­ty, call­ing it inad­mis­si­ble, no mat­ter how seri­ous the crime com­mit­ted.” He con­tin­ued, It is an offence against the invi­o­la­bil­i­ty of life and the dig­ni­ty of the human per­son, which con­tra­dicts God’s plan for man and soci­ety, and his mer­ci­ful jus­tice, and impedes the penal­ty from ful­fill­ing any just objec­tive. It does not ren­der jus­tice to the vic­tims, but rather fos­ters vengeance.” He acknowl­edged soci­ety’s need to pro­tect itself from aggres­sors, but said, When the death penal­ty is applied, it is not for a cur­rent act of aggres­sion, but rather for an act com­mit­ted in the past. It is also applied to per­sons whose cur­rent abil­i­ty to cause harm is not cur­rent, as it has been neu­tral­ized — they are already deprived of their lib­er­ty.” He also addressed ques­tions of meth­ods of exe­cu­tion, say­ing, There is dis­cus­sion in some quar­ters about the method of killing, as if it were pos­si­ble to find ways of get­ting it right’. … But there is no humane way of killing anoth­er per­son.” The pope had pre­vi­ous­ly offered remarks in oppo­si­tion to the death penal­ty when he spoke to the International Association on Penal Law in October 2014.

(“Pope Francis: no crime ever deserves the death penal­ty,” Vatican Radio, March 20, 2015; Pope Francis: the death penal­ty is inad­mis­si­ble,” Vatican Information Service, March 20, 2015; Photo cred­it: Vatican Radio) See Religion and New Voices.

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