Capital punishment promotes a deadly attitude of revenge and denies the possibility of change in the lives of incarcerated people, Pope Francis has written in the preface to a new book on prison chaplaincy. Source: NCR Online.
“The death penalty is in no way the solution to the violence that can strike innocent people,” the Pope wrote.
Capital executions, “far from bringing justice, fuel a sense of revenge that becomes a dangerous poison for the body of our civil societies”, the Pope wrote.
And rather than continue the cycle of violence, governments “should focus on allowing prisoners the opportunity to truly change their lives, rather than investing money and resources in their execution, as if they were human beings no longer worthy of living and to be disposed of”.
The book featuring the Pope’s preface, titled A Christian on Death Row, shares the experiences of Dale Recinella, a lay Catholic prison chaplain and licensed attorney who, along with his wife, has accompanied people on death row and in solitary confinement in Florida prisons since 1998.
The book, published by the Vatican publishing house, is set to go on sale August 27.
Francis called Mr Recinella’s work a “living and passionate witness to God’s school of infinite mercy”, and he said it is a “great gift to the Church and to society in the United States”.
In light of the upcoming Holy Year 2025, the Pope wrote, Catholics should “collectively call for the abolition of the death penalty”.
“As the Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy taught us, we must never think that there could be a sin, a mistake, or an action of ours that distances us permanently from the Lord. His heart has already been crucified for us,” he wrote. “And God can only forgive us.”
In 2018, the Pope formally changed the Catechism of the Catholic Church to unambiguously oppose the death penalty.
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Death penalty fuels ‘poison’ of revenge in society, Pope says (By Justin McLellan, OSV News via NCR Online)