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The Death Penalty and the Catholic Church: Reversal or Development?

 

by CAPP-USA

How Catholic teaching developed from tolerating capital punishment to calling it inadmissible today.

Should the death penalty be allowed in the eyes of the Church and what has changed?

Should the death penalty be allowed in the eyes of Catholic social teaching?

What is the Death Penalty?


The death penalty refers to capital punishment, by which a criminal is put to death by a legitimate authority for serious crimes against human life and the common good.

Only a legitimate court of law has the right, in the eyes of the Church, of sentencing someone to capital punishment. “Legitimate public authority has the right and duty to inflict penalties commensurate with the gravity of the crime.” (CCC, 2266)

To understand where the Church is today, we must first look at the historical justifications—the traditional arguments for the state’s right to punish—and contrast them with the modern development of Catholic Social Teaching.

The Early Church: A Tension Between State and Sanctity


Unlike other issues such as abortion, which received absolute condemnation from the earliest days of the Church, pronouncements on the death penalty reflected a complex tension. While early Christians abhorred killing—often preferring martyrdom over resistance—they recognized the state’s duty to maintain order. What if you asked the early Christians ‘should the death penalty be allowed?’

  • Mercy over Execution: In the 5th century, St. Ambrose told a Christian judge: “You will be excused if you do it, but you will be admired if you refrain when you might have done it. (Letter, 25)
  • “Extreme Necessity”: His student, St. Augustine, justified the death penalty only when there was “no other established method of restraining the hostility of the desperate.” (Letter, 134)


The consensus of the Church Fathers was clear: the state has the authority to execute, but the Christian heart should always prefer mercy—especially when peace can be kept without further bloodshed:

  • “As violence is used towards him who rebels and resists, so mercy is due to the vanquished or the captive, especially in the case in which future troubling of the peace is not to be feared.” (St. Augustine, Letter, 189)

The Medieval Tradition: Protecting the Common Good


During the Middle Ages, the focus shifted toward the state’s duty to protect the “Common Good.”

  • St. Thomas Aquinas argued that rebuking those who refuse to obey God’s laws with criminal sanctions was a matter of justice  (Summa Contra Gentilles, Book 3, Chapter 146), and the state may execute dangerous criminals to protect the common good, comparing it to amputating a diseased limb to preserve the health of the body. (Summa Theologiae II–II, q.64, a.2)
  • “The Catechism of the Council of Trent later codified this, noting that civil authorities were entrusted with the power of life and death to “punish the guilty and protect the innocent.” (Part III, Fifth Commandment)

The Shift: From Necessity to Inviolability


For centuries, regarding if the death penalty should be allowed, the Church’s historical justification was never that killing was “good”—it was that it was a regrettable necessity for the protection of the innocent. St. Augustine’s “extreme necessity” was the standard because, in the 5th century, a “life sentence” without a secure prison system was often impossible.

However, as the modern era set in, two things changed: our ability to keep society safe without the hangman, and our understanding of the Gospel’s demands regarding human dignity.

The Turning Point: St. John Paul II


In 1995, Pope St. John Paul II shifted the conversation from the rights of the state to the realities of the penal system. He argued that if we can protect the common good without taking a life, we must.

“Today… as a result of steady improvements in the organization of the penal system, such cases [of absolute necessity] are very rare, if not practically non-existent.” (Evangelium Vitae, 56)

Pope Benedict XVI furthered this, especially during his address to Africa, “I draw the attention of society’s leaders to the need to make every effort to eliminate the death penalty and to reform the penal system in a way that ensures respect for the prisoners’ human dignity.” (Africae Munus, 83)

While his predecessors focused on the practical reality that modern prisons make the death penalty unnecessary for safety, Pope Francis has clarified the theological core of the issue. The Church’s shift is not just about better locks and bars; it is a deepening of our understanding of ontological dignity—the belief that because every person is created in the image of God, they never lose their inherent right to life, regardless of their crimes.

Should the Death Penalty be Allowed? Current Church Teaching


In light of this development, the Catechism was formally changed in 2018. The full revised paragraph reads:

“Recourse to the death penalty… was long considered an appropriate response… Today, however, there is an increasing awareness that the dignity of the person is not lost even after the commission of very serious crimes… Consequently, the Church teaches, in the light of the Gospel, that ‘the death penalty is inadmissible because it is an attack on the inviolability and dignity of the person’”. (CCC, 2267)

  • A Note on the “Development of Doctrine” Readers may ask: Is this a “reversal” of Church teaching? The Church distinguishes between unchanging dogma (like the Resurrection) and moral application — and theologians continue to debate where this revision falls—prudential refinement or deeper moral shift. Cardinal Ladaria’s 2018 letter insisted the change was a development, not a contradiction, refining moral application in light of modern circumstances. However, others have argued the change amounts to a genuine reversal, not a development. This remains a live debate among faithful Catholics.


Just as the Church’s understanding of issues like religious liberty and slavery deepened over centuries—refining moral applications in light of evolving insights into human dignity and Gospel demands—the Church holds that this shift on the death penalty represents a development of doctrine rather than a contradiction.

The underlying principle—the sanctity of life—has never changed. What has developed is the Church’s prudential judgment about how best to defend that principle in modern circumstances. Earlier centuries permitted the death penalty when it was considered necessary to protect society; today the Church judges that such necessity no longer exists.

Why the Death Penalty Should be Abolished: Bottom Line


Should the death penalty be allowed in modern times? No. The Church now teaches that the death penalty is inadmissible in light of the dignity of the human person and modern penal systems.

  • “It is necessary…to reaffirm that no matter how serious the crime that has been committed, the death penalty is inadmissible because it is an attack on the inviolability and the dignity of the person.” (Pope Francis)


This isn’t merely a change in policy; it is a challenge to our witness as Catholics. By affirming that no one forfeits their inherent dignity—even after grave crime—the Church invites us to build a culture of life that is consistent, coherent, and truly universal.

Learn More About the Death Penalty
Learn More About the Common Good
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Three circles containing symbols of the three principles of catholic social teaching: human dignity, subsidiarity, and solidarity.

Three Key Principles

Catholic social teaching is built on three foundational principles - Human Dignity, Solidarity and Subsidiarity. Human Dignity, embodied in a correct understanding of the human person, is the greatest. The others flow from it. Good governments and good economic systems find ways of fostering the three principles.

Human Dignity

This means a correct understanding of the human person and of each person’s unique value. All Catholic social teaching flows from this: the inherent dignity of every person that comes from being made in God’s image. 

Solidarity

Solidarity is not “a feeling of vague compassion or shallow distress at the misfortunes of others. It is a firm and persevering determination to commit oneself to the common good”. (Pope St. John Paul II, 38) Love of God and love of neighbor are, in fact, linked and form one, single commandment.

Subsidiarity

Subsidiarity “is a fundamental principle of social philosophy, fixed and unchangeable, that one should not withdraw from individuals and commit to the community what they can accomplish by their own enterprise and industry. So, too, it is an injustice and at the same time a grave evil and a disturbance of right order to transfer to the larger and higher collectivity functions which can be performed and provided for by the lesser and subordinate bodies”. (Pope Pius XI)

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CAPP-USA (Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice, Inc.) is the United States affiliate of the Vatican-based pontifical foundation of Fondazione Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice, established by Pope St. John Paul II in 1993 to promote Catholic Social Teaching in fidelity to the Magisterium of the Catholic Church. CAPP-USA is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.

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