Saint Augustine and Saint Thomas supported the death penalty
It would be better for him if a millstone were hung round his neck and he were cast into the sea, than that he should cause one of these little ones to sin.
St. Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas Pro death …
Saint Thomas Aquinas, in the *Summa Theologiae*, teaches that heretics render themselves worthy not only of excommunication but also of physical extermination.
In his *Summa Theologiae*, he writes: "In the case of heretics, two aspects must be considered: one on their part, and the other on the part of the Church. On their part, there is indeed a sin whereby they have merited not only separation from the Church through excommunication, but also exclusion from the world THROUGH DEATH." "However, on the part of the Church, there is mercy in favor of the conversion of those who err; and for this reason, they are not condemned summarily, but rather after a first and second admonition (Titus 3:10), as the Apostle teaches. Yet, after this—should the heretic remain obstinate—the Church, having lost all hope of his conversion, looks to the salvation of others and separates him from herself by a sentence of excommunication. Furthermore, she proceeds even further by handing him over to the secular judgment for his EXTERMINATION FROM THE WORLD THROUGH DEATH."
The heresiarch Bergoglio professed the heresy against the death penalty in Argentina.
Catholic scholars urged the cardinals to correct Francis's heresy regarding the death penalty.