A5
Whether a sentence of excommunication can be passed on a body of men?
[a]
Objection 1: It would seem that sentence of excommunication can be passed on a body of men.
Because it is possible for a number of people to be united together in wickedness.
Now when a man is obstinate in his wickedness he should be excommunicated.
Therefore a body of men can be excommunicated.
[b]
Objection 2: Further, the most grievous effect of an excommunication is privation of the sacraments of the Church.
But sometimes a whole country is laid under an interdict.
Therefore a body of people can be excommunicated.
[c]
On the contrary, A gloss of Augustine [* Cf. Ep. ccl] on Mat. 12 asserts that the sovereign and a body of people cannot be excommunicated.
[d]
I answer that, No man should be excommunicated except for a mortal sin.
Now sin consists in an act: and acts do not belong to communities, but, generally speaking, to individuals.
Wherefore individual members of a community can be excommunicated, but not the community itself.
And although sometimes an act belongs to a whole multitude, as when many draw a boat, which none of them could draw by himself, yet it is not probable that a community would so wholly consent to evil that there would be no dissentients.
Now God, Who judges all the earth, does not condemn the just with the wicked (Gn. 18:25).
Therefore the Church, who should imitate the judgments of God, prudently decided that a community should not be excommunicated, lest the wheat be uprooted together with the tares and cockle.
[e]
The Reply to the First Objection is evident from what has been said.
[f]
Reply to Objection 2: Suspension is not so great a punishment as excommunication, since those who are suspended are not deprived of the prayers of the Church, as the excommunicated are.
Wherefore a man can be suspended without having committed a sin himself, just as a whole kingdom is laid under an interdict on account of the king's crime.
Hence there is no comparison between excommunication and suspension.
|