Vance questions the pope on just war theory hours after Leo honored its founder, St. Augustine
National Catholic Reporter reports:
Hours after Pope Leo XIV paid public homage to St. Augustine, one of the key architects of just war theory, Vice President JD Vance questioned the pontiff’s understanding of the Catholic doctrine for determining whether a war is morally justifiable.
“When the pope says that God is never on the side of people who wield the sword, there is more than a 1,000-year tradition of just war theory,” Vance said at a Turning Point USA event hosted at the University of Georgia on April 14. “We can, of course, have disagreements about whether this or that conflict is just.”
“How do you say that God is never on the side of those who wield the sword?” he asked, citing the example of U.S. troops that had liberated France from the Nazis and freed prisoners from the Holocaust camps.
“I think it’s very, very important for the pope to be careful when he talks about matters of theology,” Vance said. “If you’re going to opine on matters of theology, you’ve got to be careful. You’ve got to make sure it’s anchored in the truth and that’s one of the things that I try to do and it’s certainly something I would expect from the clergy.”
The vice president, who met Leo at the Vatican in May and has a book on his conversion to Catholicism due out this summer, responded to a post on the pope’s X account in which he wrote that God is “never on the side of those who once wielded the sword and today drop bombs.”
Leo has acknowledged that many have called the United States and Israel’s war with Iran unjust, including Cardinal Robert McElroy of Washington D.C who said the war fails the criteria for a just war.
“You cannot satisfy the just war tradition’s criterion of right intention if you do not have a clear intention,” the cardinal said in an interview discussing the war in Iran.
Vance, who had chosen St. Augustine as his patron saint, made his comments just hours after the pope traveled to Annaba, Algeria, to pay homage to his spiritual father St. Augustine, the North African saint who played a fundamental role in developing just war theory.
Augustine, a doctor of the church and one of the greatest intellectual influences on Western thought, argued that war is morally justified when oriented toward the restoration of peace. Later thinkers, particularly St. Thomas Aquinas, further developed Augustine’s thought and established the criteria for determining whether a war is just. [Continue reading…]