Penal Philosophy and Practice from a Historical and Theological Perspective
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. The Monastic Traditions and Penal Confinement
Where could you see anything like laughter, or idle talking, or irritation, or anger? They did not even know that such a thing as anger existed among men, because in themselves grief had finally eradicated anger. Where were disputes among them, or frivolity, or audacious speech, or concern for the body, or a trace of vanity, or hope of comfort, or thought of wine, or eating of fruit, or the cheer of cooked food, or pleasing the palate? For even the hope of all such things had been extinguished in them in this present world. Where amongst them is there any care for earthly things or condemnation of anyone? Nowhere at all
3. The Religious Origins of the Penitentiary
We know that the abuses exist in our prisons,—I speak more especially of our city prisons:—the foul and loathsome Penitentiary [in New York City], the still more foul and loathsome Tombs; —we know that these abuses are frightful, appalling, almost unexampled, and in all their atrocity, quite unutterable; and now, that these abuses are exposed and known, if they are still to be tolerated in a Christian community, everyone who is silent and passive, who fails to denounce and resist, to expose and counteract them, will share the guilt of their continuance(New York Prison Association 1846, p. 76, as cited in Skotnicki 2000, p. 54).
4. Penal Philosophies: A Critique
What kind and what degree of punishment does public legal justice adopt as its principle and standard?” None other than the principle of equality … Accordingly, any undeserved evil that you inflict on someone else is one that you do to yourself. If you vilify him, you vilify yourself; if you steal from him, you steal from yourself; if you kill him, you kill yourself
Basing felony crime reduction on rehabilitation and deterrence is at least problematic. Quite clearly, incapacitated felons will not commit crimes outside prison… Planners, police, prosecutors, and judges often cling to principles with which no one can disagree, such as justice and fairness. However, these high purposes should not be excuses for failure to formulate more specific and consistent objectives which can be measured
…that the objective of this paper was to present research findings pertinent to the question of how much offenders should be punished. Rather than rely on traditional but difficult to quantify desiderata of punishment such as retribution and justice, a cost-benefit perspective was used to investigate whether society spends more money punishing than it gains from punishment(as quoted in Goldsmith 1985, p. 778).
These details are gone into, merely as matter of interesting speculation, but not as having any bearing on the principle of the institution. The object is not, or ought not to be, to make money, but prevent crime, and promote the reformation of criminals
“The Pennsylvanian” or “separate system” is an ameliorated system, … and based on the principle that society has more interest in the benefits which a system of punitive imprisonment can confer on those subjected to its influence, than in one, the only or chief merit of which may be, that it saves expense. The idea of economy at all hazards, excluding all considerations of the duty which society owes to its unfortunate or depraved members, is a false economy. It may save money, but it will waste morality----(ibid).
5. Religion as Interrogator
5.1. A Meta-Historical Narrative
5.2. Moral Ontology
5.3. Sin as Permanent, Existential, and Redemptive
“For whenever I act freely as a subject, I always act into an objective world. I always, as it were, leave my freedom and enter into the necessities of the world … [Thus] the subject knows indeed who he is. But he can never objectify this original knowledge in a definite, thematic, propositional knowledge of absolute certainty”
6. Discussion of Implications for Criminal Justice
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | “Cum excommunicatus aliquis pro culpa, mittantur solitarius in cellam obscuram, in solo pan et aqua … Absque ullo solatio vel colloquio fratrum sedeat, nisi quem Abbatis, vel Praepositi cum eo praeceperit autoritas ut loquatur.” “Regula S. Fructuosi” in Holstenius (1957). |
2 | Twenty-seven states and the federal government incarcerated 90,873 people in private prisons in 2022, representing 8% of the total state and federal prison population (Budd 2024). Core Civic is a corporation that trades on Wall Street. It owns 43 prisons and jails in the United States with a capacity of 65,000 beds. American Friends Service Committee, https://investigate.afsc.org/company/corecivic, accessed on 10 March 2025. |
3 | The power of public opinion to shape penal policy has been discussed by numerous authors, albeit from different perspectives. See, e.g., (Garland 2002, pp. 145–46; Roberts et al. 2002; P. Smith 2008; Tonry 2010, pp. 72–103). |
4 | Julian of Norwich 1978, Showings, trans. Edmund Colledge, O.S.A. and James Walsh, S.J. (New York: Paulist, 1978) Ch. 13 (Short Text). Quoted in (Rohr 2011, p. 136); Abelard, Ethics, 7–13. |
5 | There are certain limitations to these initiatives. One that is shared is their subjection to the ever-changing trends of history. Specifically, each of these visible and controversial reform efforts is fodder for a volatile and divisive political system. We would also note that restorative justice (RJ) is focused more on ensuring that the needs of the victim, offender, and community are met in facilitating justice. There is little if any attention paid to the behavior or attitudes of penal agents. Moreover, RJ programs typically forbid compulsory participation by the victim and offender, unless it involves restitution. As for the abolitionist perspective, there will inevitably be prisons maintained for those who are legitimately quite dangerous and violent and community supervision of some sort for those who have committed lesser harms. The abolitionist perspective does not adequately address the treatment of those who will still be subject to incarceration or other forms of correctional supervision. |
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Skotnicki, A.; Lucken, K. Penal Philosophy and Practice from a Historical and Theological Perspective. Histories 2025, 5, 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories5040052
Skotnicki A, Lucken K. Penal Philosophy and Practice from a Historical and Theological Perspective. Histories. 2025; 5(4):52. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories5040052
Chicago/Turabian StyleSkotnicki, Andrew, and Karol Lucken. 2025. "Penal Philosophy and Practice from a Historical and Theological Perspective" Histories 5, no. 4: 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories5040052
APA StyleSkotnicki, A., & Lucken, K. (2025). Penal Philosophy and Practice from a Historical and Theological Perspective. Histories, 5(4), 52. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories5040052