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The Ordinatio of John Duns Scotus
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Ordinatio. Book 4. Distinctions 14 - 42.
Book Four. Distinctions 14 - 42
Thirty Fifth Distinction
Single Question. Whether Adultery with Someone while the First Husband is Living Impedes Matrimony with the Same Person after the Death of the Husband
II. To the Initial Arguments

II. To the Initial Arguments

34. To the first argument [n.3]: this law [sc. the canon law of the Church] was not established for that time; however, David would have acted more justly if he had stoned her. Nor did he have to dismiss the thing because of his own guilt without exacting justice on the other.

35. And if you say ‘no, because then he would have stoned himself, because he was partner in the crime’ - to the contrary:

Either you do not excuse him by this, or you must say that a partner in crime is not bound to inflict the same public penalty that he would be bound to inflict if he were not a partner.

But if you excuse him from not punishing her by the fact he remitted for her the penalty of the Law, we do not have this from Scripture, but that it was a private sin and therefore he did not have to punish it with a public penalty. This seems a more reasonable response. And then the fact he took her to wife after the grave sins of adultery and homicide - the last was not an impediment [n.26].

36. To Augustine [n.4] the answer is plain [sc. from the whole preceding discussion about when adultery impedes matrimony and when it does not].