It is sometimes said that St. Thomas Aquinas taught that rape is a lesser sin than masturbation. Is this actually the case?
Here are two examples:
[In Aquinas's view], Because sins against nature were sins against God, they were considered more serious than sins against other people, such as adultery, seduction, and rape (John F. Schumaker, Religion and Mental Health [Oxford University Press US], 1992), 76). To make his point perfectly clear, Aquinas poses a question: are not rape and adultery worse than unnatural acts, since they harm other persons, while consensual sins against nature do not? The answer is unequivocal: the four non-procreative forms of sex are worse, since–though not harmful to others–they are sins directly against God himself as the creator of nature. According to this logic, rape, which may at least lead to pregnancy, becomes a less serious sin than masturbation (Louis Crompton, Homosexuality and Civilisation, [Harvard University Press, 2006], 188).
"A practice opposed to the pattern set for us by nature" exceeds in wickedness the seduction of an innocent of the opposite sex, adultery, and rape (II-II 154:12) (Sex from Plato to Paglia, by Alan Soble [Greenwood Publishing Group, 2006], 1053).
What is the source of this notion, and is the statement true in context? If it is, what led Aquinas to this conclusion?
Good answer @DJClayworth...thanks for helping me make sense of this question.
– Dec 18 '14 at 19:28He's not judging based on "a sexual matter" as well as "other sinful factors". He isn't saying that masturbation is -100 for being against nature, rape is -0 because it's not against nature, but rape is -200 because it's violent.
Aquinas is saying that crimes against nature trump all other ways something is considered a sin. Nothing else need be considered, if it's against nature. Nothing compares in offense to being against nature, in Aquinas' opinion.
– Nate Dec 08 '20 at 07:14