Can. 204 §1 Christ’s faithful are those who, since they
are incorporated into Christ through baptism, are constituted the people of
God. For this reason they participate in their own way in the priestly, prophetic
and kingly office of Christ. They are called, each according to his or her particular
condition, to exercise the mission which God entrusted to the Church to fulfil
in the world.
§2 This Church, established and ordered in this world as a society, subsists
in the catholic Church, governed by the successor of Peter and the Bishops in
communion with him.
Can. 205 Those baptised are in full communion with the catholic Church
here on earth who are joined with Christ in his visible body, through the bonds
of profession of faith, the sacraments and ecclesiastical governance.
Can. 206 §1 Catechumens are linked with the Church in a special
way since, moved by the Holy Spirit, they are expressing an explicit desire
to be incorporated in the Church. By this very desire, as well as by the life
of faith, hope and charity which they lead, they are joined to the Church which
already cherishes them as its own.
§2 The Church has a special care for catechumens. While it invites them
to lead an evangelical life, and introduces them to the celebration of the sacred
rites, it already accords them various prerogatives which are proper to christians.
Can. 207 §1 By divine institution, among Christ’s faithful
there are in the Church sacred ministers, who in law are also called clerics
the others are called lay people.
§2 Drawn from both groups are those of Christ’s faithful who, professing
the evangelical counsels through vows or other sacred bonds recognised and approved
by the Church, are consecrated to God in their own special way and promote the
salvific mission of the Church. Their state, although it does not belong to
the hierarchical structure of the Church, does pertain to its life and holiness.
Can. 208 Flowing from their rebirth in Christ, there is a genuine equality
of dignity and action among all of Christ’s faithful. Because of this
equality they all contribute, each according to his or her own condition and
office, to the building up of the Body of Christ.
Can. 209 §1 Christ’s faithful are bound to preserve their
communion with the Church at all times, even in their external actions.
§2 They are to carry out with great diligence their responsibilities towards
both the universal Church and the particular Church to which by law they belong.
Can. 210 All Christ’s faithful, each according to his or her own
condition, must make a wholehearted effort to lead a holy life, and to promote
the growth of the Church and its continual sanctification.
Can. 211 All Christ’s faithful have the obligation and the right
to strive so that the divine message of salvation may more and more reach all
people of all times and all places.
Can. 212 §1 Christ’s faithful, conscious of their own responsibility,
are bound to show christian obedience to what the sacred Pastors, who represent
Christ, declare as teachers of the faith and prescribe as rulers of the Church.
§2 Christ’s faithful are at liberty to make known their needs, especially
their spiritual needs, and their wishes to the Pastors of the Church.
§3 They have the right, indeed at times the duty, in keeping with their
knowledge, competence and position, to manifest to the sacred Pastors their
views on matters which concern the good of the Church. They have the right also
to make their views known to others of Christ’s faithful, but in doing
so they must always respect the integrity of faith and morals, show due reverence
to the Pastors and take into account both the common good and the dignity of
individuals.
Can. 213 Christ’s faithful have the right to be assisted by their
Pastors from the spiritual riches of the Church, especially by the word of God
and the sacraments.
Can. 214 Christ’s faithful have the right to worship God according
to the provisions of their own rite approved by the lawful Pastors of the Church;
they also have the right to follow their own form of spiritual life, provided
it is in accord with Church teaching.
Can. 215 Christ’s faithful may freely establish and direct associations
which serve charitable or pious purposes or which foster the christian vocation
in the world, and they may hold meetings to pursue these purposes by common
effort.
Can. 216 Since they share the Church’s mission, all Christ’s
faithful have the right to promote and support apostolic action, by their own
initiative, undertaken according to their state and condition. No initiative,
however, can lay claim to the title ‘catholic’ without the consent
of the competent ecclesiastical authority.
Can. 217 Since Christ’s faithful are called by baptism to lead
a life in harmony with the gospel teaching, they have the right to a christian
education, which genuinely teaches them to strive for the maturity of the human
person and at the same time to know and live the mystery of salvation.
Can. 218 Those who are engaged in fields of sacred study have a just
freedom to research matters in which they are expert and to express themselves
prudently concerning them, with due allegiance to the magisterium of the Church.
Can. 219 All Christ’s faithful have the right to immunity from
any kind of coercion in choosing a state in life.
Can. 220 No one may unlawfully harm the good reputation which a person
enjoys, or violate the right of every person to protect his or her privacy.
Can. 221 §1 Christ’s faithful may lawfully vindicate and defend
the rights they enjoy in the Church, before the competent ecclesiastical forum
in accordance with the law.
§2 If any members of Christ’s faithful are summoned to trial by the
competent authority, they have the right to be judged according to the provisions
of the law, to be applied with equity.
§3 Christ’s faithful have the right that no canonical penalties be
inflicted upon them except in accordance with the law.
Can. 222 §1 Christ’s faithful have the obligation to provide
for the needs of the Church, so that the Church has available to it those things
which are necessary for divine worship, for apostolic and charitable work and
for the worthy support of its ministers.
§2 They are also obliged to promote social justice and, mindful of the
Lord’s precept, to help the poor from their own resources.
Can. 223 §1 In exercising their rights, Christ’s faithful,
both individually and in associations, must take account of the common good
of the Church, as well as the rights of others and their own duties to others.
§2 Ecclesiastical authority is entitled to regulate, in view of the common
good, the exercise of rights which are proper to Christ’s faithful.
Can. 224 Lay members of Christ’s faithful have the duties and
rights enumerated in the canons of this title, in addition to those duties and
rights which are common to all Christ’s faithful and those stated in other
canons.
Can. 225 §1 Since lay people, like all Christ’s faithful,
are deputed to the apostolate by baptism and confirmation, they are bound by
the general obligation and they have the right, whether as individuals or in
associations, to strive so that the divine message of salvation may be known
and accepted by all people throughout the world. This obligation is all the
more insistent in circumstances in which only through them are people able to
hear the Gospel and to know Christ.
§2 They have also, according to the condition of each, the special obligation
to permeate and perfect the temporal order of things with the spirit of the
Gospel. In this way, particularly in conducting secular business and exercising
secular functions, they are to give witness to Christ.
Can. 226 §1 Those who are married are bound by the special obligation,
in accordance with their own vocation, to strive for the building up of the
people of God through their marriage and family.
§2 Because they gave life to their children, parents have the most serious
obligation and the right to educate them. It is therefore primarily the responsibility
of christian parents to ensure the christian education of their children in
accordance with the teaching of the Church.
Can. 227 To lay members of Christ’s faithful belongs the right
to have acknowledged as theirs that freedom in secular affairs which is common
to all citizens. In using this freedom, however, they are to ensure that their
actions are permeated with the spirit of the Gospel, and they are to heed the
teaching of the Church proposed by the magisterium, but they must be on guard,
in questions of opinion, against proposing their own view as the teaching of
the Church.
Can. 228 §1 Lay people who are found to be suitable are capable
of being admitted by the sacred Pastors to those ecclesiastical offices and
functions which, in accordance with the provisions of law, they can discharge.
§2 Lay people who are outstanding in the requisite knowledge, prudence
and integrity, are capable of being experts or advisors, even in councils in
accordance with the law, in order to provide assistance to the Pastors of the
Church.
Can. 229 §1 Lay people have the duty and the right to acquire the
knowledge of christian teaching which is appropriate to each one’s capacity
and condition, so that they may be able to live according to this teaching,
to proclaim it and if necessary to defend it, and may be capable of playing
their part in the exercise of the apostolate.
§2 They also have the right to acquire that fuller knowledge of the sacred
sciences which is taught in ecclesiastical universities or faculties or in institutes
of religious sciences, attending lectures there and acquiring academic degrees.
§3 Likewise, assuming that the provisions concerning the requisite suitability
have been observed, they are capable of receiving from the lawful ecclesiastical
authority a mandate to teach the sacred sciences.
Can. 230 §1 Lay men whose age and talents meet the requirements
prescribed by decree of the Episcopal Conference, can be given the stable ministry
of lector and of acolyte, through the prescribed liturgical rite. This conferral
of ministry does not, however, give them a right to sustenance or remuneration
from the Church.
§2 Lay people can receive a temporary assignment to the role of lector
in liturgical actions. Likewise, all lay people can exercise the roles of commentator,
cantor or other such, in accordance with the law.
§3 Where the needs of the Church require and ministers are not available,
lay people, even though they are not lectors or acolytes, can supply certain
of their functions, that is, exercise the ministry of the word, preside over
liturgical prayers, confer baptism and distribute Holy Communion, in accordance
with the provisions of the law.
Can. 231 §1 Lay people who are pledged to the special service of
the Church, whether permanently or for a time, have a duty to acquire the appropriate
formation which their role demands, so that they may conscientiously, earnestly
and diligently fulfil this role.
§2 Without prejudice to the provisions of Can. 230 §1, they have the
right to a worthy remuneration befitting their condition, whereby, with due
regard also to the provisions of the civil law, they can becomingly provide
for their own needs and the needs of their families. Likewise, they have the
right to have their insurance, social security and medical benefits duly safeguarded.
Can. 232 It is the duty and the proper and exclusive right of the Church
to train those who are deputed to sacred ministries.
Can. 233 §1 It is the duty of the whole christian community to foster
vocations so that the needs of the sacred ministry are sufficiently met in the
entire Church. In particular, this duty binds christian families, educa tors
and, in a special way, priests, especially parish priests. DiocesanBishops,
who must show the greatest concern to promote vocations, are to instruct the
people entrusted to them on the importance of the sacred ministry and the need
for ministers in the Church. They are to encourage and support initiatives to
promote vocations, especially movements established for this purpose.
§2 Moreover, priests and especially diocesan Bishops are to be solicitous
that men of more mature years who believe they are called to the sacred ministries
are prudently assisted by word and deed and are duly prepared.
Can. 234 §1 Minor seminaries and other institutions of a similar
nature promote vocations by providing a special religious formation, allied
to human and scientific education where they exist, they are to be retained
and fostered. Indeed, where the diocesan Bishop considers it expedient, he is
to provide for the establishment of a minor seminary or similar institution.
§2 Unless the circumstances of certain situations suggest otherwise, young
men who aspire to the priesthood are to receive that same human and scientific
formation which prepares their peers in their region for higher studies.
Can. 235 §1 Young men who intend to become priests are to receive
the appropriate religious formation and instruction in the duties proper to
the priesthood in a major seminary, for the whole of the time of formation or,
if in the judgement of the diocesan Bishop circumstances require it, for at
least four years.
§2 Those who lawfully reside outside the seminary are to be entrusted by
the diocesan Bishop to a devout and suitable priest, who will ensure that they
are carefully formed in the spiritual life and in discipline.
Can. 236 Those who aspire to the permanent diaconate are to be formed
in the spiritual life and appropriately instructed in the fulfilment of the
duties proper to that order, in accordance with the provisions made by the Episcopal
Conference:
1° young men are to reside for at least three years in a special houseunless
the diocesan Bishop for grave reasons decides otherwise,
2° men of more mature years, whether celibate or married, are toprepare
for three years in a manner determined by the same Episcopal Conference.
Can. 237 §1 Where it is possible and advisable, each diocese is
to have a major seminary; otherwise, students preparing for the sacred ministries
are to be sent to the seminary of another diocese, or an inter diocesan seminary
is to be established.
§2 An inter diocesan seminary may not be established unless the prior approval
of the Apostolic See has been obtained, both for the establishment of the seminary
and for its statutes. Approval is also required from the Episcopal Conference
if the seminary is for the whole of its territory; otherwise, from the Bishops
concerned.
Can. 238 §1 Seminaries which are lawfully established have juridical
personality in the Church by virtue of the law itself.
§2 In the conduct of all its affairs, the rector acts in the person of
the seminary, unless for certain matters the competent authority has prescribed
otherwise.
Can. 239 §1 In all seminaries there is to be a rector who presides
over it, a vice rector, if circumstances warrant this, and a financial administrator.
Moreover, if the students follow their studies in the seminary, there are to
be professors who teach the various subjects in a manner suitably coordinated
between them.
§2 In every seminary there is to be at least one spiritual director, though
the students are also free to approach other priests who have been deputed to
this work by the Bishop.
§3 The seminary statutes are to determine the manner in which the other
moderators, the professors and indeed the students themselves, are to participate
in the rector’s responsibility, especially in regard to the maintenance
of discipline.
Can. 240 §1 Besides ordinary confessors, other confessors are to
come regularly to the seminary; while maintaining seminary discipline, the students
are always to be free to approach any confessor, whether inside or outside the
seminary.
§2 In deciding about the admission of students to orders, or their dismissal
from the seminary, the vote of the spiritual director and the confessors may
never be sought.
Can. 241 §1 The diocesan Bishop is to admit to the major seminary
only those whose human, moral, spiritual and intellectual gifts, as well as
physical and psychological health and right intention, show that they are capable
of dedicating themselves permanently to the sacred ministries.
§2 Before they are accepted, they must submit documentation of their baptism
and confirmation, and whatever else is required by the provisions of the Charter
of Priestly Formation.
§3 If there is question of admitting those who have been dismissed from
another seminary or religious institute, there is also required the testimony
of the respective superior, especially concerning the reason for their dismissal
or departure.
Can. 242 §1 In each country there is to be a Charter of Priestly
Formation. It is to be drawn up by the Episcopal Conference, taking account
of the norms issued by the supreme ecclesiastical authority, and it is to be
approved by the Holy See; moreover, it is to be adapted to new circumstances,
likewise with the approval of the Holy See. This Charter is to define the overall
principles governing formation in the seminary and the general norms which take
account of the pastoral needs of each region or province.
§2 The norms of the Charter mentioned in §1 are to be observed in
all seminaries, whether diocesan or inter diocesan.
Can. 243 In addition, each seminary is to have its own rule, approved
by the diocesan Bishop or, in the case of an inter diocesan seminary, by the
Bishops concerned. In this, the norms of the Charter of Priestly Formation are
to be adapted to the particular circumstances and developed in greater detail,
especially on points of discipline affecting the daily life of the students
and the good order of the entire seminary.
Can. 244 The spiritual formation and the doctrinal instruction of the
students in a seminary are to be harmoniously blended. They are to be so planned
that the students, each according to his talents, simultaneously develop the
requisite human maturity and acquire the spirit of the Gospel and a close relationship
with Christ.
Can. 245 §1 Through their spiritual formation students are to be
fitted for the fruitful exercise of the pastoral ministry, and are to be inculcated
with a sense of mission. They are to learn that a ministry which is always exercised
with lively faith and charity contributes effectively to their personal sanctification.
They are to learn to cultivate those virtues which are highly valued in human
relationships, in such a way that they can arrive at an appropriate harmony
between human and supernatural values.
§2 Students are to be so trained that, filled with love for Christ’s
Church, they are linked to the Roman Pontiff, the successor of Peter, in humble
and filial charity, to their own Bishop as his faithful co workers and to their
brethren in friendly cooperation. Through the common life in the seminary, and
by developing relationships of friendship and of association with others, they
are to be prepared for the fraternal unity of the diocesan presbyterium, in
whose service of the Church they will share.
Can. 246 §1 The celebration of the Eucharist is to be the centre
of the whole life of the seminary, so that the students, participating in the
very charity of Christ, may daily draw strength of soul for their apostolic
labour and for their spiritual life particularly from this richest of sources.
§2 They are to be formed in the celebration of the liturgy of the hours,
by which the ministers of God, in the name of the Church, intercede with Him
for all the people entrusted to them, and indeed for the whole world.
§3 Devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary, including the rosary, mental prayer
and other exercises of piety are to be fostered, so that the students may acquire
the spirit of prayer and be strengthened in their vocation.
§4 The students are to become accustomed to approach the sacrament of penance
frequently. It is recommended that each should have a director of his spiritual
life, freely chosen, to whom he can trustfully reveal his conscience.
§5 Each year the students are to make a spiritual retreat.
Can. 247 §1 By appropriate instruction they are to be prepared to
observe celibacy and to learn to hold it in honour as a special gift of God.
§2 The students are to be given all the requisite knowledge concerning
the duties and burdens which are proper to the sacred ministers of the Church,
concealing none of the difficulties of the priestly life.
Can. 248 The doctrinal formation given is to be so directed that the
students may acquire a wide and solid teaching in the sacred sciences, together
with a general culture which is appropriate to the needs of place and time.
As a result, with their own faith founded on and nourished by this teaching,
they ought to be able properly to proclaim the Gospel to the people of their
own time, in a fashion suited to the manner of the people’s thinking.
Can. 249 The Charter of Priestly Formation is to provide that the students
are not only taught their native language accurately, but are also well versed
in latin, and have a suitable knowledge of other languages which would appear
to be necessary or useful for their formation or for the exercise of their pastoral
ministry.
Can. 250 The philosophical and theological studies which are organised
in the seminary itself may be conducted either in succession or conjointly,
in accordance with the Charter of Priestly Formation. These studies are to take
at least six full years, in such a way that the time given to philosophical
studies amounts to two full years and that allotted to theological studies to
four full years.
Can. 251 Philosophical formation must be based on the philosophical heritage
that is perennially valid, and it is also to take account of philosophical investigations
over the course of time. It is to be so given that it furthers the human formation
of the students, sharpens their mental edge and makes them more fitted to engage
in theological studies.
Can. 252 §1 Theological formation, given in the light of faith and
under the guidance of the magisterium, is to be imparted in such a way that
the students learn the whole of catholic teaching, based on divine Revelation,
that they make it a nourishment of their own spiritual lives, and that in the
exercise of the ministry they may be able properly to proclaim and defend it.
§2 Students are to be instructed with special care in sacred Scripture,
so that they may acquire an insight into the whole of sacred Scripture.
§3 Lectures are to be given in dogmatic theology, based always on the written
word of God and on sacred Tradition; through them the students are to learn
to penetrate more deeply into the mysteries of salvation, with St. Thomas in
particular as their teacher. Lectures are also to be given in moral and pastoral
theology, canon law, liturgy, ecclesiastical history, and other auxiliary and
special disciplines, in accordance with the provisions of the Charter on Priestly
Formation.
Can. 253 §1 The Bishop or the Bishops concerned are to appoint as
teachers in philosophical, theological and juridical subjects only those who
are of outstanding virtue and have a doctorate or a licentiate from a university
or faculty recognised by the Holy See.
§2 Care is to be taken that different professors are appointed for sacred
Scripture, dogmatic theology, moral theology, liturgy, philosophy, canon law
and church history, and for other disciplines which are to be taught by their
own distinctive methods.
§3 A professor who seriously fails in his or her duty is to be removed
by the authority mentioned in §1.
Can. 254 §1 In their lectures, the professors are to be continuously
attentive to the intimate unity and harmony of the entire doctrine of faith,
so that the students are aware that they are learning one science. To ensure
this, there is to be someone in the seminary who is in charge of the overall
organisation of studies.
§2 The students are to be taught in such a way that they themselves are
enabled to research various questions in the scientific way appropriate to each
question. There are, therefore, to be assignments in which, under the guidance
of the professors, the students learn to work out certain subjects by their
own efforts.
Can. 255 Although the whole formation of students in the seminary has
a pastoral purpose, a specifically pastoral formation is also to be provided
there; in this the students are to learn the principles and the techniques which,
according to the needs of place and time, are relevant to the ministry of teaching,
sanctifying and ruling the people of God.
Can. 256 §1 Students are to be carefully instructed in whatever
especially pertains to the sacred ministry, particularly in catechetics and
homiletics, in divine worship and in a special way in the celebration of the
sacraments, in dealing with people, including non catholics and unbelievers,
in parish administration and in the fulfilment of other tasks.
§2 The students are to be instructed about the needs of the universal Church,
so that they may have a solicitude for encouraging vocations, for missionary
and ecumenical questions, and for other pressing matters, including social problems.
Can. 257 §1 The formation of students is to ensure that they are
concerned not only for the particular Church in which they are incardinated,
but also for the universal Church, and that they are ready to devote themselves
to particular Churches which are beset by grave need.
§2 The diocesan Bishop is to ensure that clerics who intend to move from
their own particular Church to a particular Church in another region, are suitably
prepared to exercise the sacred ministry there, that is, that they learn the
language of the region, and have an understanding of its institutions, social
conditions, usages and customs.
Can. 258 In order that the students may also by practice learn the art
of exercising the apostolate, they are in the course of their studies, and especially
during holiday time, to be initiated into pastoral practice by suitable assignments,
always under the supervision of an experienced priest. These assignments, appropriate
to the age of the student and the conditions of the place, are to be determined
by the Ordinary.
Can. 259 §1 It belongs to the diocesan Bishop or, in the case of
an inter diocesan seminary, to the Bishops concerned to determine those matters
which concern the overall control and administration of the seminary.
§2 The diocesan Bishop or, in the case of an inter diocesan seminary, the
Bishops concerned, are frequently to visit the seminary in person. They are
to oversee the formation of their students, and the philosophical and theological
instruction given in the seminary. They are to inform themselves about the vocation,
character, piety and progress of the students, in view particularly to the conferring
of sacred orders.
Can. 260 In the fulfilment of their duties, all must obey the rector,
who is responsible for the day to day direction of the seminary, in accordance
with the norms of the Charter of Priestly Formation and the rule of the seminary.
Can. 261 §1 The rector of the seminary is to ensure that the students
faithfully observe the norms of the Charter of Priestly Formation and the rule
of the seminary; under his authority, and according to their different positions,
the moderators and professors have the same responsibility.
Can. 262 The seminary is to be exempt from parochial governance. For
all those in the seminary, the function of the parish priest is to be discharged
by the rector of the seminary or his delegate, with the exception of matters
concerning marriage and without prejudice to the provisions of Can. 985.
Can. 263 The diocesan Bishop must ensure that the building and maintenance
of the seminary, the support of the students, the remuneration of the teachers
and the other needs of the seminary are provided for. In an inter diocesan seminary
this responsibility devolves upon the Bishops concerned, each to the extent
allotted by their common agreement.
Can. 264 §1 To provide for the needs of the seminary, the Bishop
can, apart from the collection mentioned in Can. 1266, impose a levy in the
diocese.
§2 Every ecclesiastical juridical person is subject to the levy for the
seminary, including even private juridical persons, which have a centre in the
diocese. Exception is made for those whose sole support comes from alms, or
in which there is actually present a college of students or of teachers for
furthering the common good of the Church. This levy should be general, proportionate
to the revenue of those who are subject to it and calculated according to the
needs of the seminary.
Can. 265 Every cleric must be incardinated in a particular church,
or in a personal Prelature, or in an institute of consecrated life or a society
which has this faculty: accordingly, acephalous or ‘wandering’ clergy
are in no way to be allowed.
Can. 266 §1 By the reception of the diaconate a person becomes a
cleric, and is incardinated in the particular Church or personal Prelature for
whose service he is ordained.
§2 A member who is perpetually professed in a religious institute, or who
is definitively incorporated into a clerical society of apostolic life, is by
the reception of the diaconate incardinated as a cleric in that institute or
society unless, in the case of a society, the constitutions determine otherwise.
§3 A member of a secular institute is by the reception of the diaconate
incardinated into the particular Church for whose service he was ordained, unless
by virtue of a concession of the Apostolic See he is incardinated into the institute
itself.
Can. 267 §1 To be validly incardinated in another particular Church,
a cleric who is already incardinated must obtain a letter of excardination signed
by the diocesan Bishop, and in the same way a letter of incardination signed
by the diocesan Bishop of the particular Church in which he wishes to be incardinated.
§2 Excardination granted in this way does not take effect until incardination
is obtained in the other particular Church.
Can. 268 §1 A cleric who has lawfully moved from his own particular
Church to another is, by virtue of the law itself, incardinated in that latter
Church after five years, if he has declared this intention in writing to both
the diocesan Bishop of the host diocese and his own diocesan Bishop, and neither
of the two Bishops has indicated opposition in writing within four months of
receiving the cleric’s written request.
§2 By perpetual or definitive admission into an institute of consecrated
life or a society of apostolic life, a cleric who in accordance with Can. 266
is incardinated in that institute or society, is excardinated from his own particular
Church.
Can. 269 A diocesan Bishop is not to incardinate a cleric unless:
1° the need or the advantage of his particular Church requires it and the
provisions of law concerning the worthy support of the cleric are observed;
2° he knows by a lawful document that excardination has been granted, and
has also obtained from the excardinating Bishop, under secrecy if need be, appropriate
testimonials concerning the cleric’s life, behaviour and studies;
3° the cleric declares in writing to the same Bishop that he wishes to enter
the service of the new particular Church in accordance with the norms of law.
Can. 270 Excardination can be lawfully granted only for a just reason,
such as the advantage of the Church or the good of the cleric. It may not, however,
be refused unless grave reasons exist; it is lawful for a cleric who considers
himself to be unfairly treated and who has a Bishop to receive him, to have
recourse against the decision.
Can. 271 §1 Except for a grave need of his own particular Church,
a Bishop is not to refuse clerics seeking permission to move whom he knows to
be prepared and considers suitable to exercise the ministry in regions which
suffer from a grave shortage of clergy. He is to ensure, however, that the rights
and duties of these clerics are determined by written agreement with the diocesan
Bishop of the place to which they wish to move.
§2 A Bishop can give permission to his clerics to move to another particular
Church for a specified time. Such permission can be renewed several times, but
in such a way that the clerics remain incardinated in their own particular Church,
and on returning there enjoy all the rights which they would have had if they
had ministered there.
§3 A cleric who lawfully moves to another particular Church while remaining
incardinated in his own, may for a just reason be recalled by his own Bishop,
provided the agreements entered into with the other Bishop are honoured and
natural equity is observed. Under the same conditions, the Bishop of the other
particular Church can for a just reason refuse the cleric permission to reside
further in his territory.
Can. 272 The diocesan Administrator cannot grant excardination nor incardination,
nor permission to move to another particular Church, unless the episcopal see
has been vacant for a year, and he has the consent of the college of consultors.
Can. 273 Clerics have a special obligation to show reverence and obedience
to the Supreme Pontiff and to their own Ordinary.
Can. 274 §1 Only clerics can obtain offices the exercise of which
requires the power of order or the power of ecclesiastical governance.
§2 Unless excused by a lawful impediment, clerics are obliged to accept
and faithfully fulfil the office committed to them by their Ordinary.
Can. 275 §1 Since all clerics are working for the same purpose,
namely the building up of the body of Christ, they are to be united with one
another in the bond of brotherhood and prayer. They are to seek to cooperate
with one another, in accordance with the provisions of particular law.
§2 Clerics are to acknowledge and promote the mission which the laity,
each for his or her part, exercises in the Church and in the world.
Can. 276 §1 Clerics have a special obligation to seek holiness in
their lives, because they are consecrated to God by a new title through the
reception of orders, and are stewards of the mysteries of God in the service
of His people.
§2 In order that they can pursue this perfection:
1° they are in the first place faithfully and untiringly to fulfil the obligations
of their pastoral ministry;
2° they are to nourish their spiritual life at the twofold table of the
sacred Scripture and the Eucharist; priests are therefore earnestly invited
to offer the eucharistic Sacrifice daily, and deacons to participate daily in
the offering;
3° priests, and deacons aspiring to the priesthood, are obliged to carry
out the liturgy of the hours daily, in accordance with their own approved liturgical
books; permanent deacons are to recite that part of it determined by the Episcopal
Conference;
4° they are also obliged to make spiritual retreats, in accordance with
the provision of particular law;
5° they are exhorted to engage regularly in mental prayer, to approach the
sacrament of penance frequently, to honour the Virgin Mother of God with particular
veneration, and to use other general and special means to holiness.
Can. 277 §1 Clerics are obliged to observe perfect and perpetual
continence for the sake of the Kingdom of heaven, and are therefore bound to
celibacy. Celibacy is a special gift of God by which sacred ministers can more
easily remain close to Christ with an undivided heart, and can dedicate themselves
more freely to the service of God and their neighbour.
§2 Clerics are to behave with due prudence in relation to persons whose
company can be a danger to their obligation of preserving continence or can
lead to scandal of the faithful.
§3 The diocesan Bishop has authority to establish more detailed rules concerning
this matter, and to pass judgement on the observance of the obligation in particular
cases.
Can. 278 §1 The secular clergy have the right of association with
others for the achievement of purposes befitting the clerical state.
§2 The secular clergy are to hold in high esteem those associations especially
whose statutes are recognised by the competent authority and which, by a suitable
and well tried rule of life and by fraternal support, promote holiness in the
exercise of their ministry and foster the unity of the clergy with one another
and with their Bishop.
§3 Clerics are to refrain from establishing or joining associations whose
purpose or activity cannot be reconciled with the obligations proper to the
clerical state, or which can hinder the diligent fulfilment of the office entrusted
to them by the competent ecclesiastical authority.
Can. 279 §1 Clerics are to continue their sacred studies even after
ordination to the priesthood. They are to hold to that solid doctrine based
on sacred Scripture which has been handed down by our forebears and which is
generally received in the Church, as set out especially in the documents of
the Councils and of the Roman Pontiffs. They are to avoid profane novelties
and pseudo science.
§2 Priests are to attend pastoral courses to be arranged for them after
their ordination, in accordance with the provisions of particular law. At times
determined by the same law, they are to attend other courses, theological meetings
or conferences, which offer them an occasion to acquire further knowledge of
the sacred sciences and of pastoral methods.
§3 They are also to seek a knowledge of other sciences, especially those
linked to the sacred sciences, particularly insofar as they benefit the exercise
of the pastoral ministry.
Can. 280 Some manner of common life is highly recommended to clerics;
where it exists, it is as far as possible to be maintained.
Can. 281 §1 Since clerics dedicate themselves to the ecclesiastical
ministry, they deserve the remuneration that befits their condition, taking
into account both the nature of their office and the conditions of time and
place. It is to be such that it provides for the necessities of their life and
for the just remuneration of those whose services they need.
§2 Suitable provision is likewise to be made for such social welfare as
they may need in infirmity, sickness or old age.
§3 Married deacons who dedicate themselves full time to the ecclesiastical
ministry deserve remuneration sufficient to provide for themselves and their
families. Those, however, who receive a remuneration by reason of a secular
profession which they exercise or exercised, are to see to their own and to
their families’ needs from that income.
Can. 282 §1 Clerics are to follow a simple way of life and avoid
anything which smacks of worldliness.
§2 Goods which they receive on the occasion of the exercise of an ecclesiastical
office, and which are over and above what is necessary for their worthy upkeep
and the fulfilment of all the duties of their state, they may well wish to use
for the good of the Church and for charitable works.
Can. 283 §1 Clerics, even if they do not have a residential office,
are not to be absent from their diocese for a considerable time, to be determined
by particular law, without the at least presumed permission of their proper
Ordinary.
§2 They may, however, take a rightful and sufficient holiday every year,
for the length of time determined by general or by particular law.
Can. 284 Clerics are to wear suitable ecclesiastical dress, in accordance
with the norms established by the Episcopal Conference and legitimate local
custom.
Can. 285 §1 Clerics are to shun completely everything that is unbecoming
to their state, in accordance with the provisions of particular law.
§2 Clerics are to avoid whatever is foreign to their state, even when it
is not unseemly.
§3 Clerics are forbidden to assume public office whenever it means sharing
in the exercise of civil power.
§4 Without the permission of their Ordinary, they may not undertake the
administration of goods belonging to lay people, or secular offices which involve
the obligation to render an account. They are forbidden to act as surety, even
concerning their own goods, without consulting their proper Ordinary. They are
not to sign promissory notes which involve the payment of money but do not state
the reasons for the payment.
Can. 286 Clerics are forbidden to practise commerce or trade, either
personally or through another, for their own or another’s benefit, except
with the permission of the lawful ecclesiastical authority.
Can. 287 §1 Clerics are always to do their utmost to foster among
people peace and harmony based on justice.
§2 They are not to play an active role in political parties or in directing
trade unions unless, in the judgement of the competent ecclesiastical authority,
this is required for the defence of the rights of the Church or to promote the
common good.
Can. 288 Permanent deacons are not bound by the provisions of Cann. 284,
285 §§3 and 4, 286, 287 §2, unless particular law states otherwise.
Can. 289 §1 As military service ill befits the clerical state, clerics
and candidates for sacred orders are not to volunteer for the armed services
without the permission of their Ordinary.
§2 Clerics are to take advantage of exemptions from exercising functions
and public civil offices foreign to the clerical state, which are granted in
their favour by law, agreements or customs, unless their proper Ordinary has
in particular cases decreed otherwise.
Can. 290 Sacred ordination once validly received never becomes invalid.
A cleric, however, loses the clerical state:
1° by a judgement of a court or an administrative decree, declaring the
ordination invalid;
2° by the penalty of dismissal lawfully imposed;
3° by a rescript of the Apostolic See; this rescript, however, is granted
to deacons only for grave reasons and to priests only for the gravest of reasons.
Can. 291 Apart from the cases mentioned in Can. 290, n. 1, the loss of
the clerical state does not carry with it a dispensation from the obligation
of celibacy, which is granted solely by the Roman Pontiff.
Can. 292 A cleric who loses the clerical state in accordance with the
law, loses thereby the rights that are proper to the clerical state and is no
longer bound by any obligations of the clerical state, without prejudice to
Can. 291. He is prohibited from exercising the power of order, without prejudice
to Can. 976. He is automatically deprived of all offices and roles and of any
delegated power.
Can. 293 A cleric who has lost the clerical state cannot be enrolled
as a cleric again save by rescript of the Apostolic See.
Can. 294 Personal prelatures may be established by the Apostolic See
after consultation with the Episcopal Conferences concerned. They are composed
of deacons and priests of the secular clergy. Their purpose is to promote an
appropriate distribution of priests, or to carry out special pastoral or missionary
enterprises in different regions or for different social groups.
Can. 295 §1 A personal prelature is governed by statutes laid down
by the Apostolic See. It is presided over by a Prelate as its proper Ordinary.
He has the right to establish a national or an international seminary, and to
incardinate students and promote them to orders with the title of service of
the prelature.
§2 The Prelate must provide both for the spiritual formation of those who
are ordained with this title, and for their becoming support.
Can. 296 Lay people can dedicate themselves to the apostolic work of
a personal prelature by way of agreements made with the prelature. The manner
of this organic cooperation and the principal obligations and rights associated
with it, are to be duly defined in the statutes.
Can. 297 The statutes are likewise to define the relationships of the
prelature with the local Ordinaries in whose particular Churches the prelature,
with the prior consent of the diocesan Bishop, exercises or wishes to exercise
its pastoral or missionary activity.
Can. 298 §1 In the Church there are associations which are distinct
from institutes of consecrated life and societies of apostolic life. In these
associations, Christ’s faithful, whether clerics or laity, or clerics
and laity together, strive with a common effort to foster a more perfect life,
or to promote public worship or christian teaching. They may also devote themselves
to other works of the apostolate, such as initiatives for evangelisation, works
of piety or charity, and those which animate the temporal order with the christian
spirit.
§2 Christ’s faithful are to join especially those associations which
have been established, praised or recommended by the competent ecclesiastical
authority.
Can. 299 §1 By private agreement among themselves, Christ’s
faithful have the right to constitute associations for the purposes mentioned
in Can. 298 §1, without prejudice to the provisions of Can. 301 §1.
§2 Associations of this kind, even though they may be praised or commended
by ecclesiastical authority, are called private associations.
§3 No private association of Christ’s faithful is recognised in the
Church unless its statutes have been reviewed by the competent authority.
Can. 300 No association may call itself ‘catholic’ except
with the consent of the competent ecclesiastical authority, in accordance with
Can. 312.
Can. 301 §1 It is for the competent ecclesiastical authority alone
to establish associations of Christ’s faithful which intend to impart
Christian teaching in the name of the Church, or to promote public worship,
or which are directed to other ends whose pursuit is of its nature reserved
to the same ecclesiastical authority.
§2 The competent ecclesiastical authority, if it judges it expedient, can
also establish associations of Christ’s faithful to pursue, directly or
indirectly, other spiritual ends whose attainment is not adequately provided
for by private initiatives.
§3 Associations of Christ’s faithful which are established by the
competent ecclesiastical authority are called public associations.
Can. 302 Associations of Christ’s faithful are called clerical
when they are under the direction of clerics, presuppose the exercise of sacred
orders, and are acknowledged as such by the competent authority.
Can. 303 Associations whose members live in the world but share in the
spirit of some religious institute, under the overall direction of the same
institute, and who lead an apostolic life and strive for Christian perfection,
are known as third orders, or are called by some other suitable title.
Can. 304 §1 All associations of Christ’s faithful, whether
public or private, by whatever title or name they are called, are to have their
own statutes. These are to define the purpose or social objective of the association,
its centre, its governance and the conditions of membership. They are also to
specify the manner of action of the association, paying due regard to what is
necessary or useful in the circumstances of the time and place.
§2 Associations are to select for themselves a title or name which is in
keeping with the practices of the time and place, especially one derived from
the purpose they intend.
Can. 305 §1 All associations of Christ’s faithful are subject
to the supervision of the competent ecclesiastical authority. This authority
is to ensure that integrity of faith and morals is maintained in them and that
abuses in ecclesiastical discipline do not creep in. The competent authority
has therefore the duty and the right to visit these associations, in accordance
with the law and the statutes. Associations are also subject to the governance
of the same authority in accordance with the provisions of the canons which
follow.
§2 Associations of every kind are subject to the supervision of the Holy
See. Diocesan associations are subject to the supervision of the local Ordinary,
as are other associations to the extent that they work in the diocese.
Can. 306 To enjoy the rights and privileges, indulgences and other spiritual
favours granted to an association, it is necessary and sufficient that a person
be validly received into the association in accordance with the provisions of
the law and with the association’s own statutes, and be not lawfully dismissed
from it.
Can. 307 §1 The admission of members is to take place in accordance
with the law and with the statutes of each association.
§2 The same person can be enrolled in several associations.
§3 In accordance with their own law, members of religious institutes may,
with the consent of their Superior, join associations.
Can. 308 No one who was lawfully admitted is to be dismissed from an
association except for a just reason, in accordance with the law and the statutes.
Can. 309 Associations that are lawfully established have the right, in
accordance with the law and the statutes, to make particular norms concerning
the association, for the holding of meetings, and for the appointment of moderators,
officials, ministers and administrators of goods.
Can. 310 A private association which has not been constituted a juridical
person cannot, as such, be the subject of duties and rights. However the faithful
who are joined together in it can jointly contract obligations. As joint owners
and joint possessors they can acquire and possess rights and goods. They can
exercise these rights and obligations through a delegate or a proxy.
Can. 311 Members of institutes of consecrated life who preside over or
assist associations which are joined in some way to their institute, are to
ensure that these associations help the apostolic works existing in the diocese.
They are especially to cooperate, under the direction of the local Ordinary,
with associations which are directed to the exercise of the apostolate in the
diocese.
Can. 312 §1 The authority which is competent to establish public
associations is:
1° the Holy See, for universal and international associations
2° the Episcopal Conference in its own territory, for national associations
which by their very establishment are intended for work throughout the whole
nation;
3° the diocesan Bishop, each in his own territory, but not the diocesan
Administrator, for diocesan associations, with the exception, however, of associations
the right to whose establishment is reserved to others by apostolic privilege.
§2 The written consent of the diocesan Bishop is required for the valid
establishment of an association or branch of an association in the diocese even
though it is done in virtue of an apostolic privilege. Permission, however,
which is given by the diocesan Bishop for the foundation of a house of a religious
institute, is valid also for the establishment in the same house, or in a church
attached to it, of an association which is proper to that institute.
Can. 313 A public association or a confederation of public associations
is constituted a juridical person by the very decree by which it is established
by the authority competent in accordance with Can. 312. Moreover, insofar as
is required, it thereby receives its mission to pursue, in the name of the Church,
those ends which it proposes for itself.
Can. 314 The statutes of any public association require the approval
of the authority which, in accordance with Can. 312 §1, is competent to
establish the association; this approval is also required for a revision of,
or a change in, the statutes.
Can. 315 Public associations can, on their own initiative, undertake
projects which are appropriate to their character, and they are governed by
the statutes, but under the overall direction of the ecclesiastical authority
mentioned in Can. 312 §1.
Can. 316 §1 A person who has publicly rejected the catholic faith,
or has defected from ecclesiastical communion, or upon whom an excommunication
has been imposed or declared, cannot validly be received into public associations.
§2 Those who have been lawfully enrolled but who fall into one of the categories
mentioned in §1, having been previously warned, are to be dismissed, in
accordance with the statutes of the association, without prejudice to their
right of recourse to the ecclesiastical authority mentioned in Can. 312 §1.
Can. 317 §1 Unless the statutes provide otherwise, it belongs to
the ecclesiastical authority mentioned in Can. 312 §1 to confirm the moderator
of a public association on election, or to appoint the moderator on presentation,
or by his own right to appoint the moderator. The same authority appoints the
chaplain or ecclesiastical assistant, after consulting the senior officials
of the association, wherever this is expedient.
§2 The norm of §1 is also valid for associations which members of
religious institutes, by apostolic privilege, establish outside their own churches
or houses. In associations which members of religious institutes establish in
their own church or house, the appointment or confirmation of the moderator
and chaplain belongs to the Superior of the institute, in accordance with the
statutes.
§3 The laity can be moderators of associations which are not clerical.
The chaplain or ecclesiastical assistant is not to be the moderator, unless
the statutes provide otherwise.
§4 Those who hold an office of direction in political parties are not to
be moderators in public associations of the faithful which are directly ordered
to the exercise of the apostolate.
Can. 318 §1 In special circumstances, when serious reasons so require
the ecclesiastical authority mentioned in Can. 312 §1 can appoint a commissioner
to direct the association in his name for the time being.
§2 The moderator of a public association may be removed for a just reason,
by the person who made the appointment or the confirmation, but the Moderator
himself and the senior officials of the association must be consulted, in accordance
with the statutes. The chaplain can, however, be removed by the person who appointed
him, in accordance with Cann. 192–195.
Can. 319 §1 Unless otherwise provided, a lawfully established public
association administers the goods it possesses, in accordance with the statutes,
and under the overall direction of the ecclesiastical authority mentioned in
Can. 312 §1. It must give a yearly account to this authority.
§2 The association must also faithfully account to the same authority for
the disbursement of contributions and alms which it has collected.
Can. 320 §1 Associations established by the Holy See can be suppressed
only by the Holy See.
§2 For grave reasons, associations established by the Episcopal Conference
can be suppressed by it. The diocesan Bishop can suppress those he has established,
and also those which members of religious institutes have established by apostolic
indult with the consent of the diocesan Bishop.
§3 A public association is not to be suppressed by the competent authority
unless the moderator and other senior officials have been consulted.
Can. 321 Christ’s faithful direct and moderate private associations
according to the provisions of the statutes.
Can. 322 §1 A private association of Christ’s faithful can
acquire juridical personality by a formal decree of the competent ecclesiastical
authority mentioned in Can. 312.
§2 No private association of Christ’s faithful can acquire juridical
personality unless its statutes are approved by the ecclesiastical authority
mentioned in Can. 312 §1. The approval of the statutes does not, however,
change the private nature of the association.
Can. 323 §1 Although private associations of Christ’s faithful
enjoy their own autonomy in accordance with Can. 321, they are subject to the
supervision of ecclesiastical authority, in accordance with Can. 305, and also
to the governance of the same authority.
§2 It is also the responsibility of ecclesiastical authority, with due
respect for the autonomy of private associations, to oversee and ensure that
there is no dissipation of their forces, and that the exercise of their apostolate
is directed to the common good.
Can. 324 §1 A private association of Christ’s faithful can
freely designate for itself a moderator and officers, in accordance with the
statutes.
§2 If a private association of Christ’s faithful wishes to have a
spiritual counsellor, it can freely choose one for itself from among the priests
who lawfully exercise a ministry in the diocese, but the priest requires the
confirmation of the local Ordinary.
Can. 325 §1 A private association of Christ’s faithful is
free to administer any goods it possesses, according to the provisions of the
statutes, but the competent ecclesiastical authority has the right to ensure
that the goods are applied to the purposes of the association.
§2 In accordance with Can. 1301, the association is subject to the authority
of the local Ordinary in whatever concerns the administration and distribution
of goods which are donated or left to it for pious purposes.
Can. 326 §1 A private association of Christ’s faithful is
extinguished in accordance with the norms of the statutes. It can also be suppressed
by the competent authority if its activity gives rise to grave harm to ecclesiastical
teaching or discipline, or is a scandal to the faithful.
§2 The fate of the goods of a private association which ceases to exist
is to be determined in accordance with the statutes, without prejudice to acquired
rights and to the wishes of donors.
Can. 327 Lay members of Christ’s faithful are to hold in high
esteem associations established for the spiritual purposes mentioned in Can.
298. They should especially esteem those associations whose aim is to animate
the temporal order with the christian spirit, and thus greatly foster an intimate
union between faith and life.
Can. 328 Those who head lay associations, even those established by apostolic
privilege, are to ensure that their associations cooperate with other associations
of Christ’s faithful, where this is expedient. They are to give their
help freely to various christian works, especially those in the same territory.
Can. 329 Moderators of lay associations are to ensure that the members
receive due formation, so that they may carry out the apostolate which is proper
to the laity.
Can. 330 Just as, by the decree of the Lord, Saint Peter and the rest of the Apostles form one College, so for a like reason the Roman Pontiff, the successor of Peter, and the Bishops, the successors of the Apostles, are united together in one.
ARTICLE 1: THE ROMAN PONTIFF
Can. 331 The office uniquely committed by the Lord to Peter, the first
of the Apostles, and to be transmitted to his successors, abides in the Bishop
of the Church of Rome. He is the head of the College of Bishops, the Vicar of
Christ, and the Pastor of the universal Church here on earth. Consequently,
by virtue of his office, he has supreme, full, immediate and universal ordinary
power in the Church, and he can always freely exercise this power.
Can. 332 §1 The Roman Pontiff acquires full and supreme power in
the Church when, together with episcopal consecration, he has been lawfully
elected and has accepted the election. Accordingly, if he already has the episcopal
character, he receives this power from the moment he accepts election to the
supreme pontificate. If he does not have the episcopal character, he is immediately
to be ordained Bishop.
§2 Should it happen that the Roman Pontiff resigns from his office, it
is required for validity that the resignation be freely made and properly manifested,
but it is not necessary that it be accepted by anyone.
Can. 333 §1 By virtue of his office, the Roman Pontiff not only
has power over the universal Church, but also has pre eminent ordinary power
over all particular Churches and their groupings. This reinforces and defends
the proper, ordinary and immediate power which the Bishops have in the particular
Churches entrusted to their care.
§2 The Roman Pontiff, in fulfilling his office as supreme Pastor of the
Church, is always joined in full communion with the other Bishops, and indeed
with the whole Church. He has the right, however, to determine, according to
the needs of the Church, whether this office is to be exercised in a personal
or in a collegial manner.
§3 There is neither appeal nor recourse against a judgement or a decree
of the Roman Pontiff.
Can. 334 The Bishops are available to the Roman Pontiff in the exercise
of his office, to cooperate with him in various ways, among which is the synod
of Bishops. Cardinals also assist him, as do other persons and, according to
the needs of the time, various institutes; all these persons and institutes
fulfil their offices in his name and by his authority, for the good of all the
Churches, in accordance with the norms determined by law.
Can. 335 When the Roman See is vacant, or completely impeded, no innovation
is to be made in the governance of the universal Church. The special laws enacted
for these circumstances are to be observed.
ARTICLE 2: THE COLLEGE OF BISHOPS
Can. 336 The head of the College of Bishops is the Supreme Pontiff, and
its members are the Bishops by virtue of their sacramental consecration and
hierarchical communion with the head of the College and its members. This College
of Bishops, in which the apostolic body abides in an unbroken manner, is, in
union with its head and never without this head, also the subject of supreme
and full power over the universal Church.
Can. 337 §1 The College of Bishops exercises its power over the
universal Church in solemn form in an Ecumenical Council.
§2 It exercises this same power by the united action of the Bishops dispersed
throughout the world, when this action is as such proclaimed or freely accepted
by the Roman Pontiff, so that it becomes a truly collegial act.
§3 It belongs to the Roman Pontiff to select and promote, according to
the needs of the Church, ways in which the College of Bishops can exercise its
office in respect of the universal Church in a collegial manner.
Can. 338 §1 It is the prerogative of the Roman Pontiff alone to
summon an Ecumenical Council, to preside over it personally or through others,
to transfer, suspend or dissolve the Council, and to approve its decrees.
§2 It is also the prerogative of the Roman Pontiff to determine the matters
to be dealt with in the Council, and to establish the order to be observed.
The Fathers of the Council may add other matters to those proposed by the Roman
Pontiff, but these must be approved by the Roman Pontiff .
Can. 339 §1 All Bishops, but only Bishops who are members of the
College of Bishops, have the right and the obligation to be present at an Ecumenical
Council with a deliberative vote.
§2 Some others besides, who do not have the episcopal dignity, can be summoned
to an Ecumenical Council by the supreme authority in the Church, to whom it
belongs to determine what part they take in the Council.
Can. 340 If the Apostolic See should become vacant during the celebration
of the Council, it is by virtue of the law itself suspended until the new Supreme
Pontiff either orders it to continue or dissolves it.
Can. 341 §1 The decrees of an Ecumenical Council do not oblige unless
they are approved by the Roman Pontiff as well as by the Fathers of the Council,
confirmed by the Roman Pontiff and promulgated by his direction.
§2 If they are to have binding force, the same confirmation and promulgation
is required for decrees which the College of Bishops issues by truly collegial
actions in another manner introduced or freely accepted by the Roman Pontiff.
Can. 342 The synod of Bishops is a group of Bishops selected from different
parts of the world, who meet together at specified times to promote the close
relationship between the Roman Pontiff and the Bishops. These Bishops, by their
counsel, assist the Roman Pontiff in the defence and development of faith and
morals and in the preservation and strengthening of ecclesiastical discipline.
They also consider questions concerning the mission of the Church in the world.
Can. 343 The function of the synod of Bishops is to discuss the matters
proposed to it and set forth recommendations. It is not its function to settle
matters or to draw up decrees, unless the Roman Pontiff has given it deliberative
power in certain cases; in this event, it rests with the Roman Pontiff to ratify
the decisions of the synod.
Can. 344 The synod of Bishops is directly under the authority of the
Roman Pontiff, whose prerogative it is:
1° to convene the synod, as often as this seems opportune to him, and to
designate the place where the meetings are to be held
2° to ratify the election of those who, in accordance with the special law
of the synod, are to be elected, and to designate and appoint other members;
3° at a suitable time before the celebration of the synod, to prescribe
the outlines of the questions to be discussed, in accordance with the special
law;
4° to determine the agenda;
5° to preside over the synod personally or through others;
6° to conclude, transfer, suspend or dissolve the synod.
Can. 345 The synod of Bishops can meet in general assembly, in which
matters are dealt with which directly concern the good of the universal Church;
such an assembly is either ordinary or extraordinary. It can also meet in special
assembly, to deal with matters directly affecting a determined region or regions.
Can. 346 §1 The synod of Bishops meeting in ordinary general assembly
is comprised, for the most part, of Bishops elected for each assembly by the
Episcopal Conferences, in accordance with the norms of the special law of the
synod. Other members are designated according to the same law; others are directly
appointed by the Roman Pontiff. Added to these are some members of clerical
religious institutes, elected in accordance with the same special law.
§2 The synod of Bishops meeting in extraordinary general assembly for the
purpose of dealing with matters which require speedy resolution, is comprised
for the most part, of Bishops who, by reason of the office they hold, are designated
by the special law of the synod; others are appointed directly by the Roman
Pontiff. Added to these are some members of clerical religious institutes, elected
in accordance with the same law.
§3 The synod of Bishops which meets in special assembly is comprised of
members chosen principally from those regions for which the synod was convened,
in accordance with the special law by which the synod is governed.
Can. 347 §1 When the meeting of the synod of Bishops is concluded
by the Roman Pontiff, the function entrusted in it to the Bishops and other
members ceases.
§2 If the Apostolic See becomes vacant after the synod has been convened
or during its celebration, the meeting of the synod, and the function entrusted
in it to the members, is by virtue of the law itself suspended, until the new
Pontiff decrees either that the assembly is to be dissolved or that it is to
continue.
Can. 348 §1 There is to be a permanent general secretariat of the
synod, presided over by a Secretary general appointed by the Roman Pontiff.
The Secretary is to have the assistance of a council of the secretariat, composed
of Bishops, some elected by the synod of Bishops itself in accordance with the
special law, others appointed by the Roman Pontiff. The function of all these
persons ceases with the beginning of a new general assembly.
§2 For each assembly of the synod of Bishops there are one or more special
secretaries, who are appointed by the Roman Pontiff. They remain in office only
until the end of the synod assembly.
Can. 349 The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church constitute a special
College, whose prerogative it is to elect the Roman Pontiff in accordance with
the norms of a special law. The Cardinals are also available to the Roman Pontiff,
either acting collegially, when they are summoned together to deal with questions
of major importance, or acting individually, that is, in the offices which they
hold in assisting the Roman Pontiff especially in the daily care of the universal
Church.
Can. 350 §1 The College of Cardinals is divided into three orders:
the episcopal order, to which belong those Cardinals to whom the Roman Pontiff
assigns the title of a suburbicarian Church, and eastern rite Patriarchs who
are made members of the College of Cardinals; the presbyteral order, and the
diaconal order.
§2 Cardinal priests and Cardinal deacons are each assigned a title or a
deaconry in Rome by the Roman Pontiff.
§3 Eastern Patriarchs within the College of Cardinals have their patriarchal
see as a title.
§4 The Cardinal Dean has the title of the diocese of Ostia, together with
that of any other Church to which he already has a title.
§5 By a choice made in Consistory and approved by the Supreme Pontiff,
Cardinal priests may transfer to another title; Cardinal deacons may transfer
to another deaconry and, if they have been a full ten years in the diaconal
order, to the presbyteral order: priority of order and of promotion is to be
observed.
§6 A Cardinal who by choice transfers from the diaconal to the presbyteral
order, takes precedence over all Cardinal priests who were promoted to the Cardinalate
after him.
Can. 351 §1 Those to be promoted Cardinals are men freely selected
by the Roman Pontiff, who are at least in the order of priesthood and are truly
outstanding in doctrine, virtue, piety and prudence in practical matters; those
who are not already Bishops must receive episcopal consecration.
§2 Cardinals are created by decree of the Roman Pontiff, which in fact
is published in the presence of the College of Cardinals. From the moment of
publication, they are bound by the obligations and they enjoy the rights defined
in the law.
§3 A person promoted to the dignity of Cardinal, whose creation the Roman
Pontiff announces, but whose name he reserves in petto, is not at that time
bound by the obligations nor does he enjoy the rights of a Cardinal. When his
name is published by the Roman Pontiff, however, he is bound by these obligations
and enjoys these rights, but his right of precedence dates from the day of the
reservation in petto.
Can. 352 §1 The Dean presides over the College of Cardinals. When
he is unable to do so, the sub Dean takes his place. The Dean, or the subDean,
has no power of governance over the other Cardinals, but is considered as first
among equals.
§2 When the office of Dean is vacant, those Cardinals who have a suburbicarian
title, and only those, under the presidency of the sub Dean if he is present,
or of the oldest member, elect one of their number to act as Dean of the College.
They are to submit his name to the Roman Pontiff, to whom it belongs to approve
the person elected.
§3 In the same way as set out in §2, the sub Dean is elected, with
the Dean presiding. It belongs to the Roman Pontiff to approve also the election
of the sub Dean.
§4 If the Dean and sub Dean do not already have a domicile in Rome, they
acquire it there.
Can. 353 §1 Cardinals assist the Supreme Pastor of the Church in
collegial fashion particularly in Consistories, in which they are gathered by
order of the Roman Pontiff and under his presidency. Consistories are either
ordinary or extraordinary.
§2 In an ordinary Consistory all Cardinals, or at least those who are in
Rome, are summoned for consultation on certain grave matters of more frequent
occurrence, or for the performance of especially solemn acts.
§3 All Cardinals are summoned to an extraordinary Consistory, which takes
place when the special needs of the Church and more serious matters suggest
it.
§4 Only an ordinary Consistory in which certain solemnities are celebrated,
can be public, that is when, in addition to the Cardinals, Prelates, representatives
of civil states and other invited persons are admitted.
Can. 354 Cardinals who head the departments and other permanent sections
of the Roman Curia and of Vatican City, who have completed their seventy fifth
year, are requested to offer their resignation from office to the Roman Pontiff,
who will consider all the circumstances and make provision accordingly.
Can. 355 §1 It belongs to the Cardinal Dean to ordain the elected
Roman Pontiff a Bishop, if he is not already ordained. If the Dean is prevented
from doing so, the same right belongs to the sub Dean or, if he is prevented,
to the senior Cardinal of the episcopal order.
§2 The senior Cardinal Deacon announces the name of the newly elected Supreme
Pontiff to the people. Acting in place of the Roman Pontiff, he also confers
the pallium on metropolitan Bishops or gives the pallium to their proxies.
Can. 356 Cardinals have the obligation of cooperating closely with the
Roman Pontiff. For this reason, Cardinals who have any office in the Curia and
are not diocesan Bishops, are obliged to reside in Rome. Cardinals who are in
charge of a diocese as diocesan Bishops, are to go to Rome whenever summoned
by the Roman Pontiff.
Can. 357 §1 When a Cardinal has taken possession of a suburbicarian
Church or of a titular Church in Rome, he is to further the good of the diocese
or church by counsel and patronage. However, he has no power of governance over
it, and he should not for any reason interfere in matters concerning the administration
of its goods, or its discipline, or the service of the church.
§2 Cardinals living outside Rome and outside their own diocese, are exempt
in what concerns their person from the power of governance of the Bishop of
the diocese in which they are residing.
Can. 358 A Cardinal may be deputed by the Roman Pontiff to represent
him in some solemn celebration or assembly of persons as a ‘Legatus a
latere’, that is, as his alter ego; or he may, as a special emissary,
be entrusted with a particular pastoral task. A Cardinal thus nominated is entitled
to deal only with those affairs which have been entrusted to him by the Roman
Pontiff himself.
Can. 359 When the Apostolic See is vacant, the College of Cardinals has
only that power in the Church which is granted to it by special law.
Can. 360 The Supreme Pontiff usually conducts the business of the universal
Church through the Roman Curia, which acts in his name and with his authority
for the good and for the service of the Churches. The Curia is composed of the
Secretariat of State or Papal Secretariat, the Council for the public affairs
of the Church, the Congregations, the Tribunals and other Institutes. The constitution
and competence of all these is defined by special law.
Can. 361 In this Code the terms Apostolic See or Holy See mean not only
the Roman Pontiff, but also, unless the contrary is clear from the nature of
things or from the context, the Secretariat of State, the Council for the public
affairs of the Church, and the other Institutes of the Roman Curia.
Can. 362 The Roman Pontiff has an inherent and independent right to
appoint Legates and to send them either to particular Churches in various countries
or regions, or at the same time to States and to public Authorities. He also
has the right to transfer or recall them, in accordance with the norms of international
law concerning the mission and recall of representatives accredited to States.
Can. 363 §1 To Legates of the Roman Pontiff is entrusted the office
of representing in a stable manner the person of the Roman Pontiff in the particular
Churches, or also in the States and public Authorities, to whom they are sent.
§2 Those also represent the Apostolic See who are appointed to pontifical
Missions as Delegates or Observers at international Councils or at Conferences
and Meetings.
Can. 364 The principal task of a Papal Legate is continually to make
more firm and effective the bonds of unity which exist between the Holy See
and the particular Churches. Within the territory assigned to him, it is therefore
the responsibility of a Legate:
1° to inform the Apostolic See about the conditions in which the particular
Churches find themselves, as well as about all matters which affect the life
of the Church and the good of souls;
2° to assist the Bishops by action and advice, while leaving intact the
exercise of their lawful power;
3° to foster close relations with the Episcopal Conference, offering it
every assistance;
4° in connection with the appointment of Bishops, to send or propose names
of candidates to the Apostolic See, as well as to prepare the informative process
about those who may be promoted, in accordance with the norms issued by the
Apostolic See;
5° to take pains to promote whatever may contribute to peace, progress and
the united efforts of peoples;
6° to work with the Bishops to foster appropriate exchanges between the
Catholic Church and other Churches or ecclesial communities, and indeed with
non christian religions;
7° to work with the Bishops to safeguard, so far as the rulers of the State
are concerned, those things which relate to the mission of the Church and of
the Apostolic See;
8° to exercise the faculties and carry out the other instructions which
are given to him by the Apostolic See.
Can. 365 §1 A papal Legate who at the same time acts as envoy to
the State according to international law, has in addition the special role:
1° of promoting and fostering relationships between the Apostolic See and
the Authorities of the State;
2° of dealing with questions concerning relations between Church and State,
especially, of drawing up concordats and other similar agreements, and giving
effect to them.
§2 As circumstances suggest, in the matters mentioned in §1, the papal
Legate is not to omit to seek the opinion and counsel of the Bishops of the
ecclesiastical jurisdiction and to keep them informed of the course of events.
Can. 366 Given the special nature of a Legate’s role:
1° the papal Legation is exempt from the power of governance of the local
Ordinary, except for the celebration of marriages;
2° the papal Legate has the right to perform liturgical celebrations, even
in pontificalia, in all churches of the territory of his legation; as far as
it is possible, he is to give prior notice to the local Ordinary.
Can. 367 The office of papal Legate does not cease when the Apostolic
See is vacant, unless otherwise specified in the pontifical Letters it does
cease, however, on the expiry of the mandate, on receipt by him of notification
of recall, and on acceptance of his resignation by the Roman Pontiff.
Can. 368 Particular Churches, in which and from which the one and only
catholic Church exists, are principally dioceses. Unless the contrary is clear,
the following are equivalent to a diocese: a territorial prelature, a territorial
abbacy, a vicariate apostolic, a prefecture apostolic and a permanently established
apostolic administration.
Can. 369 A diocese is a portion of the people of God, which is entrusted
to a Bishop to be nurtured by him, with the cooperation of the presbyterium,
in such a way that, remaining close to its pastor and gathered by him through
the Gospel and the Eucharist in the Holy Spirit, it constitutes a particular
Church. In this Church, the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church of Christ
truly exists and functions.
Can. 370 A territorial prelature or abbacy is a certain portion of the
people of God, territorially defined, the care of which is for special reasons
entrusted to a Prelate or an Abbot, who governs it, in the manner of a diocesan
Bishop, as its proper pastor.
Can. 371 §1 A vicariate apostolic or a prefecture apostolic is a
certain portion of the people of God, which for special reasons is not yet constituted
a diocese, and which is entrusted to the pastoral care of a Vicar apostolic
or a Prefect apostolic, who governs it in the name of the Supreme Pontiff.
§2 An apostolic administration is a certain portion of the people of God
which, for special and particularly serious reasons, is not yet established
by the Supreme Pontiff as a diocese, and whose pastoral care is entrusted to
an apostolic Administrator, who governs it in the name of the Supreme Pontiff.
Can. 372 §1 As a rule, that portion of the people of God which constitutes
a diocese or other particular Church is to have a defined territory, so that
it comprises all the faithful who live in that territory.
§2 If however, in the judgement of the supreme authority in the Church,
after consultation with the Episcopal Conferences concerned, it is thought to
be helpful, there may be established in a given territory particular Churches
distinguished by the rite of the faithful or by some other similar quality.
Can. 373 It is within the competence of the supreme authority alone to
establish particular Churches; once they are lawfully established, the law itself
gives them juridical personality.
Can. 374 §1 Each diocese or other particular Church is to be divided
into distinct parts or parishes.
§2 To foster pastoral care by means of common action, several neighbouring
parishes can be joined together in special groups, such as vicariates forane.
ARTICLE 1: BISHOPS IN GENERAL
Can. 375 §1 By divine institution, Bishops succeed the Apostles
through the Holy Spirit who is given to them. They are constituted Pastors in
the Church, to be the teachers of doctrine, the priests of sacred worship and
the ministers of governance.
§2 By their episcopal consecration, Bishops receive, together with the
office of sanctifying, the offices also of teaching and of ruling, which however,
by their nature, can be exercised only in hierarchical communion with the head
of the College and its members.
Can. 376 Bishops to whom the care of a given diocese is entrusted are
called diocesan Bishops; the others are called titular Bishops.
Can. 377 §1 The Supreme Pontiff freely appoints Bishops or confirms
those lawfully elected.
§2 At least every three years, the Bishops of an ecclesiastical province
or, if circumstances suggest it, of an Episcopal Conference, are to draw up,
by common accord and in secret, a list of priests, even of members of institutes
of consecrated life, who are suitable for the episcopate; they are to send this
list to the Apostolic See. This is without prejudice to the right of every Bishop
individually to make known to the Apostolic See the names of priests whom he
thinks are worthy and suitable for the episcopal office.
§3 Unless it has been lawfully prescribed otherwise, for the appointment
of a diocesan Bishop or a coadjutor Bishop, a ternus, as it is called, is to
be proposed to the Apostolic See. In the preparation of this list, it is the
responsibility of the papal Legate to seek individually the suggestions of the
Metropolitan and of the Suffragans of the province to which the diocese in question
belongs or with which it is joined in some grouping, as well as the suggestions
of the president of the Episcopal Conference. The papal Legate is, moreover,
to hear the views of some members of the college of consultors and of the cathedral
chapter. If he judges it expedient, he is also to seek individually, and in
secret, the opinions of other clerics, both secular and religious, and of lay
persons of outstanding wisdom. He is then to send these suggestions, together
with his own opinion, to the Apostolic See.
§4 Unless it has been lawfully provided otherwise, the diocesan Bishop
who judges that his diocese requires an auxiliary Bishop, is to propose to the
Apostolic See a list of the names of at least three priests suitable for this
office .
§5 For the future, no rights or privileges of election, appointment, presentation
or designation of Bishops are conceded to civil authorities.
Can. 378 §1 To be a suitable candidate for the episcopate, a person
must:
1° be outstanding in strong faith, good morals, piety, zeal for souls, wisdom,
prudence and human virtues, and possess those other gifts which equip him to
fulfil the office in question;
2° be held in good esteem;
3° be at least 35 years old;
4° be a priest ordained for at least five years;
5° hold a doctorate or at least a licentiate in sacred Scripture, theology
or canon law, from an institute of higher studies approved by the Apostolic
See, or at least be well versed in these disciplines.
§2 The definitive judgement on the suitability of the person to be promoted
rests with the Apostolic See.
Can. 379 Unless prevented by a lawful reason, one who is promoted to
the episcopate must receive episcopal consecration within three months of receiving
the apostolic letters, and in fact before he takes possession of his office.
Can. 380 Before taking canonical possession of his office, he who has
been promoted is to make the profession of faith and take the oath of fidelity
to the Apostolic See, in accordance with the formula approved by the same Apostolic
See.
ARTICLE 2: DIOCESAN BISHOPS
Can. 381 §1 In the diocese entrusted to his care, the diocesan Bishop
has all the ordinary, proper and immediate power required for the exercise of
his pastoral office, except in those matters which the law or a decree of the
Supreme Pontiff reserves to the supreme or to some other ecclesiastical authority.
§2 Those who are at the head of the other communities of the faithful mentioned
in Can. 368, are equivalent in law to the diocesan Bishop unless the contrary
is clear from the nature of things or from a provision of the law.
Can. 382 §1 A person who is promoted to the episcopate cannot become
involved in the exercise of the office entrusted to him before he has taken
canonical possession of the diocese. However, he is able to exercise offices
which he already held in the same diocese at the time of his promotion, without
prejudice to Can. 409 §2.
§2 Unless he is lawfully impeded, one who is not already consecrated a
Bishop and is now promoted to the office of diocesan Bishop, must take canonical
possession of his diocese within four months of receiving the apostolic letters.
If he is already consecrated, he must take possession within two months of receiving
the apostolic letters.
§3 A Bishop takes canonical possession of his diocese when, personally
or by proxy, he shows the apostolic letters to the college of consultors, in
the presence of the chancellor of the curia, who makes a record of the fact.
This must take place within the diocese. In dioceses which are newly established
he takes possession when he communicates the same letters to the clergy and
the people in the cathedral church, with the senior of the priests present making
a record of the fact.
§4 It is strongly recommended that the taking of canonical possession be
performed with a liturgical act in the cathedral church, in the presence of
the clergy and the people.
Can. 383 §1 In exercising his pastoral office, the diocesan Bishop
is to be solicitous for all Christ’s faithful entrusted to his care, whatever
their age, condition or nationality, whether they live in the territory or are
visiting there. He is to show an apostolic spirit also to those who, because
of their condition of life, are not sufficiently able to benefit from ordinary
pastoral care, and to those who have lapsed from religious practice.
§2 If he has faithful of a different rite in his diocese, he is to provide
for their spiritual needs either by means of priests or parishes of the same
rite, or by an episcopal Vicar.
§3 He is to act with humanity and charity to those who are not in full
communion with the catholic Church he should also foster ecumenism as it is
understood by the Church.
§4 He is to consider the non baptised as commended to him in the Lord,
so that the charity of Christ, of which the Bishop must be a witness to all,
may shine also on them.
Can. 384 He is to have a special concern for the priests, to whom he
is to listen as his helpers and counsellors. He is to defend their rights and
ensure that they fulfil the obligations proper to their state. He is to see
that they have the means and the institutions needed for the development of
their spiritual and intellectual life. He is to ensure that they are provided
with adequate means of livelihood and social welfare, in accordance with the
law.
Can. 385 He must in a very special way foster vocations to the various
ministries and to consecrated life, having a special care for priestly and missionary
vocations.
Can. 386 §1 The diocesan Bishop is bound to teach and illustrate
to the faithful the truths of faith which are to be believed and applied to
behaviour. He is himself to preach frequently. He is also to ensure that the
provisions of the canons on the ministry of the word, especially on the homily
and catechetical instruction, are faithfully observed, so that the whole of
christian teaching is transmitted to all.
§2 By whatever means seem most appropriate, he is firmly to defend the
integrity and unity of the faith to be believed. However, he is to acknowledge
a just freedom in the further investigation of truths.
Can. 387 Mindful that he is bound to give an example of holiness, charity,
humility and simplicity of life, the diocesan Bishop is to seek in every way
to promote the holiness of Christ’s faithful according to the special
vocation of each. Since he is the principal dispenser of the mysteries of God,
he is to strive constantly that Christ’s faithful entrusted to his care
may grow in grace through the celebration of the sacraments, and may know and
live the paschal mystery.
Can. 388 §1 After he has taken possession of the diocese, the diocesan
Bishop must apply the Mass for the people entrusted to him on each Sunday and
on each holyday of obligation in his region.
§2 The Bishop must himself celebrate and apply the Mass for the people
on the days mentioned in §1; if, however, he is lawfully impeded from so
doing, he is to have someone else do so on those days, or do so himself on other
days.
§3 A Bishop who, in addition to his own, is given another diocese, even
as administrator, satisfies the obligation by applying one Mass for all the
people entrusted to him.
§4 A Bishop who has not satisfied the obligation mentioned in §§1
3, is to apply as soon as possible as many Masses for the people as he has omitted.
Can. 389 He is frequently to preside at the Eucharistic celebration in
the cathedral church or in some other church of his diocese, especially on holydays
of obligation and on other solemnities.
Can. 390 The diocesan Bishop may use pontificalia throughout his diocese.
He may not do so outside his diocese without the consent of the local Ordinary,
either expressly given or at least reasonably presumed.
Can. 391 §1 The diocesan Bishop governs the particular Church entrusted
to him with legislative, executive and judicial power, in accordance with the
law.
§2 The Bishop exercises legislative power himself. He exercises executive
power either personally or through Vicars general or episcopal Vicars, in accordance
with the law. He exercises judicial power either personally or through a judicial
Vicar and judges, in accordance with the law.
Can. 392 §1 Since the Bishop must defend the unity of the universal
Church, he is bound to foster the discipline which is common to the whole Church,
and so press for the observance of all ecclesiastical laws.
§2 He is to ensure that abuses do not creep into ecclesiastical discipline,
especially concerning the ministry of the word, the celebration of the sacraments
and sacramentals, the worship of God and the cult of the saints, and the administration
of goods.
Can. 393 In all juridical transactions of the diocese, the diocesan Bishop
acts in the person of the diocese.
Can. 394 §1 The Bishop is to foster various forms of the apostolate
in his diocese and is to ensure that throughout the entire diocese, or in its
particular districts, all works of the apostolate are coordinated under his
direction, with due regard for the character of each apostolate.
§2 He is to insist on the faithful’s obligation to exercise the apostolate
according to the condition and talents of each. He is to urge them to take part
in or assist various works of the apostolate, according to the needs of place
and time.
Can. 395 §1 The diocesan Bishop is bound by the law of personal
residence in his diocese, even if he has a coadjutor or auxiliary Bishop.
§2 Apart from the visit ‘ad limina’, attendance at councils
or at the synod of Bishops or at the Episcopal Conference, at which he must
be present, or by reason of another office lawfully entrusted to him, he may
be absent from the diocese, for a just reason, for not longer than one month,
continuously or otherwise, provided he ensures that the diocese is not harmed
by this absence.
§3 He is not to be absent from his diocese on Christmas Day, during Holy
Week, or on Easter Sunday, Pentecost and Corpus Christi, except for a grave
and urgent reason.
§4 If the Bishop is unlawfully absent from the diocese for more than six
months, the Metropolitan is to notify the Holy See. If it is the Metropolitan
who is absent, the senior suffragan is to do the same.
Can. 396 §1 The Bishop is bound to visit his diocese in whole or
in part each year, so that at least every five years he will have visited the
whole diocese, either personally or, if he is lawfully impeded, through the
coadjutor or auxiliary Bishop, the Vicar general, an episcopal Vicar or some
other priest.
§2 The Bishop has a right to select any clerics he wishes as his companions
and helpers in a visitation, any contrary privilege or custom being reprobated.
Can. 397 §1 Persons, catholic institutes, pious objects and places
within the boundaries of the diocese, are subject to ordinary episcopal visitation.
§2 The Bishop may visit the members of religious institutes of pontifical
right and their houses only in the cases stated in the law.
Can. 398 The Bishop is to endeavour to make his pastoral visitation with
due diligence. He is to ensure that he is not a burden to anyone on the ground
of undue expense.
Can. 399 §1 Every five years the diocesan Bishop is bound to submit
to the Supreme Pontiff a report on the state of the diocese entrusted to him,
in the form and at the time determined by the Apostolic See.
§2 If the year assigned for submitting this report coincides in whole or
in part with the first two years of his governance of the diocese, for that
occasion the Bishop need not draw up and submit the report.
Can. 400 §1 Unless the Apostolic See has decided otherwise, in the
year in which he is bound to submit the report to the Supreme Pontiff, the diocesan
Bishop is to go to Rome to venerate the tombs of the Blessed Apostles Peter
and Paul, and to present himself to the Roman Pontiff.
§2 The Bishop is to satisfy this obligation personally, unless he is lawfully
impeded; in which case he is to satisfy the obligation through the coadjutor,
if he has one, or the auxiliary, or a suitable priest of his presbyterium who
resides in his diocese.
§3 A Vicar apostolic can satisfy this obligation through a proxy, even
through one residing in Rome. A Prefect apostolic is not bound by this obligation.
Can. 401 §1 A diocesan Bishop who has completed his seventy fifth
year of age is requested to offer his resignation from office to the Supreme
Pontiff, who, taking all the circumstances into account, will make provision
accordingly.
§2 A diocesan Bishop who, because of illness or some other grave reason,
has become unsuited for the fulfilment of his office, is earnestly requested
to offer his resignation from office.
Can. 402 §1 A Bishop whose resignation from office has been accepted,
acquires the title ‘emeritus’ of his diocese. If he so wishes, he
may have a residence in the diocese unless, because of special circumstances
in certain cases, the Apostolic See provides otherwise.
§2 The Episcopal Conference must ensure that suitable and worthy provision
is made for the upkeep of a Bishop who has resigned, bearing in mind the primary
obligation which falls on the diocese which he served.
ARTICLE 3: COADJUTOR AND AUXILIARY BISHOPS
Can. 403 §1 When the pastoral needs of the diocese require it, one
or more auxiliary Bishops are to be appointed at the request of the diocesan
Bishop. An auxiliary Bishop does not have the right of succession.
§2 In more serious circumstances, even of a personal nature, the diocesan
Bishop may be given an auxiliary Bishop with special faculties.
§3 If the Holy See considers it more opportune, it can ex officio appoint
a coadjutor Bishop, who also has special faculties. A coadjutor Bishop has the
right of succession.
Can. 404 §1 The coadjutor Bishop takes possession of his office
when, either personally or by proxy, he shows the apostolic letters of appointment
to the diocesan Bishop and the college of consultors, in the presence of the
chancellor of the curia, who makes a record of the fact.
§2 An auxiliary Bishop takes possession of his office when he shows his
apostolic letters of appointment to the diocesan Bishop, in the presence of
the chancellor of the curia, who makes a record of the fact.
§3 If the diocesan Bishop is wholly impeded, it is sufficient that either
the coadjutor Bishop or the auxiliary Bishop show their apostolic letters of
appointment to the college of consultors, in the presence of the chancellor
of the curia.
Can. 405 §1 The coadjutor Bishop and the auxiliary Bishop have the
obligations and the rights which are determined by the provisions of the following
canons and defined in their letters of appointment.
§2 The coadjutor Bishop, or the auxiliary Bishop mentioned in Can. 403
§2, assists the diocesan Bishop in the entire governance of the diocese,
and takes his place when he is absent or impeded.
Can. 406 §1 The coadjutor Bishop, and likewise the auxiliary Bishop
mentioned in Can. 403 §2, is to be appointed a Vicar general by the diocesan
Bishop. The diocesan Bishop is to entrust to him, in preference to others, those
things which by law require a special mandate.
§2 Unless the apostolic letters provide otherwise, and without prejudice
to the provision of §1, the diocesan Bishop is to appoint his auxiliary
or auxiliaries as Vicar general or at least episcopal Vicar, in dependence solely
on his authority, or on that of the coadjutor Bishop or of the auxiliary Bishop
mentioned in Can. 403 §2.
Can. 407 §1 For the greatest present and future good of the diocese,
the diocesan Bishop, the coadjutor and the auxiliary Bishop mentioned in Can.
403 §2, are to consult with each other on matters of greater importance.
§2 In assessing matters of greater importance, particularly those of a
pastoral nature, the diocesan Bishop is to consult the auxiliary Bishop before
all others.
§3 The coadjutor Bishop and the auxiliary Bishop, since they are called
to share in the cares of the diocesan Bishop, should so exercise their office
that they act and think in accord with him.
Can. 408 §1 As often as they are requested to do so by the diocesan
Bishop, a coadjutor Bishop and an auxiliary Bishop who are not lawfully impeded,
are obliged to perform those pontifical and other functions to which the diocesan
Bishop is bound.
§2 Those episcopal rights and functions which the coadjutor can exercise
are not habitually to be entrusted to another by the diocesan Bishop.
Can. 409 §1 When the episcopal see falls vacant, the coadjutor immediately
becomes the Bishop of the diocese for which he was appointed, provided he has
lawfully taken possession.
§2 Unless the competent authority has provided otherwise, when the episcopal
see is vacant and until the new Bishop takes possession of the see, the auxiliary
Bishop retains all and only those powers and faculties which he had as Vicar
general or as episcopal Vicar when the see was occupied. If he is not appointed
to the office of diocesan Administrator, he is to exercise this same power of
his, conferred by the law, under the authority of the diocesan Administrator,
who governs the diocese.
Can. 410 The coadjutor Bishop and the auxiliary Bishop are bound, like
the diocesan Bishop, to reside in the diocese. Other than for the fulfilment
of some duty outside the diocese, or for holidays, which are not to be longer
than one month, they may not be away from the diocese except for a brief period.
Can. 411 The provisions of Cann. 401 and 402 §2, concerning resignation
from office, apply also to a coadjutor and an auxiliary Bishop.
ARTICLE 1: THE IMPEDED SEE
Can. 412 The episcopal see is understood to be impeded if the diocesan
Bishop is completely prevented from exercising the pastoral office in the diocese
by reason of imprisonment, banishment, exile or incapacity, so that he is unable
to communicate, even by letter, with the people of his diocese.
Can. 413 §1 Unless the Holy See has provided otherwise, when a see
is impeded, the governance of the diocese devolves on the coadjutor Bishop,
if there is one. If there is no coadjutor, or if he is impeded, it devolves
upon the auxiliary Bishop, or the Vicar general, or the episcopal Vicar, or
another priest: the order of persons to be followed is to be that determined
in the list which the diocesan Bishop is to draw up as soon as possible after
taking possession of his diocese. This list, which is to be communicated to
the Metropolitan, is to be revised at least every three years, and kept under
secrecy by the chancellor.
§2 If there is no coadjutor Bishop or if he is impeded, and the list mentioned
in §1 is not at hand, it is the responsibility of the college of consultors
to elect a priest who will govern the diocese.
§3 The person who undertakes the governance of the diocese according to
the norms of §§1 or 2, is to notify the Holy See as soon as possible
that the see is impeded and that he has undertaken the office.
Can. 414 Whoever is called, in accordance with Can. 413, to exercise
the pastoral care of the diocese for the time being, that is, only for the period
during which the see is impeded, is in his pastoral care of the diocese bound
by the obligations, and has the power, which by law belong to the diocesan Administrator.
Can. 415 If the diocesan Bishop is prohibited from exercising his office
by reason of an ecclesiastical penalty, the Metropolitan is to refer the matter
at once to the Holy See, so that it may make provision; if there is no Metropolitan,
or if he is the one affected by the penalty, it is the suffragan senior by promotion
who is to refer the matter.
ARTICLE 2: THE VACANT SEE
Can. 416 The episcopal see becomes vacant by the death of the diocesan
Bishop, by his resignation accepted by the Holy See, by transfer, or by deprivation
notified to the Bishop.
Can. 417 Until they have received certain notification of the Bishop’s
death, all actions taken by the Vicar general or the episcopal Vicar have effect.
Until they have received certain notification of the aforementioned papal acts,
the same is true of actions taken by the diocesan Bishop, the Vicar general
or the episcopal Vicar.
Can. 418 §1 Within two months of receiving certain notification
of transfer, the Bishop must proceed to the diocese to which he has been transferred
and take canonical possession of it. On the day on which he takes possession
of the new diocese, the diocese from which he has been transferred becomes vacant.
§2 In the period between receiving certain notification of the transfer
and taking possession of the new diocese, in the diocese from which he is being
transferred the Bishop:
1° has the power, and is bound by the obligations, of a diocesan Administrator;
all powers of the Vicar general and of the episcopal Vicar cease, without prejudice
to Can. 409 §2;
2° receives the full remuneration proper to the office.
Can. 419 While the see is vacant and until the appointment of a diocesan
Administrator, the governance of the diocese devolves upon the auxiliary Bishop.
If there are a number of auxiliary Bishops, it devolves upon the senior by promotion.
If there is no auxiliary Bishop, it devolves upon the college of consultors,
unless the Holy See has provided otherwise. The one who thus assumes the governance
of the diocese must without delay convene the college which is competent to
appoint a diocesan Administrator.
Can. 420 Unless the Holy See has prescribed otherwise, when the see is
vacant in a vicariate or a prefecture apostolic, the governance is assumed by
the Pro Vicar or Pro Prefect who was designated for this sole purpose by the
Vicar or Prefect immediately upon taking possession.
Can. 421 §1 Within eight days of receiving notification of the vacancy
of an episcopal see, a diocesan Administrator is to be elected by the college
of consultors, to govern the diocese for the time being, without prejudice to
the provisions of Can. 502 §3.
§2 If, for any reason, the diocesan Administrator is not lawfully elected
within the prescribed time, his appointment devolves upon the Metropolitan.
If the metropolitan see is itself vacant, or if both the metropolitan see and
a suffragan see are vacant, the appointment devolves on the suffragan who is
senior by promotion.
Can. 422 The auxiliary Bishop or, if there is none, the college of consultors,
must as soon as possible notify the Apostolic See of the death of the Bishop.
The person elected as diocesan Administrator must as soon as possible notify
the Apostolic See of his election.
Can. 423 §1 Only one diocesan Administrator is to be appointed,
contrary customs being reprobated; otherwise the election is invalid.
§2 The diocesan Administrator is not to be at the same time the financial
administrator. Accordingly, if the financial administrator of the diocese is
elected Administrator, the finance committee is to elect another temporary financial
administrator.
Can. 424 The diocesan Administrator is to be elected according to the
norms of Cann. 165–178.
Can. 425 §1 Only a priest who has completed his thirty fifth year
of age, and has not already been elected, appointed or presented for the same
see, can validly be deputed to the office of diocesan Administrator.
§2 As diocesan Administrator a priest is to be elected who is outstanding
for doctrine and prudence.
§3 If the conditions prescribed in §1 have not been observed, the
Metropolitan or, if the metropolitan see itself is vacant, the suffragan senior
by promotion, having verified the truth of the matter, is to appoint an Administrator
for that occasion. The acts of a person elected contrary to the provisions of
§1 are by virtue of the law itself invalid.
Can. 426 Whoever governs the diocese before the appointment of the diocesan
Administrator, has the power which the law gives to a Vicar general.
Can. 427 §1 The diocesan Administrator is bound by the obligations
and enjoys the power of a diocesan Bishop, excluding those matters which are
excepted by the nature of things or by the law itself.
§2 The diocesan Administrator obtains his power on his acceptance of the
election, without the need of confirmation from anyone, but without prejudice
to the provision of Can. 833, n. 4.
Can. 428 §1 While the see is vacant, no innovation is to be made.
§2 Those who have the interim governance of the diocese are forbidden to
do anything which could in any way prejudice the rights of the diocese or of
the Bishop. Both they, and in like manner any other persons, are specifically
forbidden to remove, destroy or in any way alter documents of the diocesan curia,
either personally or through another.
Can. 429 The diocesan Administrator is bound by the obligations of residing
in the diocese, and of applying the Mass for the people in accordance with Can.
388.
Can. 430 §1 The office of the diocesan Administrator ceases when
the new Bishop takes possession of the diocese.
§2 Removal of the diocesan Administrator is reserved to the Holy See. Should
he perchance resign, the resignation is to be submitted in authentic form to
the college which is competent to elect, but it does not require acceptance
by the college. If the diocesan Administrator is removed, resigns or dies, another
diocesan Administrator is to be elected in accordance with Can. 421.
Can. 431 Neighbouring particular Churches are to be grouped into ecclesiastical
provinces, with a certain defined territory. The purpose of this grouping is
to promote, according to the circumstances of persons and place, a common pastoral
action of various neighbouring dioceses, and the more closely to foster relations
between diocesan Bishops.
§2 From now onwards, as a rule, there are to be no exempt dioceses. Accordingly,
individual dioceses and other particular Churches which exist within the territory
of an ecclesiastical province, must be included in that ecclesiastical province.
§3 It is the exclusive prerogative of the supreme authority in the Church,
after consulting the Bishops concerned, to establish, suppress or alter ecclesiastical
provinces.
Can. 432 §1 The provincial council and the Metropolitan have authority
over the ecclesiastical province, in accordance with the law.
§2 By virtue of the law, an ecclesiastical province has juridical personality.
Can. 433 §1 If it seems advantageous, especially in countries where
there are very many particular Churches, the Holy See can, on the proposal of
the Episcopal Conference, join together neighbouring provinces into ecclesiastical
regions.
§2 An ecclesiastical region can be constituted a juridical person.
Can. 434 It is for a meeting of the Bishops of an ecclesiastical region
to foster cooperation and common pastoral action in the region. However the
powers given to Episcopal Conferences in the canons of this Code do not belong
to such a meeting, unless some of these powers have been specially granted to
it by the Holy See.
Can. 435 An ecclesiastical province is presided over by a Metropolitan,
who is Archbishop in his own diocese. The office of Metropolitan is linked to
an episcopal see, determined or approved by the Roman Pontiff.
Can. 436 §1 Within the suffragan dioceses, the Metropolitan is competent:
1° to see that faith and ecclesiastical discipline are carefully observed
and to notify the Roman Pontiff if there be any abuses;
2° for a reason approved beforehand by the Apostolic See, to conduct a canonical
visitation if the suffragan Bishop has neglected it;
3° to appoint a diocesan Administrator in accordance with Cann. 421 §2
and 425 §3.
§2 Where circumstances require it, the Apostolic See can give the Metropolitan
special functions and power, to be determined in particular law.
§3 The Metropolitan has no other power of governance over suffragan dioceses.
He can, however, celebrate sacred functions in all churches as if he were a
Bishop in his own diocese, provided, if it is the cathedral church, the diocesan
Bishop has been previously notified.
Can. 437 §1 The Metropolitan is obliged to request the pallium from
the Roman Pontiff, either personally or by proxy, within three months of his
episcopal consecration or, if he has already been consecrated, of his canonical
appointment. The pallium signifies the power which, in communion with the Roman
Church, the Metropolitan possesses by law in his own province.
§2 The Metropolitan can wear the pallium, in accordance with the liturgical
laws, in any church of the ecclesiastical province over which he presides, but
not outside the province, not even with the assent of the diocesan Bishop.
§3 If the Metropolitan is transferred to another metropolitan see, he requires
a new pallium.
Can. 438 The title of Patriarch or Primate gives a prerogative of honour,
but in the Latin Church does not carry with it any power of governance, except
in certain matters where an apostolic privilege or approved custom establishes
otherwise.
Can. 439 §1 A plenary council for all the particular Churches of
the same Episcopal Conference is to be celebrated as often as the Episcopal
Conference, with the approval of the Apostolic See, considers it necessary or
advantageous.
§2 The norm laid down in §1 is valid also for a provincial council
to be celebrated in an ecclesiastical province whose boundaries coincide with
the boundaries of the country.
Can. 440 §1 A provincial council, for the various particular Churches
of the same ecclesiastical province, is celebrated as often as, in the judgement
of the majority of the diocesan Bishops of the province, it is considered opportune,
without prejudice to Can. 439 §2.
§2 A provincial council may not be called while the metropolitan see is
vacant.
Can. 441 It is the responsibility of the Episcopal Conference:
1° to convene a plenary council;
2° to choose a place within the territory of the Episcopal Conference for
the celebration of the council;
3° to elect from among the diocesan Bishops a president of the plenary council,
who is to be approved by the Apostolic See;
4° to determine the order of business and the matters to be considered,
to announce when the plenary council is to begin and how long it is to last,
and to transfer, prorogue and dissolve it.
Can. 442 §1 It is the responsibility of the Metropolitan, with the
consent of the majority of the suffragan Bishops:
1° to convene a provincial council
2° to choose a place within the territory of the province for the celebration
of the provincial council;
3° to determine the order of business and the matters to be considered,
to announce when the provincial council is to begin and how long it is to last,
and to transfer, prorogue and dissolve it.
§2 It is the prerogative of the Metropolitan to preside over the provincial
council. If he is lawfully impeded from doing so, it is the prerogative of a
suffragan Bishop elected by the other suffragan Bishops.
Can. 443 §1 The following have the right to be summoned to particular
councils and have the right to a deliberative vote:
1° diocesan Bishops;
2° coadjutor and auxiliary Bishops
3° other titular Bishops who have been given a special function in the territory,
either by the Apostolic See or by the Episcopal Conference.
§2 Other titular Bishops who are living in the territory, even if they
are retired, may be invited to particular councils; they have the right to a
deliberative vote.
§3 The following are to be invited to particular councils, but with only
a consultative vote:
1° Vicars general and episcopal Vicars of all the particular Churches in
the territory;
2° the major Superiors of religious institutes and societies of apostolic
life. Their number, for both men and women, is to be determined by the Episcopal
Conference or the Bishops of the province, and they are to be elected respectively
by all the major Superiors of institutes and societies which have a centre in
the territory;
3° the rectors of ecclesiastical and catholic universities which have a
centre in the territory, together with the deans of their faculties of theology
and canon law;
4° some rectors of major seminaries, their number being determined as in
no. 2; they are to be elected by the rectors of seminaries situated in the territory.
§4 Priests and others of Christ’s faithful may also be invited to
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