Can. 834 §1 The Church carries out its office of sanctifying in
a special way in the sacred liturgy, which is an exercise of the priestly office
of Jesus Christ. In the liturgy, by the use of signs perceptible to the senses,
our sanctification is symbolised and, in a manner appropriate to each sign,
is brought about. Through the liturgy a complete public worship is offered to
God by the head and members of the mystical body of Christ.
§2 This worship takes place when it is offered in the name of the Church,
by persons lawfully deputed and through actions approved by ecclesiastical authority.
Can. 835 §1 The sanctifying office is exercised principally by Bishops,
who are the high priests, the principal dispensers of the mysteries of God and
the moderators, promoters and guardians of the entire liturgical life in the
Churches entrusted to their care.
§2 This office is also exercised by priests. They, too, share in the priesthood
of Christ and, as his ministers under the authority of the Bishop, are consecrated
to celebrate divine worship and to sanctify the people.
§3 Deacons have a share in the celebration of divine worship in accordance
with the provisions of law.
§4 The other members of Christ’s faithful have their own part in
this sanctifying office, each in his or her own way actively sharing in liturgical
celebrations, particlarly in the Eucharist. Parents have a special share in
this office when they live their married lives in a christian spirit and provide
for the christian education of their children.
Can. 836 Since christian worship, in which the common priesthood of Christ’s
faithful is exercised, must proceed from and rest upon faith, sacred ministers
are to strive diligently to arouse and enlighten this faith, especially by the
ministry of the word by which faith is born and nourished.
Can. 837 §1 Liturgical actions are not private but are celebrations
of the Church itself as the ‘sacrament of unity’, that is, the holy
people united and ordered under the Bishops. Accordingly, they concern the whole
body of the Church, making it known and influencing it. They affect individual
members of the Church in ways that vary according to orders, role and actual
participation.
§2 Since liturgical matters by their very nature call for a community celebration,
they are, as far as possible, to be celebrated in the presence of Christ’s
faithful and with their active participation.
Can. 838 §1 The ordering and guidance of the sacred liturgy depends
solely upon the authority of the Church, namely, that of the Apostolic See and,
as provided by law, that of the diocesan Bishop.
§2 It is the prerogative of the Apostolic See to regulate the sacred liturgy
of the universal Church, to publish liturgical books and review their vernacular
translations, and to be watchful that liturgical regulations are everywhere
faithfully observed.
§3 It pertains to Episcopal Conferences to prepare vernacular translations
of liturgical books, with appropriate adaptations as allowed by the books themselves
and, with the prior review of the Holy See, to publish these translations.
§4 Within the limits of his competence, it belongs to the diocesan Bishop
to lay down for the Church entrusted to his care, liturgical regulations which
are binding on all.
Can. 839 §1 The Church carries out its sanctifying office by other
means also, that is by prayer, in which it asks God to make Christ’s faithful
holy in the truth, and by works of penance and charity, which play a large part
in establishing and strengthening in souls the Kingdom of Christ, and so contribute
to the salvation of the world.
§2 Local Ordinaries are to ensure that the prayers and the pious and sacred
practices of the christian people are in full harmony with the laws of the Church.
Can. 840 The sacraments of the New Testament were instituted by Christ
the Lord and entrusted to the Church. As actions of Christ and of the Church,
they are signs and means by which faith is expressed and strengthened, worship
is offered to God and our sanctification is brought about. Thus they contribute
in the most effective manner to establishing, strengthening and manifesting
ecclesiastical communion. Accordingly, in the celebration of the sacraments
both the sacred ministers and all the other members of Christ’s faithful
must show great reverence and due care.
Can. 841 Since the sacraments are the same throughout the universal Church,
and belong to the divine deposit of faith, only the supreme authority in the
Church can approve or define what is needed for their validity. It belongs to
the same authority, or to another competent authority in accordance with Can.
838 §§3 and 4, to determine what is required for their lawful celebration,
administration and reception and for the order to be observed in their celebration.
Can. 842 §1 A person who has not received baptism cannot validly
be admitted to the other sacraments.
§2 The sacraments of baptism, confirmation and the blessed Eucharist so
complement one another that all three are required for full christian initiation.
Can. 843 §1 Sacred ministers may not deny the sacraments to those
who opportunely ask for them, are properly disposed and are not prohibited by
law from receiving them.
§2 According to their respective offices in the Church, both pastors of
souls and all other members of Christ’s faithful have a duty to ensure
that those who ask for the sacraments are prepared for their reception. This
should be done through proper evangelisation and catechetical instruction, in
accordance with the norms laid down by the competent authority.
Can. 844 §1 Catholic ministers may lawfully administer the sacraments
only to catholic members of Christ’s faithful, who equally may lawfully
receive them only from catholic ministers, except as provided in §§2,
3 and 4 of this canon and in Can. 861 §2.
§2 Whenever necessity requires or a genuine spiritual advantage commends
it, and provided the danger of error or indifferentism is avoided, Christ’s
faithful for whom it is physically or morally impossible to approach a catholic
minister, may lawfully receive the sacraments of penance, the Eucharist and
anointing of the sick from non catholic ministers in whose Churches these sacraments
are valid.
§3 Catholic ministers may lawfully administer the sacraments of penance,
the Eucharist and anointing of the sick to members of the eastern Churches not
in full communion with the catholic Church, if they spontaneously ask for them
and are properly disposed. The same applies to members of other Churches which
the Apostolic See judges to be in the same position as the aforesaid eastern
Churches so far as the sacraments are concerned.
§4 If there is a danger of death or if, in the judgement of the diocesan
Bishop or of the Episcopal Conference, there is some other grave and pressing
need, catholic ministers may lawfully administer these same sacraments to other
christians not in full communion with the catholic Church, who cannot approach
a minister of their own community and who spontaneously ask for them, provided
that they demonstrate the catholic faith in respect of these sacraments and
are properly disposed.
§5 In respect of the cases dealt with in §§2, 3 and 4, the diocesan
Bishop or the Episcopal Conference is not to issue general norms except after
consultation with the competent authority, at least at the local level, of the
non catholic Church or community concerned.
Can. 845 §1 Because they imprint a character, the sacraments of
baptism, confirmation and order cannot be repeated.
§2 If after diligent enquiry a prudent doubt remains as to whether the
sacraments mentioned in §1 have been conferred at all, or conferred validly,
they are to be conferred conditionally.
Can. 846 §1 The liturgical books, approved by the competent authority,
are to be faithfully followed in the celebration of the sacraments. Accordingly,
no one may on a personal initiative add to or omit or alter anything in those
books.
§2 The ministers are to celebrate the sacraments according to their own
rite.
Can. 847 §1 In administering sacraments in which holy oils are to
be used, the minister must use oil made from olives or other plants, which,
except as provided in Can. 999, n. 2, has recently been consecrated or blessed
by a Bishop. Older oil is not to be used except in a case of necessity.
§2 The parish priest is to obtain the holy oils from his own Bishop and
keep them carefully in fitting custody.
Can. 848 For the administration of the sacraments the minister may not
ask for anything beyond the offerings which are determined by the competent
authority, and he must always ensure that the needy are not deprived of the
help of the sacraments by reason of poverty.
Can. 849 Baptism, the gateway to the sacraments, is necessary for salva-tion, either by actual reception or at least by desire. By it people are freed from sins, are born again as children of God and, made like to Christ by an indelible character, are incorporated into the Church. It is validly conferred only by a washing in real water with the proper form of words.
Can. 850 Baptism is administered according to the rite prescribed in
the approved liturgical books, except in a case of urgent necessity when only
those elements which are required for the validity of the sacrament must be
observed.
Can. 851 The celebration of baptism should be properly prepared. Accordingly:
1° an adult who intends to receive baptism is to be admitted to the catechumenate
and, as far as possible, brought through the various stages to sacramental initiation,
in accordance with the rite of initiation as adapted by the Episcopal Conference
and with the particular norms issued by it;
2° the parents of a child who is to be baptised, and those who are to undertake
the office of sponsers, are to be suitably instructed on the meaning of this
sacrament and the obligations attaching to it. The parish priest is to see to
it that either he or others duly prepare the parents, by means of pastoral advice
and indeed by prayer together; a number of families might be brought together
for this purpose and, where possible, each family visited.
Can. 852 §1 The provisions of the canons on adult baptism apply
to all those who, being no longer infants, have reached the use of reason.
§2 One who is incapable of personal responsibility is regarded as an infant
even in regard to baptism.
Can. 853 Apart from a case of necessity, the water to be used in conferring
baptism is to be blessed, in accordance with the provisions of the liturgical
books.
Can. 854 Baptism is to be conferred either by immersion or by pouring,
in accordance with the provisions of the Episcopal Conference.
Can. 855 Parents, sponsors and parish priests are to take care that a
name is not given which is foreign to christian sentiment.
Can. 856 Though baptism may be celebrated on any day, it is recommended
that normally it be celebrated on a Sunday or, if possible, on the vigil of
Easter.
Can. 857 §1 Apart from a case of necessity, the proper place for
baptism is a church or an oratory.
§2 As a rule and unless a just reason suggests otherwise, an adult is to
be baptised in his or her proper parish church, and an infant in the proper
parish church of the parents.
Can. 858 §1 Each parish church is to have a baptismal font, without
prejudice to the same right already acquired by other churches.
§2 The local Ordinary, after consultation with the local parish priest,
may for the convenience of the faithful permit or order that a baptismal font
be placed also in another church or oratory within the parish.
Can. 859 If, because of distance or other circumstances, the person to
be baptised cannot without grave inconvenience go or be brought to the parish
church or the oratory mentioned in Can. 858 §2, baptism may and must be
conferred in some other church or oratory which is nearer, or even in some other
fitting place.
Can. 860 §1 Apart from a case of necessity, baptism is not to be
conferred in private houses, unless the local Ordinary should for a grave reason
permit it.
§2 Unless the diocesan Bishop has decreed otherwise, baptism is not to
be conferred in hospital, except in a case of necessity or for some other pressing
pastoral reason.
Can. 861 §1 The ordinary minister of baptism is a Bishop, a priest
or a deacon, without prejudice to the provision of Can. 530, n. 1.
§2 If the ordinary minister is absent or impeded, a catechist or some other
person deputed to this office by the local Ordinary, may lawfully confer baptism;
indeed, in a case of necessity, any person who has the requisite intention may
do so. Pastors of souls, especially parish priests, are to be diligent in ensuring
that Christ’s faithful are taught the correct way to baptise.
Can. 862 Except in a case of necessity, it is unlawful for anyone without
due permission to confer baptism outside his own territory, not even upon his
own subjects.
Can. 863 The baptism of adults, at least of those who have completed
their fourteenth year, is to be referred to the Bishop, so that he himself may
confer it if he judges this appropriate.
Can. 864 Every unbaptised person, and only such a person, can be baptised.
Can. 865 §1 To be admitted to baptism, an adult must have manifested
the intention to receive baptism, must be adequately instructed in the truths
of the faith and in the duties of a christian, and tested in the christian life
over the course of the catechumenate. The person must moreover be urged to have
sorrow for personal sins.
§2 An adult in danger of death may be baptised if, with some knowledge
of the principal truths of the faith, he or she has in some manner manifested
the intention to receive baptism and promises to observe the requirements of
the christian religion.
Can. 866 Unless there is a grave reason to the contrary, immediately
after receiving baptism an adult is to be confirmed, to participate in the celebration
of the Eucharist and to receive holy communion.
Can. 867 §1 Parents are obliged to see that their infants are baptised
within the first few weeks. As soon as possible after the birth, indeed even
before it, they are to approach the parish priest to ask for the sacrament for
their child, and to be themselves duly prepared for it.
§2 If the infant is in danger of death, it is to be baptised without any
delay.
Can. 868 §1 For an infant to be baptised lawfully it is required:
1° that the parents, or at least one of them, or the person who lawfully
holds their place, give their consent;
2° that there be a well founded hope that the child will be brought up in
the catholic religion. If such hope is truly lacking, the baptism is, in accordance
with the provisions of particular law, to be deferred and the parents advised
of the reason for this.
§2 An infant of catholic parents, indeed even of non catholic parents,
may in danger of death be baptised even if the parents are opposed to it.
Can. 869 §1 If there is doubt as to whether a person was baptised
or whether a baptism was conferred validly, and after serious enquiry this doubt
persists, the person is to be baptised conditionally.
§2 Those baptised in a non catholic ecclesial community are not to be baptised
conditionally unless there is a serious reason for doubting the validity of
their baptism, on the ground of the matter or the form of words used in the
baptism, or of the intention of the adult being baptised or of that of the baptising
minister.
§3 If in the cases mentioned in §§1 and 2 a doubt remains about
the conferring of the baptism or its validity, baptism is not to be conferred
until the doctrine of the sacrament of baptism is explained to the person to
be baptised, if that person is an adult. Moreover, the reasons for doubting
the validity of the earlier baptism should be given to the person or, where
an infant is concerned, to the parents.
Can. 870 An abandoned infant or a foundling is to be baptised unless
diligent enquiry establishes that it has already been baptised.
Can. 871 Aborted foetuses, if they are alive, are to be baptised, in
so far as this is possible.
Can. 872 In so far as possible, a person being baptised is to be assigned
a sponsor. In the case of an adult baptism, the sponsor’s role is to assist
the person in christian initiation. In the case of an infant baptism, the role
is together with the parents to present the child for baptism, and to help it
to live a christian life befitting the baptised and faithfully to fulfil the
duties inherent in baptism.
Can. 873 One sponsor, male or female, is sufficient; but there may be
two, one of each sex.
Can. 874 §1 To be admitted to undertake the office of sponsor, a
person must:
1° be appointed by the candidate for baptism, or by the parents or whoever
stands in their place, or failing these, by the parish priest or the minister;
to be appointed the person must be suitable for this role and have the intention
of fulfilling it;
2° be not less than sixteen years of age, unless a different age has been
stipulated by the diocesan Bishop, or unless the parish priest or the minister
considers that there is a just reason for an exception to be made;
3° be a catholic who has been confirmed and has received the blessed Eucharist,
and who lives a life of faith which befits the role to be undertaken;
4° not labour under a canonical penalty, whether imposed or declared;
5° not be either the father or the mother of the person to be baptised.
§2 A baptised person who belongs to a non catholic ecclesial community
may be admitted only in company with a catholic sponsor, and then simply as
a witness to the baptism.
Can. 875 Whoever administers baptism is to take care that if there is
not a sponsor present, there is at least one witness who can prove that the
baptism was conferred.
Can. 876 To prove that baptism has been conferred, if there is no conflict
of interest, it is sufficient to have either one unexceptionable witness or,
if the baptism was conferred upon an adult, the sworn testimony of the baptised
person.
Can. 877 §1 The parish priest of the place in which the baptism
was conferred must carefully and without delay record in the register of baptism
the names of the baptised, the minister, the parents, the sponsors and, if there
were such, the witnesses, and the place and date of baptism. He must also enter
the date and place of birth.
§2 In the case of a child of an unmarried mother, the mother’s name
is to be entered if her maternity is publicly known or if, either in writing
or before two witnesses, she freely asks that this be done. Similarly, the name
of the father is to be entered, if his paternity is established either by some
public document or by his own declaration in the presence of the parish priest
and two witnesses. In all other cases, the name of the baptised person is to
be registered, without any indication of the name of the father or of the parents.
§3 In the case of an adopted child, the names of the adopting parents are
to be registered and, at least if this is done in the local civil registration,
the names of the natural parents in accordance with §§1 and 2 subject
however to the rulings of the Episcopal Conference.
Can. 878 If baptism was administered neither by the parish priest nor
in his presence, the minister of baptism, whoever that was, must notify the
parish priest of the parish in which the baptism was administered, so that he
may register the baptism in accordance with Can. 877 §1.
Can. 879 The sacrament of confirmation confers a character. By it the baptised continue their path of christian initiation. They are enriched with the gift of the Holy Spirit, and are more closely linked to the Church. They are made strong and more firmly obliged by word and deed to witness to Christ and to spread and defend the faith.
Can. 880 §1 The sacrament of confirmation is conferred by anointing
with chrism on the forehead in a laying on of hands, and by the words prescribed
in the approved liturgical books.
§2 The chrism to be used in the sacrament of confirmation must have been
consecrated by a Bishop, even when the sacrament is administered by a priest.
Can. 881 It is desirable that the sacrament of confirmation be celebrated
in a church and indeed during Mass. However, for a just and reasonable cause
it may be celebrated apart from Mass and in any fitting place.
Can. 882 The ordinary minister of confirmation is a Bishop. A priest
can also validly confer this sacrament if he has the faculty to do so, either
from the general law or by way of a special grant from the competent authority.
Can. 883 The following have, by law, the faculty to administer confirmation:
1° within the confines of their jurisdiction, those who in law are equivalent
to a diocesan Bishop;
2° in respect of the person to be confirmed, the priest who by virtue of
his office or by mandate of the diocesan Bishop baptises an adult or admits
a baptised adult into full communion with the catholic Church;
3° in respect of those in danger of death, the parish priest or indeed any
priest.
Can. 884 §1 The diocesan Bishop is himself to administer confirmation
or to ensure that it is administered by another Bishop. If necessity so requires,
he may grant to one or several specified priests the faculty to administer this
sacrament.
§2 For a grave reason the Bishop, or the priest who by law or by special
grant of the competent authority has the faculty to confirm, may in individual
cases invite other priests to join with him in administering the sacrament.
Can. 885 §1 The diocesan Bishop is bound to ensure that the sacrament
of confirmation is conferred upon his subjects who duly and reasonably request
it.
§2 A priest who has this faculty must use it for those in whose favour
it was granted.
Can. 886 §1 A Bishop in his own diocese may lawfully administer
the sacrament of confirmation even to the faithful who are not his subjects,
unless there is an express prohibition by their own Ordinary.
§2 In order lawfully to administer confirmation in another diocese, unless
it be to his own subjects, a Bishop needs the permission, at least reasonably
presumed, of the diocesan Bishop.
Can. 887 A priest who has the faculty to administer confirmation may,
within the territory assigned to him, lawfully administer this sacrament even
to those from outside the territory, unless there is a prohibition by their
own Ordinary. He cannot, however, validly confirm anyone in another territory,
without prejudice to the provision of Can. 883, n.3.
Can. 888 Within the territory in which they can confer confirmation,
ministers may confirm even in exempt places.
Can. 889 §1 Every baptised person who is not confirmed, and only
such a person, is capable of receiving confirmation.
§2 Apart from the danger of death, to receive confirmation lawfully a person
who has the use of reason must be suitably instructed, properly disposed and
able to renew the baptismal promises.
Can. 890 The faithful are bound to receive this sacrament at the proper
time. Parents and pastors of souls, especially parish priests, are to see that
the faithful are properly instructed to receive the sacrament and come to it
at the opportune time.
Can. 891 The sacrament of confirmation is to be conferred on the faithful
at about the age of discretion, unless the Episcopal Conference has decided
on a different age, or there is a danger of death or, in the judgement of the
minister, a grave reason suggests otherwise.
Can. 892 As far as possible the person to be confirmed is to have a
sponsor. The sponsor’s function is to take care that the person confirmed
behaves as a true witness of Christ and faithfully fulfils the duties inherent
in this sacrament.
Can. 893 §1 A person who would undertake the office of sponsor must
fulfil the conditions mentioned in Can. 874.
§2 It is desirable that the sponsor chosen be the one who undertook this
role at baptism.
Can. 894 To establish that confirmation has been conferred, the provisions
of Can. 876 are to be observed.
Can. 895 The names of those confirmed, the minister, the parents, the
sponsors and the place and date of the confirmation are to be recorded in the
confirmation register of the diocesan curia or, wherever this has been prescribed
by the Episcopal Conference or by the diocesan Bishop, in the register to be
kept in the parochial archive. The parish priest must notify the parish priest
of the place of the baptism that the confirmation was conferred, so that it
be recorded in the baptismal register, in accordance with Can. 535 §2.
Can. 896 If the parish priest of the place was not present, the minister,
personally or through someone else, is to notify him as soon as possible that
the confirmation was conferred.
Can. 897 The most venerable sacrament is the blessed Eucharist, in which
Christ the Lord himself is contained, offered and received, and by which the
Church continually lives and grows. The eucharistic Sacrifice, the memorial
of the death and resurrection of the Lord, in which the Sacrifice of the cross
is forever perpetuated, is the summit and the source of all worship and christian
life. By means of it the unity of God’s people is signified and brought
about, and the building up of the body of Christ is perfected. The other sacraments
and all the apostolic works of Christ are bound up with, and directed to, the
blessed Eucharist.
Can. 898 Christ’s faithful are to hold the blessed Eucharist in
the highest honour. They should take an active part in the celebration of the
most august Sacrifice of the Mass; they should receive the sacrament with great
devotion and frequently, and should reverence it with the greatest adoration.
In explaining the doctrine of this sacrament, pastors of souls are assiduously
to instruct the faithful about their obligation in this regard.
Can. 899 §1 The celebration of the Eucharist is an action of Christ
himself and of the Church. In it Christ the Lord, through the ministry of the
priest, offers himself, substantially present under the appearances of bread
and wine, to God the Father, and gives himself as spiritual nourishment to the
faithful who are associated with him in his offering.
§2 In the eucharistic assembly the people of God are called together under
the presidency of the Bishop or of a priest authorised by him, who acts in the
person of Christ. All the faithful present, whether clerics or lay people, unite
to participate in their own way, according to their various orders and liturgical
roles.
§3 The eucharistic celebration is to be so ordered that all the participants
derive from it the many fruits for which Christ the Lord instituted the eucharistic
Sacrifice.
ARTICLE 1: THE MINISTER OF THE BLESSED EUCHARIST
Can. 900 §1 The only minister who, in the person of Christ, can
bring into being the sacrament of the Eucharist, is a validly ordained priest.
§2 Any priest who is not debarred by canon law may lawfully celebrate the
Eucharist, provided the provisions of the following canons are observed.
Can. 901 A priest is entitled to offer Mass for anyone, living or dead.
Can. 902 Unless the benefit of Christ’s faithful requires or suggests
otherwise, priests may concelebrate the Eucharist; they are, however, fully
entitled to celebrate the Eucharist individually, but not while a celebration
is taking place in the same church or oratory.
Can. 903 A priest is to be permitted to celebrate the Eucharist, even
if he is not known to the rector of the church, provided either that he presents
commendatory letters, not more than a year old, from his own Ordinary or Superior,
or that it can be prudently judged that he is not debarred from celebrating.
Can. 904 Remembering always that in the mystery of the eucharistic Sacrifice
the work of redemption is continually being carried out, priests are to celebrate
frequently. Indeed, daily celebration is earnestly recommended, because, even
if it should not be possible to have the faithful present, it is an action of
Christ and of the Church in which priests fulfil their principal role.
Can. 905 §1 Apart from those cases in which the law allows him to
celebrate or concelebrate the Eucharist a number of times on the same day, a
priest may not celebrate more than once a day.
§2 If there is a scarcity of priests, the local Ordinary may for a good
reason allow priests to celebrate twice in one day or even, if pastoral need
requires it, three times on Sundays or holydays of obligation.
Can. 906 A priest may not celebrate the eucharistic Sacrifice without
the participation of at least one of the faithful, unless there is a good and
reasonable cause for doing so.
Can. 907 In the celebration of the Eucharist, deacons and lay persons
are not permitted to say the prayers, especially the eucharistic prayer, nor
to perform the actions which are proper to the celebrating priest.
Can. 908 Catholic priests are forbidden to concelebrate the Eucharist
with priests or ministers of Churches or ecclesial communities which are not
in full communion with the catholic Church.
Can. 909 A priest is not to omit dutifully to prepare himself by prayer
before the celebration of the Eucharist, nor afterwards to omit to make thanksgiving
to God.
Can. 910 §1 The ordinary minister of holy communion is a Bishop,
a priest or a deacon.
§2 The extraordinary minister of holy communion is an acolyte, or another
of Christ’s faithful deputed in accordance with Can. 230 §3.
Can. 911 §1 The duty and right to bring the blessed Eucharist to
the sick as Viaticum belongs to the parish priest, to assistant priests, to
chaplains and, in respect of all who are in the house, to the community Superior
in clerical religious institutes or societies of apostolic life.
§2 In a case of necessity, or with the permission at least presumed of
the parish priest, chaplain or Superior, who must subsequently be notified,
any priest or other minister of holy communion must do this.
ARTICLE 2: PARTICIPATION IN THE BLESSED EUCHARIST
Can. 912 Any baptised person who is not forbidden by law may and must
be admitted to holy communion.
Can. 913 §1 For holy communion to be administered to children, it
is required that they have sufficient knowledge and be accurately prepared,
so that according to their capacity they understand what the mystery of Christ
means, and are able to receive the Body of the Lord with faith and devotion.
§2 The blessed Eucharist may, however, be administered to children in danger
of death if they can distinguish the Body of Christ from ordinary food and receive
communion with reverence.
Can. 914 It is primarily the duty of parents and of those who take their
place, as it is the duty of the parish priest, to ensure that children who have
reached the use of reason are properly prepared and, having made their sacramental
confession, are nourished by this divine food as soon as possible. It is also
the duty of the parish priest to see that children who have not reached the
use of reason, or whom he has judged to be insufficiently disposed, do not come
to holy communion.
Can. 915 Those upon whom the penalty of excommunication or interdict
has been imposed or declared, and others who obstinately persist in manifest
grave sin, are not to be admitted to holy communion.
Can. 916 Anyone who is conscious of grave sin may not celebrate Mass
or receive the Body of the Lord without previously having been to sacramental
confession, unless there is a grave reason and there is no opportunity to confess;
in this case the person is to remember the obligation to make an act of perfect
contrition, which includes the resolve to go to confession as soon as possible.
Can. 917 One who has received the blessed Eucharist may receive it again
on the same day only within a eucharistic celebration in which that person participates,
without prejudice to the provision of Can. 921 §2.
Can. 918 It is most strongly recommended that the faithful receive holy
communion in the course of a eucharistic celebration. If, however, for good
reason they ask for it apart from the Mass, it is to be administered to them,
observing the liturgical rites.
Can. 919 §1 Whoever is to receive the blessed Eucharist is to abstain
for at least one hour before holy communion from all food and drink, with the
sole exception of water and medicine.
§2 A priest who, on the same day, celebrates the blessed Eucharist twice
or three times may consume something before the second or third celebration,
even though there is not an hour’s interval.
§3 The elderly and those who are suffering from some illness, as well as
those who care for them, may receive the blessed Eucharist even if within the
preceding hour they have consumed something.
Can. 920 §1 Once admitted to the blessed Eucharist, each of the
faithful is obliged to receive holy communion at least once a year.
§2 This precept must be fulfilled during paschal time, unless for a good
reason it is fulfilled at another time during the year.
Can. 921 §1 Christ’s faithful who are in danger of death,
from whatever cause, are to be strengthened by holy communion as Viaticum.
§2 Even if they have already received holy communion that same day, it
is nevertheless strongly suggested that in danger of death they should communicate
again.
§3 While the danger of death persists, it is recommended that holy communion
be administered a number of times, but on separate days.
Can. 922 Holy Viaticum for the sick is not to be unduly delayed. Those
who have the care of souls are to take assiduous care that the sick are strengthened
by it while they are in full possession of their faculties.
Can. 923 Christ’s faithful may participate in the eucharistic Sacrifice
and receive holy communion in any catholic rite, without prejudice to the provisions
of Can. 844.
ARTICLE 3: THE RITES AND CEREMONIES OF THE EUCHARISTIC CELEBRATION
Can. 924 §1 The most holy Sacrifice of the Eucharist must be celebrated
in bread, and in wine to which a small quantity of water is to be added.
§2 The bread must be wheaten only, and recently made, so that there is
no danger of corruption.
§3 The wine must be natural, made from grapes of the vine, and not corrupt.
Can. 925 Holy communion is to be given under the species of bread alone
or, in accordance with the liturgical laws, under both species or, in case of
necessity, even under the species of wine alone.
Can. 926 In the eucharistic celebration, in accordance with the ancient
tradition of the Latin Church, the priest is to use unleavened bread wherever
he celebrates Mass.
Can. 927 It is absolutely wrong, even in urgent and extreme necessity,
to consecrate one element without the other, or even to consecrate both outside
the eucharistic celebration.
Can. 928 The eucharistic celebration is to be carried out either in the
Latin language or in another language, provided the liturgical texts have been
lawfully approved.
Can. 929 In celebrating and administering the Eucharist, priests and
deacons are to wear the sacred vestments prescribed by the rubrics.
Can. 930 §1 A priest who is ill or elderly, if he is unable to stand,
may celebrate the eucharistic Sacrifice sitting but otherwise observing the
liturgical laws; he may not, however, do so in public except by permission of
the local Ordinary.
§2 A priest who is blind or suffering from some other infirmity, may lawfully
celebrate the eucharistic Sacrifice by using the text of any approved Mass,
with the assistance, if need be, of another priest or deacon or even a properly
instructed lay person.
ARTICLE 4: THE TIME AND PLACE OF THE EUCHARISTIC CELEBRATION
Can. 931 The celebration and distribution of the Eucharist may take place
on any day and at any hour, except those which are excluded by the liturgical
laws.
Can. 932 §1 The eucharistic celebration is to be carried out in
a sacred place, unless in a particular case necessity requires otherwise; in
which case the celebration must be in a fitting place.
§2 The eucharistic Sacrifice must be carried out at an altar that is dedicated
or blessed. Outside a sacred place an appropriate table may be used, but always
with an altar cloth and a corporal.
Can. 933 For a good reason, with the express permission of the local
Ordinary and provided scandal has been eliminated, a priest may celebrate the
Eucharist in a place of worship of any Church or ecclesial community which is
not in full communion with the catholic Church.
Can. 934 §1 The blessed Eucharist:
1° must be reserved in the cathedral church or its equivalent, in every
parish church, and in the church or oratory attached to the house of a religious
institute or society of apostolic life
2° may be reserved in a Bishop’s chapel and, by permission of the
local Ordinary, in other churches, oratories and chapels.
§2 In sacred places where the blessed Eucharist is reserved there must
always be someone who is responsible for it, and as far as possible a priest
is to celebrate Mass there at least twice a month.
Can. 935 It is not lawful for anyone to keep the blessed Eucharist in
personal custody or to carry it around, unless there is an urgent pastoral need
and the prescriptions of the diocesan Bishop are observed.
Can. 936 In a house of a religious institute or other house of piety,
the blessed Eucharist is to be reserved only in the church or principal oratory
attached to the house. For a just reason, however, the Ordinary can permit it
to be reserved also in another oratory of the same house.
Can. 937 Unless there is a grave reason to the contrary, a church in
which the blessed Eucharist is reserved is to be open to the faithful for at
least some hours every day, so that they can pray before the blessed Sacrament.
Can. 938 §1 The blessed Eucharist is to be reserved habitually in
only one tabernacle of a church or oratory.
§2 The tabernacle in which the blessed Eucharist is reserved should be
sited in a distinguished place in the church or oratory, a place which is conspicuous,
suitably adorned and conducive to prayer.
§3 The tabernacle in which the blessed Eucharist is habitually reserved
is to be immovable, made of solid and non transparent material, and so locked
as to give the greatest security against any danger of profanation.
§4 For a grave reason, especially at night, it is permitted to reserve
the blessed Eucharist in some other safer place, provided it is fitting.
§5 The person in charge of a church or oratory is to see to it that the
key of the tabernacle in which the blessed Eucharist is reserved, is in maximum
safe keeping.
Can. 939 Consecrated hosts, in a quantity sufficient for the needs of
the faithful, are to be kept in a pyx or ciborium, and are to be renewed frequently,
the older hosts having been duly consumed.
Can. 940 A special lamp is to burn continuously before the tabernacle
in which the blessed Eucharist is reserved, to indicate and to honour the presence
of Christ.
Can. 941 §1 In churches or oratories which are allowed to reserve
the blessed Eucharist, there may be exposition, either with the pyx or with
the monstrance, in accordance with the norms prescribed in the liturgical books.
§2 Exposition of the blessed Sacrament may not take place while Mass is
being celebrated in the same area of the church or oratory.
Can. 942 It is recommended that in these churches or oratories, there
is to be each year a solemn exposition of the blessed Sacrament for an appropriate,
even if not for a continuous time, so that the local community may more attentively
meditate on and adore the eucharistic mystery. This exposition is to take place
only if a fitting attendance of the faithful is foreseen, and the prescribed
norms are observed.
Can. 943 The minister of exposition of the blessed Sacrament and of the
eucharistic blessing is a priest or deacon. In special circumstances the minister
of exposition and deposition alone, but without the blessing, is an acolyte,
and extraordinary minister of holy communion, or another person deputed by the
local Ordinary, in accordance with the regulations of the diocesan Bishop.
Can. 944 §1 Wherever in the judgement of the diocesan Bishop it
can be done, a procession through the streets is to be held, especially on the
solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ, as a public witness of veneration
of the blessed Eucharist.
§2 It is for the diocesan Bishop to establish such regulations about processions
as will provide for participation in them and for their being carried out in
a dignified manner.
Can. 945 §1 In accordance with the approved custom of the Church,
any priest who celebrates or concelebrates a Mass may accept an offering to
apply the Mass for a specific intention.
§2 It is earnestly recommended to priests that, even if they do not receive
an offering, they celebrate Mass for the intentions of Christ’s faithful,
especially of those in need.
Can. 946 The faithful who make an offering so that Mass can be celebrated
for their intention, contribute to the good of the Church, and by that offering
they share in the Church’s concern for the support of its ministers and
its activities.
Can. 947 Even the semblance of trafficking or trading is to be entirely
excluded from Mass offerings.
Can. 948 Separate Masses must be applied for the intentions of those
for whom an individual offering, even if small, has been made and accepted.
Can. 949 One who is obliged to celebrate and apply Mass for the intentions
of those who made an offering, is bound by this obligation even if the offering
received is lost through no fault of his.
Can. 950 If a sum of money is offered for the application of Masses,
but with no indication of the number of Masses to be celebrated, their number
is to be calculated on the basis of the offering prescribed in the place where
the donor resides, unless the donor’s intention must lawfully be presumed
to have been otherwise.
Can. 951 §1 A priest who celebrates a number of Masses on the same
day may apply each Mass for the intention for which an offering was made, subject
however to the rule that, apart from Christmas Day, he may retain for himself
the offering for only one Mass; the others he is to transmit to purposes prescribed
by the Ordinary, while allowing for some compensation on the ground of an extrinsic
title.
§2 A priest who on the same day concelebrates a second Mass may not under
any title accept an offering for that Mass.
Can. 952 §1 The provincial council or the provincial Bishops’
meeting is to determine by decree, for the whole of the province, what offering
is to be made for the celebration and application of Mass. Nonetheless, it is
permitted to accept, for the application of a Mass, an offering voluntarily
made, which is greater, or even less, than that which has been determined.
§2 Where there is no such decree, the custom existing in the diocese is
to be observed.
§3 Members of religious institutes of all kinds must abide by the decree
or the local custom mentioned in §§1 and 2.
Can. 953 No one may accept more offerings for Masses to be celebrated
by himself than he can discharge within a year.
Can. 954 If in certain churches or oratories more Masses are requested
than can be celebrated there, these may be celebrated elsewhere, unless the
donors have expressly stipulated otherwise.
Can. 955 §1 One who intends to transfer to others the celebration
of Masses to be applied, is to transfer them as soon as possible to priests
of his own choice, provided he is certain that they are of proven integrity.
He must transfer the entire offering received, unless it is quite certain that
an amount in excess of the diocesan offering was given as a personal gift. Moreover,
it is his obligation to see to the celebration of the Masses until such time
as he has received evidence that the obligation has been undertaken and the
offering received.
§2 Unless it is established otherwise, the time within which Masses are
to be celebrated begins from the day the priest who is to celebrate them receives
them.
§3 Those who transfer to others Masses to be celebrated are without delay
to record in a book both the Masses which they have accepted and those which
they have passed on, noting also the offerings for these Masses.
§4 Each priest must accurately record the Masses which he has accepted
to celebrate and those which he has in fact celebrated.
Can. 956 Each and every administrator of pious causes and those, whether
clerics or lay persons, who are in any way obliged to provide for the celebration
of Masses, are to transfer to their Ordinaries, in a manner to be determined
by the latter, such Mass obligations as have not been discharged within a year.
Can. 957 The duty and the right to see that Mass obligations are fulfilled
belongs, in the case of churches of the secular clergy, to the local Ordinary;
in the case of churches of religious institutes or societies of apostolic life,
to their Superiors.
Can. 958 §1 The parish priest, as well as the rector of a church
or other pious place in which Mass offerings are usually received, is to have
a special book in which he is accurately to record the number, the intention
and the offering of the Masses to be celebrated, and the fact of their celebration.
§2 The Ordinary is obliged to inspect these books each year, either personally
or through others.
Can. 959 In the sacrament of penance the faithful who confess their sins to a lawful minister, are sorry for those sins and have a purpose of amendment, receive from God, through the absolution given by that minister, forgiveness of sins they have committed after baptism, and at the same time they are reconciled with the Church, which by sinning they wounded.
Can. 960 Individual and integral confession and absolution constitute
the sole ordinary means by which a member of the faithful who is conscious of
grave sin is reconciled with God and with the Church. Physical or moral impossibility
alone excuses from such confession, in which case reconciliation may be attained
by other means also.
Can. 961 §1 General absolution, without prior individual confession,
cannot be given to a number of penitents together, unless:
1° danger of death threatens and there is not time for the priest or priests
to hear the confessions of the individual penitents;
2° there exists a grave necessity, that is, given the number of penitents,
there are not enough confessors available properly to hear the individual confessions
within an appropriate time, so that without fault of their own the penitents
are deprived of the sacramental grace or of holy communion for a lengthy period
of time. A sufficient necessity is not, however, considered to exist when confessors
cannot be available merely because of a great gathering of penitents, such as
can occur on some major feastday or pilgrimage.
§2 It is for the diocesan Bishop to judge whether the conditions required
in §1, n. 2 are present; mindful of the criteria agreed with the other
members of the Episcopal Conference, he can determine the cases of such necessity.
Can. 962 §1 For a member of Christ’s faithful to benefit validly
from a sacramental absolution given to a number of people simultaneously, it
is required not only that he or she be properly disposed, but be also at the
same time personally resolved to confess in due time each of the grave sins
which cannot for the moment be thus confessed.
§2 Christ’s faithful are to be instructed about the requirements
set out in §1, as far as possible even on the occasion of general absolution
being received. An exhortation that each person should make an act of contrition
is to precede a general absolution, even in the case of danger of death if there
is time.
Can. 963 Without prejudice to the obligation mentioned in Can. 989, a
person whose grave sins are forgiven by a general absolution, is as soon as
possible, when the opportunity occurs, to make an individual confession before
receiving another general absolution, unless a just reason intervenes.
Can. 964 §1 The proper place for hearing sacramental confessions
is a church or oratory.
§2 As far as the confessional is concerned, norms are to be issued by the
Episcopal Conference, with the proviso however that confessionals, which the
faithful who so wish may freely use, are located in an open place, and fitted
with a fixed grille between the penitent and the confessor.
§3 Except for a just reason, confessions are not to be heard elsewhere
than in a confessional.
Can. 965 Only a priest is the minister of the sacrament of penance.
Can. 966 §1 For the valid absolution of sins, it is required that,
in addition to the power of order, the minister has the faculty to exercise
that power in respect of the faithful to whom he gives absolution.
§2 A priest can be given this faculty either by the law itself, or by a
concession issued by the competent authority in accordance with Can. 969.
Can. 967 §1 Besides the Roman Pontiff, Cardinals by virtue of the
law itself have the faculty to hear the confessions of Christ’s faithful
everywhere. Likewise, Bishops have this faculty, which they may lawfully use
everywhere, unless in a particular case the diocesan Bishop has refused.
§2 Those who have the faculty habitually to hear confessions, whether by
virtue of their office or by virtue of a concession by the Ordinary of either
the place of incardination or that in which they have a domicile, can exercise
that faculty everywhere, unless in a particular case the local Ordinary has
refused, without prejudice to the provisions of Can. 974 §§2 and 3.
§3 In respect of the members and of those others who live day and night
in a house of an institute or society, this same faculty is by virtue of the
law itself possessed everywhere by those who have the faculty to hear confessions,
whether by virtue of their office or by virtue of a special concession of the
competent Superior in accordance with Cann. 968 §2 and 969 §2. They
may lawfully use this faculty, unless in a particular case some major Superior
has, in respect of his own subjects, refused.
Can. 968 §1 By virtue of his office, for each within the limits
of his jurisdiction, the faculty to hear confessions belongs to the local Ordinary,
to the canon penitentiary, to the parish priest, and to those others who are
in the place of the parish priest.
§2 By virtue of their office, the faculty to hear the confessions of their
own subjects and of those others who live day and night in the house, belongs
to the Superiors of religious institutes or of societies of apostolic life,
if they are clerical and of pontifical right, who in accordance with the constitutions
have executive power of governance, without prejudice however to the provision
of Can. 630 §4.
Can. 969 §1 Only the local Ordinary is competent to give to any
priests whomsoever the faculty to hear the confessions of any whomsoever of
the faithful. Priests who are members of religious institutes may not, however,
use this faculty without the permission, at least presumed, of their Superior.
§2 The Superior of a religious institute or of a society of apostolic life,
mentioned in Can. 968 §2, is competent to give to any priests whomsoever
the faculty to hear the confessions of his own subjects and of those others
who live day and night in the house.
Can. 970 The faculty to hear confessions is not to be given except to
priests whose suitability has been established, either by examination or by
some other means.
Can. 971 The local Ordinary is not to give the faculty habitually to
hear confessions to a priest, even to one who has a domicile or quasi domicile
within his jurisdiction, without first, as far as possible, consulting that
priest’s own Ordinary.
Can. 972 The faculty to hear confessions may be given by the competent
authority mentioned in Can. 969, for either an indeterminate or a determinate
period of time.
Can. 973 The faculty habitually to hear confessions is to be given in
writing.
Can. 974 §1 Neither the local Ordinary nor the competent Superior
may, except for a grave reason, revoke the grant of a faculty habitually to
hear confessions.
§2 If the faculty to hear confessions granted by the local Ordinary mentioned
in Can. 967, §2, is revoked by that Ordinary, the priest loses the faculty
everywhere. If the faculty is revoked by another local Ordinary, the priest
loses it only in the territory of the Ordinary who revokes it.
§3 Any local Ordinary who has revoked a priest’s faculty to hear
confessions is to notify the Ordinary who is proper to that priest by reason
of incardination or, if the priest is a member of a religious institute, his
competent Superior.
§4 If the faculty to hear confessions is revoked by his own major Superior,
the priest loses everywhere the faculty to hear the confessions of the members
of the institute. But if the faculty is revoked by another competent Superior,
the priest loses it only in respect of those subjects who are in that Superior’s
jurisdiction.
Can. 975 Apart from revocation, the faculty mentioned in Can. 967 §2
ceases by loss of office, by excardination, or by loss of domicile.
Can. 976 Any priest, even though he lacks the faculty to hear confessions,
can validly and lawfully absolve any penitents who are in danger of death, from
any censures and sins, even if an approved priest is present.
Can. 977 The absolution of a partner in a sin against the sixth commandment
of the Decalogue is invalid, except in danger of death.
Can. 978 §1 In hearing confessions the priest is to remember that
he is at once both judge and healer, and that he is constituted by God as a
minister of both divine justice and divine mercy, so that he may contribute
to the honour of God and the salvation of souls.
§2 In administering the sacrament, the confessor, as a minister of the
Church, is to adhere faithfully to the teaching of the magisterium and to the
norms laid down by the competent authority.
Can. 979 In asking questions the priest is to act with prudence and discretion,
taking into account the condition and the age of the penitent, and he is to
refrain from enquiring the name of a partner in sin.
Can. 980 If the confessor is in no doubt about the penitent’s disposition
and the penitent asks for absolution, it is not to be denied or delayed.
Can. 981 The confessor is to impose salutary and appropriate penances,
in proportion to the kind and number of sins confessed, taking into account,
however, the condition of the penitent. The penitent is bound personally to
fulfil these penances.
Can. 982 A person who confesses to having falsely denounced to ecclesiastical
authority a confessor innocent of the crime of solicitation to a sin against
the sixth commandment of the Decalogue, is not to be absolved unless that person
has first formally withdrawn the false denunciation and is prepared to make
good whatever harm may have been done.
Can. 983 §1 The sacramental seal is inviolable. Accordingly, it
is absolutely wrong for a confessor in any way to betray the penitent, for any
reason whatsoever, whether by word or in any other fashion.
§2 An interpreter, if there is one, is also obliged to observe this secret,
as are all others who in any way whatever have come to a knowledge of sins from
a confession.
Can. 984 §1 The confessor is wholly forbidden to use knowledge acquired
in confession to the detriment of the penitent, even when all danger of disclosure
is excluded.
§2 A person who is in authority may not in any way, for the purpose of
external governance, use knowledge about sins which has at any time come to
him from the hearing of confession.
Can. 985 The director and assistant director of novices, and the rector
of a seminary or of any other institute of education, are not to hear the sacramental
confessions of their students resident in the same house, unless in individual
instances the students of their own accord request it.
Can. 986 §1 All to whom by virtue of office the care of souls is
committed, are bound to provide for the hearing of the confessions of the faithful
entrusted to them, who reasonably request confession, and they are to provide
these faithful with an opportunity to make individual confession on days and
at times arranged to suit them.
§2 In an urgent necessity, every confessor is bound to hear the confessions
of Christ’s faithful, and in danger of death every priest is so obliged.
Can. 987 In order that the faithful may receive the saving remedy of
the sacrament of penance, they must be so disposed that, repudiating the sins
they have committed and having the purpose of amending their lives, they turn
back to God.
Can. 988 §1 The faithful are bound to confess, in kind and in number,
all grave sins committed after baptism, of which after careful examination of
conscience they are aware, which have not yet been directly pardoned by the
keys of the Church, and which have not been confessed in an individual confession.
§2 The faithful are recommended to confess also venial sins.
Can. 989 All the faithful who have reached the age of discretion are
bound faithfully to confess their grave sins at least once a year.
Can. 990 No one is forbidden to confess through an interpreter, provided
however that abuse and scandal are avoided, and without prejudice to the provision
of Can. 983 §2.
Can. 991 All Christ’s faithful are free to confess their sins to
lawfully approved confessors of their own choice, even to one of another rite.
Can. 992 An indulgence is the remission in the sight of God of the temporal
punishment due for sins, the guilt of which has already been forgiven. A member
of Christ’s faithful who is properly disposed and who fulfils certain
specific conditions, may gain an indulgence by the help of the Church which,
as the minister of redemption, authoritatively dispenses and applies the treasury
of the merits of Christ and the Saints.
Can. 993 An indulgence is partial or plenary according as it partially
or wholly frees a person from the temporal punishment due for sins.
Can. 994 All members of the faithful can gain indulgences, partial or
plenary, for themselves, or they can apply them by way of suffrage to the dead.
Can. 995 §1 Apart from the supreme authority in the Church, only
those can grant indulgences to whom this power is either acknowledged in the
law, or given by the Roman Pontiff.
§2 No authority below the Roman Pontiff can give to others the faculty
of granting indulgences, unless this authority has been expressly given to the
person by the Apostolic See.
Can. 996 §1 To be capable of gaining indulgences a person must be
baptised, not excommunicated, and in the state of grace at least on the completion
of the prescribed work.
§2 To gain them, however, the person who is capable must have at least
the intention of gaining them, and must fulfil the prescribed works at the time
and in the manner determined by the terms of the grant.
Can. 997 As far as the granting and the use of indulgences is concerned,
the other provisions contained in the special laws of the Church must also be
observed.
Can. 998 The anointing of the sick, by which the Church commends to the suffering and glorified Lord the faithful who are dangerously ill so that he may support and save them, is conferred by anointing them with oil and pronouncing the words prescribed in the liturgical books.
Can. 999 The oil to be used in the anointing of the sick can be blessed
not only by a Bishop but also by:
1° those who are in law equivalent to the diocesan Bishop;
2° in a case of necessity, any priest but only in the actual celebration
of the sacrament.
Can. 1000 §1 The anointings are to be carried out accurately, with
the words and in the order and manner prescribed in the liturgical books. In
a case of necessity, however, a single anointing on the forehead, or even on
another part of the body, is sufficient while the full formula is recited.
§2 The minister is to anoint with his own hand, unless a grave reason indicates
the use of an instrument.
Can. 1001 Pastors of souls and those who are close to the sick are to
ensure that the sick are helped by this sacrament in good time.
Can. 1002 The communal celebration of anointing of the sick, for a number
of the sick together, who have been appropriately prepared and are rightly disposed,
may be held in accordance with the regulations of the diocesan Bishop.
Can. 1003 §1 Every priest, but only a priest, can validly administer
the anointing of the sick.
§2 All priests to whom has been committed the care of souls, have the obligation
and the right to administer the anointing of the sick to those of the faithful
entrusted to their pastoral care. For a reasonable cause, any other priest may
administer this sacrament if he has the consent, at least presumed, of the aforementioned
priest.
§3 Any priest may carry the holy oil with him, so that in a case of necessity
he can administer the sacrament of anointing of the sick.
Can. 1004 §1 The anointing of the sick can be administered to any
member of the faithful who, having reached the use of reason, begins to be in
danger of death by reason of illness or old age.
§2 This sacrament can be repeated if the sick person, having recovered,
again becomes seriously ill or if, in the same illness, the danger becomes more
serious.
Can. 1005 If there is any doubt as to whether the sick person has reached
the age of reason, or is dangerously ill, or is dead, this sacrament is to be
administered.
Can. 1006 This sacrament is to be administered to the sick who, when
they were in possession of their faculties, at least implicitly asked for it.
Can. 1007 The anointing of the sick is not to be conferred upon those
who obstinately persist in a manifestly grave sin.
Can. 1008 By divine institution some among Christ’s faithful are,
through the sacrament of order, marked with an indelible character and are thus
constituted sacred ministers; thereby they are consecrated and deputed so that,
each according to his own grade, they fulfil, in the person of Christ the Head,
the offices of teaching, sanctifying and ruling, and so they nourish the people
of God.
Can. 1009 §1 The orders are the episcopate, the priesthood and the
diaconate.
§2 They are conferred by the imposition of hands and the prayer of consecration
which the liturgical books prescribe for each grade.
Can. 1010 An ordination is to be celebrated during Mass, on a Sunday
or holyday of obligation. For pastoral reasons, however, it may take place on
other days also, even on ferial days.
Can. 1011 §1 An ordination is normally to be celebrated in the cathedral
church. For pastoral reasons, however, it may be celebrated in another church
or oratory.
§2 Clerics and other members of Christ’s faithful are to be invited
to attend an ordination, so that the greatest possible number may be present
at the celebration.
Can. 1012 The minister of sacred ordination is a consecrated Bishop.
Can. 1013 No Bishop is permitted to consecrate anyone as Bishop, unless
it is first established that a pontifical mandate has been issued.
Can. 1014 Unless a dispensation has been granted by the Apostolic See,
the principal consecrating Bishop at an episcopal consecration is to have at
least two other consecrating Bishops with him. It is, however, entirely appropriate
that all the Bishops present should join with these in consecrating the Bishop
elect.
Can. 1015 §1 Each candidate is to be ordained to the priesthood
or to the diaconate by his proper Bishop, or with lawful dimissorial letters
granted by that Bishop.
§2 If not impeded from doing so by a just reason, a Bishop is himself to
ordain his own subjects. He may not, however, without an apostolic indult lawfully
ordain a subject of an oriental rite.
§3 Anyone who is entitled to give dimissorial letters for the reception
of orders may also himself confer these orders, if he is a Bishop.
Can. 1016 In what concerns the ordination to the diaconate of those who
intend to enrol themselves in the secular clergy, the proper Bishop is the Bishop
of the diocese in which the aspirant has a domicile, or the Bishop of the diocese
to which he intends to devote himself. In what concerns the priestly ordination
of the secular clergy, it is the Bishop of the diocese in which the aspirant
was incardinated by the diaconate.
Can. 1017 A Bishop may not confer orders outside his own jurisdiction
except with the permission of the diocesan Bishop.
Can. 1018 §1 The following can give dimissorial letters for the
secular clergy:
1° the proper Bishop mentioned in Can. 1016;
2° the apostolic Administrator; with the consent of the college of consultors,
the diocesan Administrator; with the consent of the council mentioned in Can.
495 §2, the Pro vicar and Pro prefect apostolic.
§2 The diocesan Administrator, the Pro vicar and Pro prefect apostolic
are not to give dimissorial letters to those to whom admission to orders was
refused by the diocesan Bishop or by the Vicar or Prefect apostolic.
Can. 1019 §1 It belongs to the major Superior of a clerical religious
institute of pontifical right or of a clerical society of apostolic life of
pontifical right to grant dimissorial letters for the diaconate and for the
priesthood to his subjects who are, in accordance with the constitutions, perpetually
or definitively enrolled in the institute or society.
§2 The ordination of all other candidates of whatever institute or society,
is governed by the law applying to the secular clergy, any indult whatsoever
granted to Superiors being revoked.
Can. 1020 Dimissorial letters are not to be granted unless all the testimonials
and documents required by the law in accordance with Cann. 1050 and 1051 have
first been obtained.
Can. 1021 Dimissorial letters may be sent to any Bishop in communion
with the Apostolic See, but not to a Bishop of a rite other than that of the
ordinand, unless there is an apostolic indult.
Can. 1022 When the ordaining Bishop has received the prescribed dimissorial
letters, he may proceed to the ordination only when the authenticity of these
letters is established beyond any doubt whatever.
Can. 1023 Dimissorial letters can be limited or can be revoked by the
person granting them or by his successor; once granted, they do not lapse on
the expiry of the grantor’s authority.
Can. 1024 Only a baptised man can validly receive sacred ordination.
Can. 1025 §1 In order lawfully to confer the orders of priesthood
or diaconate, it must have been established, in accordance with the proofs laid
down by law, that in the judgement of the proper Bishop or competent major Superior,
the candidate possesses the requisite qualities, that he is free of any irregularity
or impediment, and that he has fulfilled the requirements set out in Can. 1033
1039. Moreover, the documents mentioned in Can. 1050 must be to hand, and the
investigation mentioned in Can. 1051 must have been carried out.
§2 It is further required that, in the judgement of the same lawful Superior,
the candidate is considered beneficial to the ministry of the Church.
§3 A Bishop ordaining his own subject who is destined for the service of
another diocese, must be certain that the ordinand will in fact be attached
to that other diocese.
ARTICLE 1: THE REQUIREMENTS IN THOSE TO BE ORDAINED
Can. 1026 For a person to be ordained, he must enjoy the requisite freedom.
It is absolutely wrong to compel anyone, in any way or for any reason whatsoever,
to receive orders, or to turn away from orders anyone who is canonically suitable.
Can. 1027 Aspirants to the diaconate and the priesthood are to be formed
by careful preparation in accordance with the law.
Can. 1028 The diocesan Bishop or the competent Superior must ensure that
before they are promoted to any order, candidates are properly instructed concerning
the order itself and its obligations.
Can. 1029 Only those are to be promoted to orders who, in the prudent
judgement of the proper Bishop or the competent major Superior, all things considered,
have sound faith, are motivated by the right intention, are endowed with the
requisite knowledge, enjoy a good reputation, and have moral probity, proven
virtue and the other physical and psychological qualities appropriate to the
order to be received.
Can. 1030 The proper Bishop or the competent major Superior may, but
only for a canonical reason, even one which is occult, forbid admission to the
priesthood to deacons subject to them who were destined for the priesthood,
without prejudice to recourse in accordance with the law.
Can. 1031 §1 The priesthood may be conferred only upon those who
have completed their twenty fifth year of age, and possess a sufficient maturity;
moreover, an interval of at least six months between the diaconate and the priesthood
must have been observed. Those who are destined for the priesthood are to be
admitted to the order of diaconate only when they have completed their twenty
third year.
§2 A candidate for the permanent diaconate who is not married may be admitted
to the diaconate only when he has completed at least his twenty fifth year;
if he is married, not until he has completed at least his thirty fifth year,
and then with the consent of his wife.
§3 Episcopal Conferences may issue a regulation which requires a later
age for the priesthood and for the permanent diaconate.
§4 A dispensation of more than a year from the age required by §§1
and 2 is reserved to the Apostolic See.
Can. 1032 §1 Aspirants to the priesthood may be promoted to the
diaconate only when they have completed the fifth year of the curriculum of
philosophical and theological studies.
§2 After completing the curriculum of studies and before being promoted
to the priesthood, deacons are to spend an appropriate time, to be determined
by the Bishop or by the competent major Superior, exercising the diaconal order
and taking part in the pastoral ministry.
§3 An aspirant to the permanent diaconate is not to be promoted to this
order until he has completed the period of formation.
ARTICLE 2: PREREQUISITES FOR ORDINATION
Can. 1033 Only one who has received the sacrament of sacred confirmation
may lawfully be promoted to orders.
Can. 1034 §1 An aspirant to the diaconate or to the priesthood is
not to be ordained unless he has first, through the liturgical rite of admission,
secured enrolment as a candidate from the authority mentioned in Cann. 1016
and 1019. He must previously have submitted a petition in his own hand and signed
by him, which has been accepted in writing by the same authority.
§2 One who has by vows become a member of a clerical institute is not obliged
to obtain this admission.
Can. 1035 §1 Before anyone may be promoted to the diaconate, whether
permanent or transitory, he must have received the ministries of lector and
acolyte, and have exercised them for an appropriate time.
§2 Between the conferring of the ministry of acolyte and the diaconate
there is to be an interval of at least six months.
Can. 1036 For a candidate to be promoted to the order of diaconate or
priesthood, he must submit to the proper Bishop or to the competent major Superior
a declaration written in his own hand and signed by him, in which he attests
that he will spontaneously and freely receive the sacred order and will devote
himself permanently to the ecclesiastical ministry, asking at the same time
that he be admitted to receive the order.
Can. 1037 A candidate for the permanent diaconate who is not married
and likewise a candidate for the priesthood, is not to be admitted to the order
of diaconate unless he has, in the prescribed rite, publicly before God and
the Church undertaken the obligation of celibacy, or unless he has taken perpetual
vows in a religious institute.
Can. 1038 A deacon who refuses to be promoted to the priesthood may not
be forbidden the exercise of the order he has received, unless he is constrained
by a canonical impediment, or unless there is some other grave reason, to be
estimated by the diocesan Bishop or the competent major Superior
Can. 1039 All who are to be promoted to any order must make a retreat
for at least five days, in a place and in the manner determined by the Ordinary.
Before he proceeds to the ordination, the Bishop must have assured himself that
the candidates have duly made the retreat.
ARTICLE 3: IRREGULARITIES AND OTHER IMPEDIMENTS
Can. 1040 Those bound by an impediment are to be barred from the reception
of orders. An impediment may be simple; or it may be perpetual, in which case
it is called an irregularity. No impediment is contracted which is not contained
in the following canons.
Can. 1041 The following persons are irregular for the reception of orders:
1° one who suffers from any form of insanity, or from any other psychological
infirmity, because of which he is, after experts have been consulted, judged
incapable of being able to fulfil the ministry;
2° one who has committed the offence of apostasy, heresy or schism;
3° one who has attempted marriage, even a civil marriage, either while himself
prevented from entering marriage whether by an existing marriage bond or by
a sacred order or by a public and perpetual vow of chastity, or with a woman
who is validly married or is obliged by the same vow;
4° one who has committed wilful homicide, or one who has actually procured
an abortion, and all who have positively cooperated;
5° one who has gravely and maliciously mutilated himself or another, or
who has attempted suicide;
6° one who has carried out an act of order which is reserved to those in
the order of the episcopate or priesthood, while himself either not possessing
that order or being barred from its exercise by some canonical penalty, declared
or imposed.
Can. 1042 The following are simply impeded from receiving orders:
1° a man who has a wife, unless he is lawfully destined for the permanent
diaconate;
2° one who exercises an office or administration forbidden to clerics, in
accordance with Cann. 285 and 286, of which he must render an account; the impediment
binds until such time as, having relinquished the office and administration
and rendered the account, he has been freed;
3° a neophyte, unless, in the judgement of the Ordinary, he has been sufficiently
tested.
Can. 1043 Christ’s faithful are bound to reveal, before ordination,
to the Ordinary or to the parish priest, such impediments to sacred orders as
they may know about.
Can. 1044 §1 The following are irregular for the exercise of orders
already received:
1° one who, while bound by an irregularity for the reception of orders,
unlawfully received orders;
2° one who committed the offence mentioned in Can. 1041, n. 2, if the offence
is public
3° one who committed any of the offences mentioned in Can. 1041, nn. 3,
4,5,6.
§2 The following are impeded from the exercise of orders:
1° one who, while bound by an impediment to the reception of orders, unlawfully
received orders;
2° one who suffers from insanity or from some other psychological infirmity
mentioned in Can. 1041, n. 1, until such time as the Ordinary, having consulted
an expert, has allowed the exercise of the order in question.
Can. 1045 Ignorance of irregularities and impediments does not exempt
from them.
Can. 1046 Irregularities and impediments are multiplied if they arise
from different causes, not however from the repetition of the same cause, unless
it is a question of the irregularity arising from the commission of wilful homicide
or from having actually procured an abortion.
Can. 1047 §1 If the fact on which they are based has been brought
to the judicial forum, dispensation from all irregularities is reserved to the
Apostolic See alone.
§2 Dispensation from the following irregularities and impediments to the
reception of orders is also reserved to the Apostolic See:
1° irregularities arising from the offences mentioned in Can. 1041, nn.
2 and 3, if they are public;
2° an irregularity arising from the offence, whether public or occult, mentioned
in Can. 1041, n. 4;
3° the impediment mentioned in Can. 1042, n. 1.
§3 To the Apostolic See is also reserved the dispensation from the irregularities
for the exercise of an order received mentioned in Can. 1041, n.3 but only in
public cases, and in n. 4 of the same canon even in occult cases.
§4 The Ordinary can dispense from irregularities and impediments not reserved
to the Holy See.
Can. 1048 In the more urgent occult cases, if the Ordinary or, in the
case of the irregularities mentioned in Can. 1041, nn. 3 and 4, the Penitentiary
cannot be approached, and if there is imminent danger of serious harm or loss
of reputation, the person who is irregular for the exercise of an order may
exercise it. There remains, however, the obligation of his having recourse as
soon as possible to the Ordinary or the Penitentiary, without revealing his
name, and through a confessor.
Can. 1049 §1 In a petition to obtain a dispensation from irregularities
or impediments, all irregularities and impediments are to be mentioned. However,
a general dispensation is valid also for those omitted in good faith, with the
exception of the irregularities mentioned in Can. 1041, n. 4, or of others which
have been brought to the judicial forum; it is not, however, valid for those
concealed in bad faith.
§2 If it is question of an irregularity arising from wilful homicide or
from a procured abortion, for the validity of the dispensation even the number
of offences must be stated.
§3 A general dispensation from irregularities and impediments to the reception
of orders is valid for all orders.
ARTICLE 4: DOCUMENTS REQUIRED AND THE INVESTIGATION
Can. 1050 For a person to be promoted to sacred orders, the following
documents are required:
1° a certificate of studies duly completed in accordance with Can. 1032;
2" for those to be ordained to the priesthood, a certificate of the reception
of the diaconate
3° for those to be promoted to the diaconate, certificates of the reception
of baptism, of confirmation and of the ministries mentioned in Can. 1035, and
a certificate that the declaration mentioned in Can. 1036 has been made, if
an ordinand to be promoted to the permanent diaconate is married, a certificate
of his marriage and testimony of his wife’s consent.
Can. 1051 In the investigation of the requisite qualities of one who
is to be ordained, the following provisions are to be observed:
1° there is to be a certificate from the rector of the seminary or of the
house of formation, concerning the qualities required in the candidate for the
reception of the order, namely sound doctrine, genuine piety, good moral behaviour,
fitness for the exercise of the ministry, likewise, after proper investigation,
a certificate of the candidate’s state of physical and psychological health;
2° the diocesan Bishop or the major Superior may, in order properly to complete
the investigation, use other means which, taking into account the circumstances
of time and place, may seem useful, such as testimonial letters, public notices
or other sources of information.
Can. 1052 §1 For a Bishop to proceed to an ordination which he is
to confer by his own right, he must be satisfied that the documents mentioned
in Can. 1050 are at hand and that, as a result of the investigations prescribed
by law, the suitability of the candidate has been positively established.
§2 For a Bishop to proceed to the ordination of someone not his own subject,
it is sufficient that the dimissorial letters state that those documents are
at hand, that the investigation has been conducted in accordance with the law,
and that the candidate’s suitability has been established. If the ordinand
is a member of a religious institute or a society of apostolic life, these letters
must also testify that he has been definitively enrolled in the institute or
society and that he is a subject of the Superior who gives the letters.
§3 If, not withstanding all this, the Bishop has definite reasons for doubting
that the candidate is suitable to receive orders, he is not to promote him.
Can. 1053 §1 After an ordination, the names of the individuals
ordained, the name of the ordaining minister, and the place and date of ordination
are to be entered in a special register which is to be carefully kept in the
curia of the place of ordination. All the documents of each ordination are to
be accurately preserved.
§2 The ordaining Bishop is to give to each person ordained an authentic
certificate of the ordination received. Those who, with dimissorial letters,
have been promoted by a Bishop other than their own, are to submit the certificate
to their proper Ordinary for the registration of the ordination in a special
register, to be kept in the archive.
Can. 1054 The local Ordinary, if it concerns the secular clergy, or the
competent major Superior, if it concerns his subjects, is to send a notification
of each ordination to the parish priest of the place of baptism. The parish
priest is to record the ordination in the baptismal register in accordance with
Can. 535 §2.
Can. 1055 §1 The marriage covenant, by which a man and a woman
establish between themselves a partnership of their whole life, and which of
its own very nature is ordered to the well being of the spouses and to the procreation
and upbringing of children, has, between the baptised, been raised by Christ
the Lord to the dignity of a sacrament.
§2 Consequently, a valid marriage contract cannot exist between baptised
persons without its being by that very fact a sacrament.
Can. 1056 The essential properties of marriage are unity and indissolubility;
in christian marriage they acquire a distinctive firmness by reason of the sacrament.
Can. 1057 §1 A marriage is brought into being by the lawfully manifested
consent of persons who are legally capable. This consent cannot be supplied
by any human power.
§2 Matrimonial consent is an act of will by which a man and a woman by
an irrevocable covenant mutually give and accept one another for the purpose
of establishing a marriage.
Can. 1058 All can contract marriage who are not prohibited by law.
Can. 1059 The marriage of catholics, even if only one party is baptised,
is governed not only by divine law but also by canon law, without prejudice
to the competence of the civil authority in respect of the merely civil effects
of the marriage.
Can. 1060 Marriage enjoys the favour of law. Consequently, in doubt the
validity of a marriage must be upheld until the contrary is proven.
Can. 1061 §1 A valid marriage between baptised persons is said to
be merely ratified, if it is not consummated; ratified and consummated, if the
spouses have in a human manner engaged together in a conjugal act in itself
apt for the generation of offspring. To this act marriage is by its nature ordered
and by it the spouses become one flesh.
§2 If the spouses have lived together after the celebration of their marriage,
consummation is presumed until the contrary is proven.
§3 An invalid marriage is said to be putative if it has been celebrated
in good faith by at least one party. It ceases to be such when both parties
become certain of its nullity.
Can. 1062 §1 A promise of marriage, whether unilateral or bilateral,
called an engagement, is governed by the particular law which the Episcopal
Conference has enacted, after consideration of such customs and civil laws as
may exist.
§2 No right of action to request the celebration of marriage arises from
a promise of marriage, but there does arise an action for such reparation of
damages as may be due.
Can. 1063 Pastors of souls are obliged to ensure that their own church
community provides for Christ’s faithful the assistance by which the married
state is preserved in its christian character and develops in perfection. This
assistance is to be given principally:
1° by preaching, by catechetical instruction adapted to children, young
people and adults, indeed by the use of the means of social communication, so
that Christ’s faithful are instructed in the meaning of christian marriage
and in the role of christian spouses and parents;
2° by personal preparation for entering marriage, so that the spouses are
disposed to the holiness and the obligations of their new state;
3° by the fruitful celebration of the marriage liturgy, so that it clearly
emerges that the spouses manifest, and participate in, the mystery of the unity
and fruitful love between Christ and the Church;
4° by the help given to those who have entered marriage, so that by faithfully
observing and protecting their conjugal covenant, they may day by day achieve
a holier and a fuller family life.
Can. 1064 It is the responsibility of the local Ordinary to ensure that
this assistance is duly organised. If it is considered opportune, he should
consult with men and women of proven experience and expertise.
Can. 1065 §1 Catholics who have not yet received the sacrament of
confirmation are to receive it before being admitted to marriage, if this can
be done without grave inconvenience.
§2 So that the sacrament of marriage may be fruitfully received, spouses
are earnestly recommended that they approach the sacraments of penance and the
blessed Eucharist.
Can. 1066 Before a marriage takes place, it must be established that
nothing stands in the way of its valid and lawful celebration.
Can. 1067 The Episcopal Conference is to lay down norms concerning the
questions to be asked of the parties, the publication of marriage banns, and
the other appropriate means of enquiry to be carried out before marriage. Only
when he has carefully observed these norms may the parish priest assist at a
marriage.
Can. 1068 In danger of death, if other proofs are not available, it suffices,
unless there are contrary indications, to have the assertion of the parties,
sworn if need be, that they are baptised and free of any impediment.
Can. 1069 Before the celebration of a marriage, all the faithful are
bound to reveal to the parish priest or the local Ordinary such impediments
as they may know about.
Can. 1070 If someone other than the parish priest whose function it is
to assist at the marriage has made the investigations, he is by an authentic
document to inform that parish priest of the outcome of these enquiries as soon
as possible.
Can. 1071 §1 Except in a case of necessity, no one is to assist
without the permission of the local Ordinary at:
1° a marriage of vagi;
2° a marriage which cannot be recognised by the civil law or celebrated
in accordance with it;
3° a marriage of a person for whom a previous union has created natural
obligations towards a third party or towards children;
4° a marriage of a person who has notoriously rejected the catholic faith;
5° a marriage of a person who is under censure;
6° a marriage of a minor whose parents are either unaware of it or are reasonably
opposed to it;
7° a marriage to be entered by proxy, as mentioned in Can. 1105.
§2 The local Ordinary is not to give permission to assist at the marriage
of a person who has notoriously rejected the Catholic faith unless, with the
appropriate adjustments, the norms of Can. 1125 have been observed.
Can. 1072 Pastors of souls are to see to it that they dissuade young
people from entering marriage before the age customarily accepted in the region.
Can. 1073 A diriment impediment renders a person incapable of validly
contracting a marriage.
Can. 1074 An impediment is said to be public, when it can be proved in
the external forum; otherwise, it is occult.
Can. 1075 §1 Only the supreme authority in the Church can authentically
declare when the divine law prohibits or invalidates a marriage.
§2 Only the same supreme authority has the right to establish other impediments
for those who are baptised.
Can. 1076 A custom which introduces a new impediment, or is contrary
to existing impediments, is to be reprobated.
Can. 1077 §1 The local Ordinary can in a specific case forbid a
marriage of his own subjects, wherever they are residing, or of any person actually
present in his territory; he can do this only for a time, for a grave reason
and while that reason persists.
§2 Only the supreme authority in the Church can attach an invalidating
clause to a prohibition.
Can. 1078 §1 The local Ordinary can dispense his own subjects wherever
they are residing, and all who are actually present in his territory, from all
impediments of ecclesiastical law, except for those whose dispensation is reserved
to the Apostolic See.
§2 The impediments whose dispensation is reserved to the Apostolic See
are:
1° the impediment arising from sacred orders or from a public perpetual
vow of chastity in a religious institute of pontifical right
2° the impediment of crime mentioned in Can. 1090.
§3 A dispensation is never given from the impediment of consanguinity in
the direct line or in the second degree of the collateral line.
Can. 1079 §1 When danger of death threatens, the local Ordinary
can dispense his own subjects, wherever they are residing, and all who are actually
present in his territory, both from the form to be observed in the celebration
of marriage, and from each and every impediment of ecclesiastical law, whether
public or occult, with the exception of the impediment arising from the sacred
order of priesthood.
§2 In the same circumstances mentioned in §1, but only for cases in
which not even the local Ordinary can be approached, the same faculty of dispensation
is possessed by the parish priest, by a properly delegated sacred minister,
and by the priest or deacon who assists at the marriage in accordance with Can.
1116 §2.
§3 In danger of death, the confessor has the power to dispense from occult
impediments for the internal forum, whether within the act of sacramental confession
or outside it.
§4 In the case mentioned in §2, the local Ordinary is considered unable
to be approached if he can be reached only by telegram or by telephone.
Can. 1080 §1 Whenever an impediment is discovered after everything
has already been prepared for a wedding and the marriage cannot without probable
danger of grave harm be postponed until a dispensation is obtained from the
competent authority, the power to dispense from all impediments, except those
mentioned in Can. 1078 §2, n. 1, is possessed by the local Ordinary and,
provided the case is occult, by all those mentioned in Can. 1079 §§2
3, the conditions prescribed therein having been observed.
§2 This power applies also to the validation of a marriage when there is
the same danger in delay and there is no time to have recourse to the Apostolic
See or, in the case of impediments from which he can dispense, to the local
Ordinary.
Can. 1081 The parish priest or the priest or deacon mentioned in Can.
1079 §2, should inform the local Ordinary immediately of a dispensation
granted for the external forum, and this dispensation is to be recorded in the
marriage register.
Can. 1082 Unless a rescript of the Penitentiary provides otherwise, a
dispensation from an occult impediment granted in the internal nonsacramental
forum, is to be recorded in the book to be kept in the secret archive of the
curia. No other dispensation for the external forum is necessary if at a later
stage the occult impediment becomes public.
Can. 1083 §1 A man cannot validly enter marriage before the completion
of his sixteenth year of age, nor a woman before the completion of her fourteenth
year.
§2 The Episcopal Conference may establish a higher age for the lawful celebration
of marriage.
Can. 1084 §1 Antecedent and perpetual impotence to have sexual intercourse,
whether on the part of the man or on that of the woman, whether absolute or
relative, by its very nature invalidates marriage.
§2 If the impediment of impotence is doubtful, whether the doubt be one
of law or one of fact, the marriage is not to be prevented nor, while the doubt
persists, is it to be declared null.
§3 Without prejudice to the provisions of Can. 1098, sterility neither
forbids nor invalidates a marriage.
Can. 1085 §1 A person bound by the bond of a previous marriage,
even if not consummated, invalidly attempts marriage.
§2 Even though the previous marriage is invalid or for any reason dissolved,
it is not thereby lawful to contract another marriage before the nullity or
the dissolution of the previous one has been established lawfully and with certainty.
Can. 1086 §1 A marriage is invalid when one of the two persons was
baptised in the catholic Church or received into it and has not by a formal
act defected from it, and the other was not baptised.
§2 This impediment is not to be dispensed unless the conditions mentioned
in Cann. 1125 and 1126 have been fulfilled.
§3 If at the time the marriage was contracted one party was commonly understood
to be baptised, or if his or her baptism was doubtful, the validity of the marriage
is to be presumed in accordance with Can. 1060, until it is established with
certainty that one party was baptised and the other was not.
Can. 1087 Those who are in sacred orders invalidly attempt marriage.
Can. 1088 Those who are bound by a public perpetual vow of chastity in
a religious institute invalidly attempt marriage.
Can. 1089 No marriage can exist between a man and a woman who has been
abducted, or at least detained, with a view to contracting a marriage with her,
unless the woman, after she has been separated from her abductor and established
in a safe and free place, chooses marriage of her own accord.
Can. 1090 §1 One who, with a view to entering marriage with a particular
person, has killed that person’s spouse, or his or her own spouse, invalidly
attempts this marriage.
§2 They also invalidly attempt marriage with each other who, by mutual
physical or moral action, brought about the death of either’s spouse.
Can. 1091 §1 Marriage is invalid between those related by consanguinity
in all degrees of the direct line, whether ascending or descending, legitimate
or natural.
§2 In the collateral line, it is invalid up to the fourth degree inclusive.
§3 The impediment of consanguinity is not multiplied.
§4 A marriage is never to be permitted if a doubt exists as to whether
the parties are related by consanguinity in any degree of the direct line, or
in the second degree of the collateral line.
Can. 1092 Affinity in any degree of the direct line invalidates marriage.
Can. 1093 The impediment of public propriety arises when a couple live
together after an invalid marriage, or from a notorious or public concubinage.
It invalidates marriage in the first degree of the direct line between the man
and those related by consanguinity to the woman, and vice versa.
Can. 1094 Those who are legally related by reason of adoption cannot
validly marry each other if their relationship is in the direct line or in the
second degree of the collateral line.
Can. 1095 The following are incapable of contracting marriage:
1° those who lack sufficient use of reason;
2° those who suffer from a grave lack of discretionary judgement concerning
the essential matrimonial rights and obligations to be mutually given and accepted;
3° those who, because of causes of a psychological nature, are unable to
assume the essential obligations of marriage.
Can. 1096 §1 For matrimonial consent to exist, it is necessary that
the contracting parties be at least not ignorant of the fact that marriage is
a permanent partnership between a man and a woman, ordered to the procreation
of children through some form of sexual cooperation.
§2 This ignorance is not presumed after puberty.
Can. 1097 §1 Error about a person renders a marriage invalid.
§2 Error about a quality of the person, even though it be the reason for
the contract, does not render a marriage invalid unless this quality is directly
and principally intended.
Can. 1098 A person contracts invalidly who enters marriage inveigled
by deceit, perpetrated in order to secure consent, concerning some quality of
the other party, which of its very nature can seriously disrupt the partnership
of conjugal life.
Can. 1099 Provided it does not determine the will, error concerning the
unity or the indissolubility or the sacramental dignity of marriage does not
vitiate matrimonial consent.
Can. 1100 Knowledge of or opinion about the nullity of a marriage does
not necessarily exclude matrimonial consent.
Can. 1101 §1 The internal consent of the mind is presumed to conform
to the words or the signs used in the celebration of a marriage.
§2 If, however, either or both of the parties should by a positive act
of will exclude marriage itself or any essential element of marriage or any
essential property, such party contracts invalidly.
Can. 1102 §1 Marriage cannot be validly contracted subject to a
condition concerning the future.
§2 Marriage entered into subject to a condition concerning the past or
the present is valid or not, according as whatever is the basis of the condition
exists or not.
§3 However, a condition as mentioned in §2 may not lawfully be attached
except with the written permission of the local Ordinary.
Can. 1103 A marriage is invalid which was entered into by reason of force
or of grave fear imposed from outside, even if not purposely, from which the
person has no escape other than by choosing marriage.
Can. 1104 §1 To contract marriage validly it is necessary that the
contracting parties be present together, either personally or by proxy
§2 The spouses are to express their matrimonial consent in words; if, however,
they cannot speak, then by equivalent signs.
Can. 1105 §1 For a marriage by proxy to be valid, it is required:
1° that there be a special mandate to contract with a specific person;
2° that the proxy be designated by the mandator and personally discharge
this function;
§2 For the mandate to be valid, it is to be signed by the mandator, and
also by the parish priest or local Ordinary of the place in which the mandate
is given or by a priest delegated by either of them or by at least two witnesses,
or it is to be drawn up in a document which is authentic according to the civil
law.
§3 If the mandator cannot write, this is to be recorded in the mandate
and another witness added who is also to sign the document; otherwise, the mandate
is invalid.
§4 If the mandator revokes the mandate, or becomes insane, before the proxy
contracts in his or her name, the marriage is invalid, even though the proxy
or the other contracting party is unaware of the fact.
Can. 1106 Marriage can be contracted through an interpreter, but the
parish priest may not assist at such a marriage unless he is certain of the
trustworthiness of the interpreter.
Can. 1107 Even if a marriage has been entered into invalidly by reason
of an impediment or defect of form, the consent given is presumed to persist
until its withdrawal has been established.
Can. 1108 §1 Only those marriages are valid which are contracted
in the presence of the local Ordinary or parish priest or of the priest or deacon
delegated by either of them, who, in the presence of two witnesses, assists,
in accordance however with the rules set out in the following canons, and without
prejudice to the exceptions mentioned in Cann. 144, 1112 §1, 1116 and 1127
§§2 3.
§2 Only that person who, being present, asks the contracting parties to
manifest their consent and in the name of the Church receives it, is understood
to assist at a marriage.
Can. 1109 Within the limits of their territory, the local Ordinary and
the parish priest by virtue of their office validly assist at the marriages
not only of their subjects, but also of non subjects, provided one or other
of the parties is of the Latin rite. They cannot assist if by sentence or decree
they have been excommunicated, placed under interdict or suspended from office,
or been declared to be such.
Can. 1110 A personal Ordinary and a personal parish priest by virtue
of their office validly assist, within the confines of their jurisdiction, at
the marriages only of those of whom at least one party is their subject.
Can. 1111 §1 As long as they validly hold office, the local Ordinary
and the parish priest can delegate to priests and deacons the faculty, even
the general faculty, to assist at marriages within the confines of their territory.
§2 In order that the delegation of the faculty to assist at marriages be
valid, it must be expressly given to specific persons; if there is question
of a special delegation, it is to be given for a specific marriage; if however
there is question of a general delegation, it is to be given in writing.
Can. 1112 §1 Where there are no priests and deacons, the diocesan
Bishop can delegate lay persons to assist at marriages, if the Episcopal Conference
has given its prior approval and the permission of the Holy See has been obtained.
§2 A suitable lay person is to be selected, capable of giving instruction
to those who are getting married, and fitted to conduct the marriage liturgy
properly.
Can. 1113 §1 Before a special delegation is granted, provision is
to be made for all those matters which the law prescribes to establish the freedom
to marry.
Can. 1114 One who assists at a marriage acts unlawfully unless he has
satisfied himself of the parties’ freedom to marry in accordance with
the law and, whenever he assists by virtue of a general delegation, has satisfied
himself of the parish priest’s permission, if this is possible.
Can. 1115 Marriages are to be celebrated in the parish in which either
of the contracting parties has a domicile or a quasi domicile or a month’s
residence or, if there is question of vagi, in the parish in which they are
actually residing. With the permission of the proper Ordinary or the proper
parish priest, marriages may be celebrated elsewhere.
Can. 1116 §1 If one who, in accordance with the law, is competent
to assist, cannot be present or be approached without grave inconvenience, those
who intend to enter a true marriage can validly and lawfully contract in the
presence of witnesses only:
1° in danger of death;
2° apart from danger of death, provided it is prudently foreseen that this
state of affairs will continue for a month.
§2 In either case, if another priest or deacon is at hand who can be present,
he must be called upon and, together with the witnesses, be present at the celebration
of the marriage, without prejudice to the validity of the marriage in the presence
of only the witnesses.
Can. 1117 The form prescribed above is to be observed if at least one
of the parties contracting marriage was baptised in the catholic Church or received
into it and has not by a formal act defected from it, without prejudice to the
provisions of Can. 1127 §2.
Can. 1118 §1 A marriage between catholics, or between a catholic
party and a baptised non catholic, is to be celebrated in the parish church.
By permission of the local Ordinary or of the parish priest, it may be celebrated
in another church or oratory.
§2 The local Ordinary can allow a marriage to be celebrated in another
suitable place.
§3 A marriage between a catholic party and an unbaptised party may be celebrated
in a church or in another suitable place.
Can. 1119 Apart from a case of necessity, in the celebration of marriage
those rites are to be observed which are prescribed in the liturgical books
approved by the Church, or which are acknowledged by lawful customs.
Can. 1120 The Episcopal Conference can draw up its own rite of marriage,
in keeping with those usages of place and people which accord with the christian
spirit; it is to be reviewed by the Holy See, and it is without prejudice to
the law that the person who is present to assist at the marriage is to ask for
and receive the expression of the consent of the contracting parties.
Can. 1121 §1 As soon as possible after the celebration of a marriage,
the parish priest of the place of celebration or whoever takes his place, even
if neither has assisted at the marriage, is to record in the marriage register
the names of the spouses, of the person who assisted and of the witnesses, and
the place and date of the celebration of the marriage; this is to be done in
the manner prescribed by the Episcopal Conference or by the diocesan Bishop.
§2 Whenever a marriage is contracted in accordance with Can. 1116, the
priest or deacon, if he was present at the celebration, otherwise the witnesses,
are bound jointly with the contracting parties as soon as possible to inform
the parish priest or the local Ordinary about the marriage entered into.
§3 In regard to a marriage contracted with a dispensation from the canonical
form, the local Ordinary who granted the dispensation is to see to it that the
dispensation and the celebration are recorded in the marriage register both
of the curia, and of the proper parish of the catholic party whose parish priest
carried out the inquiries concerning the freedom to marry. The catholic spouse
is obliged as soon as possible to notify that same Ordinary and parish priest
of the fact that the marriage was cele brated, indicating also the place of
celebration and the public form whichwas observed.
Can. 1122 §1 A marriage which has been contracted is to be recorded
also in the baptismal registers in which the baptism of the spouses was entered.
§2 If a spouse contracted marriage elsewhere than in the parish of baptism,
the parish priest of the place of celebration is to send a notification of the
marriage as soon as possible to the parish priest of the place of baptism.
Can. 1123 Whenever a marriage is validated for the external forum, or
declared invalid, or lawfully dissolved other than by death, the parish priest
of the place of the celebration of the marriage must be informed, so that an
entry may be duly made in the registers of marriage and of baptism.
Can. 1124 Without the express permission of the competent authority,
marriage is prohibited between two baptised persons, one of whom was baptised
in the catholic Church or received into it after baptism and has not defected
from it by a formal act, the other of whom belongs to a Church or ecclesial
community not in full communion with the catholic Church.
Can. 1125 The local Ordinary can grant this permission if there is a
just and reasonable cause. He is not to grant it unless the following conditions
are fulfilled:
1° the catholic party is to declare that he or she is prepared to remove
dangers of defecting from the faith, and is to make a sincere promise to do
all in his or her power in order that all the children be baptised and brought
up in the catholic Church;
2° the other party is to be informed in good time of these promises to be
made by the catholic party, so that it is certain that he or she is truly aware
of the promise and of the obligation of the catholic party
3° both parties are to be instructed about the purposes and essential properties
of marriage, which are not to be excluded by either contractant.
Can. 1126 It is for the Episcopal Conference to prescribe the manner
in which these declarations and promises, which are always required, are to
be made, and to determine how they are to be established in the external forum,
and how the non catholic party is to be informed of them.
Can. 1127 §1 The provisions of Can. 1108 are to be observed in regard
to the form to be used in a mixed marriage. If, however, the catholic party
contracts marriage with a non catholic party of oriental rite, the canonical
form of celebration is to be observed for lawfulness only; for validity, however,
the intervention of a sacred minister is required, while observing the other
requirements of law.
§2 If there are grave difficulties in the way of observing the canonical
form, the local Ordinary of the catholic party has the right to dispense from
it in individual cases, having however consulted the Ordinary of the place of
the celebration of the marriage; for validity, however, some public form of
celebration is required. It is for the Episcopal Conference to establish norms
whereby this dispensation may be granted in a uniform manner.
§3 It is forbidden to have, either before or after the canonical celebration
in accordance with §1, another religious celebration of the same marriage
for the purpose of giving or renewing matrimonial consent. Likewise, there is
not to be a religious celebration in which the catholic assistant and a non
catholic minister, each performing his own rite, ask for the consent of the
parties.
Can. 1128 Local Ordinaries and other pastors of souls are to see to it
that the catholic spouse and the children born of a mixed marriage are not without
the spiritual help needed to fulfil their obligations; they are also to assist
the spouses to foster the unity of conjugal and family life.
Can. 1129 The provisions of Cann. 1127 and 1128 are to be applied also
to marriages which are impeded by the impediment of disparity of worship mentioned
in Can. 1086 §1.
Can. 1130 For a grave and urgent reason, the local Ordinary may permit
that a marriage be celebrated in secret.
Can. 1131 Permission to celebrate a marriage in secret involves:
1° that the investigations to be made before the marriage are carried out
in secret;
2° that the secret in regard to the marriage which has been celebrated is
observed by the local Ordinary, by whoever assists, by the witnesses and by
the spouses.
Can. 1132 The obligation of observing the secret mentioned in Can. 1131
n. 2 ceases for the local Ordinary if from its observance a threat arises of
grave scandal or of grave harm to the sanctity of marriage. This fact is to
be made known to the parties before the celebration of the marriage.
Can. 1133 A marriage celebrated in secret is to be recorded only in a
special register which is to be kept in the secret archive of the curia.
Can. 1134 From a valid marriage there arises between the spouses a bond
which of its own nature is permanent and exclusive. Moreover, in christian marriage
the spouses are by a special sacrament strengthened and, as it were, consecrated
for the duties and the dignity of their state.
Can. 1135 Each spouse has an equal obligation and right to whatever pertains
to the partnership of conjugal life.
Can. 1136 Parents have the most grave obligation and the primary right
to do all in their power to ensure their children’s physical, social,
cultural, moral and religious upbringing.
Can. 1137 Children who are conceived or born of a valid or of a putative
marriage are legitimate.
Can. 1138 §1 The father is he who is identified by a lawful marriage,
unless by clear arguments the contrary is proven.
§2 Children are presumed legitimate who are born at least 180 days after
the date the marriage was celebrated, or within 300 days from the date of the
dissolution of conjugal life.
Can. 1139 Illegitimate children are legitimated by the subsequent marriage
of their parents, whether valid or putative, or by a rescript of the Holy See.
Can. 1140 As far as canonical effects are concerned, legitimated children
are equivalent to legitimate children in all respects, unless it is otherwise
expressly provided by the law.
ARTICLE 1: THE DISSOLUTION OF THE BOND
Can. 1141 A marriage which is ratified and consummated cannot be dissolved
by any human power or by any cause other than death.
Can. 1142 A non consummated marriage between baptised persons or between
a baptised party and an unbaptised party can be dissolved by the Roman Pontiff
for a just reason, at the request of both parties or of either party, even if
the other is unwilling.
Can. 1143 §1 In virtue of the pauline privilege, a marriage entered
into by two unbaptised persons is dissolved in favour of the faith of the party
who received baptism, by the very fact that a new marriage is contracted by
that same party, provided the unbaptised party departs.
§2 The unbaptised party is considered to depart if he or she is unwilling
to live with the baptised party, or to live peacefully without offence to the
Creator, unless the baptised party has, after the reception of baptism, given
the other just cause to depart.
Can. 1144 §1 For the baptised person validly to contract a new marriage,
the unbaptised party must always be interpellated whether:
1° he or she also wishes to receive baptism;
2° he or she at least is willing to live peacefully with the baptised party
without offence to the Creator.
§2 This interpellation is to be done after baptism. However, the local
Ordinary can for a grave reason permit that the interpellation be done before
baptism; indeed he can dispense from it, either before or after baptism, provided
it is established, by at least a summary and extrajudicial procedure, that it
cannot be made or that it would be useless.
Can. 1145 As a rule, the interpellation is to be done on the authority
of the local Ordinary of the converted party. A period of time for reply is
to be allowed by this Ordinary to the other party, if indeed he or she asks
for it, warning the person however that if the period passes without any reply,
silence will be taken as a negative response.
§2 Even an interpellation made privately by the converted party is valid,
and indeed it is lawful if the form prescribed above cannot be observed.
§3 In both cases there must be lawful proof in the external forum of the
interpellation having been done and of its outcome.
Can. 1146 The baptised party has the right to contract a new marriage
with a catholic:
1° if the other party has replied in the negative to the interpellation,
or if the interpellation has been lawfully omitted;
2° if the unbaptised person, whether already interpellated or not, who at
first persevered in peaceful cohabitation without offence to the Creator, has
subsequently departed without just cause, without prejudice to the provisions
of Cann. 1144 and 1145.
Can. 1147 However, the local Ordinary can for a grave reason allow the
baptised party, using the pauline privilege, to contract marriage with a non
catholic party, whether baptised or unbaptised; in t