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Interpretation (Catholic canon law)

Regarding the canon law of the Catholic Church, canonists provide and obey rules for the interpretation and acceptation of words, in order that legislation is correctly understood and the extent of its obligation is determined.

Authentic interpretation edit

An "authentic interpretation" is an official and authoritative interpretation of a statute issued by the legislator of the statute. In canon law an authentic interpretation has the force of law.

Besides the Supreme Pontiff (Pope), who has plenary legislative power, several other authorities in the Catholic Church have various grades of legislative power. Primary examples are diocesan bishops and their equivalents, episcopal conferences, and particular councils.[1] Any of these legislators can issue authentic interpretations of their own[2] and their predecessors' laws.[3] Authentic interpretations supersede even administrative decisions of ordinaries and judgments of ecclesiastical courts, because neither of these acts have the force of law which authentic interpretations have.[4] The effect of an authentic interpretation is contingent on the extent of the interpretation:

An authentic interpretation which is presented by way of a law has the same force as the law itself, and must be promulgated. If it simply declares the words which are certain in themselves, it has retroactive force. If it restricts or extends a law or explains a doubtful one, it is not retroactive.[5]

Legislators also can entrust the power to authentically interpret their laws to another.[6] For the 1983 Code of Canon Law, the Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches, and other Papal laws, the Supreme Pontiff has delegated authority of authentic interpretation to the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts.[7] The following table lists the authentic interpretations that this dicastery has issued (with Papal approbation).

Table of authentic interpretations edit

Latin Canon(s) Publication Summary
Can. 87, §1 AAS, v. 77 (1985), p. 771 Diocesan bishop cannot dispense from canonical form for the marriage of two Catholics.
Can. 119, 1º AAS, v. 82 (1990), p. 845 Relative majority suffices on the third scrutiny.
Can. 127, §1 AAS, v. 77 (1985), p. 771 Superior does not have the right of voting, unless it is an existing custom in the community.
Can. 230, §2 AAS, v. 86 (1994), p. 541-542 Both lay men and women can serve at the altar.
Cann. 346, §1 and 402, §1 AAS, v. 83 (1991), p. 1093 Bishops emeriti may be elected to the Synod of Bishops.
Cann. 434 and 452 AAS, v. 81 (1989), p. 388 Auxiliary bishops cannot fill office of president of an episcopal conference.
Can. 455, §1 (also cann. 31-3) AAS, v. 77 (1985), p. 771 "General decrees" includes general executory decrees.
Can. 502, §1 AAS, v. 76 (1984), p. 746-747 Consultor continues in office even when no longer a member of presbyteral council.

Consultors need not be replaced unless the minimum required number is lacking.

Can. 509, §1 AAS, v. 81 (1989), p. 991 It is not required to select the president of a chapter of canons by election.
Can. 684, §3 AAS, v. 79 (1987), p. 1249 "Religious" includes religious in temporary vows.
Can. 700 AAS, v. 78 (1986), p. 1323–1324 Religious to be notified of dismissal after confirmation by Holy See.

Congregation for Religious and Secular Institutes to receive suspensive recourse against dismissal.

Cann. 705-7 AAS, v. 78 (1986), p. 1323–1324 A religious bishop does not enjoy active and passive voice in his own institute.
Cann. 705-7 AAS, v. 80 (1988), p. 1818–1819 Religious appointed judges of the Roman Rota are not exempt from the religious Ordinary.
Can. 767, §1 AAS, v. 79 (1987), p. 1249 Diocesan bishop cannot dispense from the prescription that the homily is reserved to priests or deacons.
Can. 830, §3 AAS, v. 79 (1987), p. 1249 Imprimaturs must indicate the name of the Ordinary giving his permission, and where and when the permission was given.
Can. 910, §2 (also Can. 230, §3) AAS, v. 80 (1988), p. 1373 Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion cannot exercise their function when ordinary ministers (who are not impeded from distributing the Eucharist) are present in the church, even though not celebrating the Mass.
Can. 917 AAS, v. 76 (1984), p. 746-747 A person may receive Holy Communion on the same day only twice, outside of the danger of death.
Can. 951, §1 AAS, v. 79 (1987), p. 1132 Mass offerings for multiple celebrations on the same day are to be sent to the proper Ordinary of the celebrant.
Can. 964, §2 AAS, v. 90 (1998), p. 711[8] A priest may choose to hear confession in a confessional with a fixed grille.
Can. 1103 AAS, v. 79 (1987), p. 1132 Force and fear invalidate the matrimonial consent of non-Catholics as well.
Can. 1263 AAS, v. 81 (1989), p. 991 External schools of religious institutes of pontifical right are not subject to taxation by diocesan bishop.
Can. 1367[9] AAS, v. 91 (1999), p. 918 "Desecration" includes any voluntary and gravely comptemptuous action towards the Eucharistic species.
Can. 1398 AAS, v. 80 (1988), p. 1818–1819 "Abortion" includes the killing of a fetus in any way whatsoever, at any time from the moment of conception onwards.
Cann. 1522 and 1525 AAS, v. 78 (1986), p. 1324 Can reintroduce a case in another tribunal after instance is finished through preemption or renunciation.
Can. 1673, 3º AAS, v. 78 (1986), p. 1323–1324 The judicial vicar of the interdiocesan tribunal of the respondent cannot give the consent required for hearing a nullity case in the diocese of the plaintiff.
Can. 1686 (also Cann. 1066–7) AAS, v. 76 (1984), p. 746-747 The pre-nuptial investigation suffices to determine the invalidity of a prior marriage due to lack of canonical form; a declaration of nullity via the documentary process is not required.
Can. 1737 (also Can. 299, §3) AAS, v. 80 (1988), p. 1818 A non-juridical group with a grievance must take hierarchical recourse as individuals.

Rules of interpretation edit

In general, the authentic interpretation of a law may be made by the legislator or his successor or superior, but when this is not the case recourse must be had to what is called magisterial, or doctrinal, interpretation. It is for this latter mode that rules have been formed.

Words edit

The specific words of a law are understood according to their usual signification, unless it is certain that the legislator intended them to be understood otherwise. When words are unambiguous, they must not be twisted into another, improbable signification. If the intention of the legislator regarding words in question is known, interpretation must accord therewith, rather than with the usual signification of the words, because in this instance the words are said not to be nude but rather clothed with the will of the legislator.

When a law is stated in general terms, it is presumed that no exception was intended; that is, if the general law states no exception, interpreters may not distinguish specific cases. Regarding all interpretations, however, that signification of the words in question is to be preferred that favors equity rather than strict justice. An argument can be made from the contrary signification of the words, provided that it does produce a result that is absurd, inappropriate, or contradicted by another law. Further, the provisions of a prior statute are presumed not to be changed beyond the express signification of the words of a new law.

When a law is penal in nature, its words are to be construed in their strictest sense and not to be extended to cases that are not explicitly stated, but when a law concedes favors, its words are to be interpreted in their widest sense. "In contracts, words are to be taken in their full [plena] meaning, in last wills in a wider [plenior] sense, and in grants of favours in their widest [plenissimi] interpretation".[10] When the signification of words is doubtful, that sense is to be preferred that does not prejudice the rights of a third person, i. e., a person whom the law does not directly affect or concern.

Words of a law are never presumed to be superfluous. Words must be considered in their context. An interpretation of words that renders the law in question futile is a false interpretation. When words are in the future tense, and even when they are in the imperative mood regarding the judge, but not regarding the crime, the penalty is understood to be incurred not ipso facto but only upon judicial sentence. When words are doubtful they must be presumed to favor the subjects thereof and not the legislator.

Benedict XVI's opinion edit

According to Benedict XVI, the instructions of the Magisterium regarding canon law and its interpretation are binding per se insofar as it teaches of the law. The juridically binding instructions on canonical interpretation of the Magisterium are primarily given in the allocutions of the Supreme Pontiffs to the Tribunal of the Roman Rota.[11]

Pope Benedict XVI, in his address of 21 January 2012 to the Roman Rota, taught that canonical law can only be interpreted and fully understood within the Catholic Church in the light of her mission and ecclesiological structure, and that "the work of the interpreter must not be deprived of "vital contact with ecclesial reality":[11]

All things considered, the hermeneutics of canonical laws is most closely tied to the very understanding of the law of the Church....In such realistic prospectiveness, the interpretative undertaking, at times arduous, takes on meaning and purpose. The use of the interpretive meaning foreseen by the Code of Canon Law in can. 17, beginning with "the proper meaning of the words considered in their text and context", is no longer a mere logical exercise. It has to do with an assignment that is vivified by an authentic contact with the comprehensive reality of the Church, which allows one to penetrate the true meaning of the letter of the law. Something then occurs, similar to what I said about the inner process of St Augustine in biblical hermeneutics: "the transcending of the letter has rendered the letter itself credible".[note 1] In such a manner, also in the hermeneutics of the law is it confirmed that the authentic horizon is that of the juridical truth to love, to seek out and to serve. It follows that the interpretation of canonical law must take place within the Church. This is not a matter of mere external circumstance, subject to the environs: it is a calling to the same humus of Canon Law and the reality regulated by it. Sentire cum Ecclesia takes on meaning also within the discipline, by reason of the doctrinal foundations that are always present and operative within the legal norms of the Church. In this manner, is also applied to Canon Law that hermeneutics of renewal in continuity of which I spoke in reference to the Second Vatican Council[note 2] so closely bound to the current canonical legislation. Christian maturity leads one to love the law ever more and want to understand it and to apply it faithfully.[11]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Benedict XVI, 2012 Roman Rota Address, citing Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Verbum Domini, 30 September 2010, 38: AAS 102 (2010), p. 718, n. 38.
  2. ^ Benedict XVI, 2012 Roman Rota Address, citing his Discourse to the Roman Curia of 22 December 2005: AAS 98 (2006), pp. 40-53., https://w2.vatican.va/content/benedict-xvi/en/speeches/2005/december/documents/hf_ben_xvi_spe_20051222_roman-curia.html

References edit

  1. ^ Canon L. Socy. Gr. Brit. & Ir., The Canon Law Letter and Spirit: A Practical Guide to the Code of Canon Law ¶ 46, at 15, 15 n. 2 (Gerard Sheehy et al. eds., Liturgical Press 1995).
  2. ^ 1983 Codex Iuris Canonici (CIC), Canon 16, §1; Codex Canonum Ecclesiarum Orientalium (CCEO), Canon 1498.
  3. ^ The Canon Law Letter and Spirit, ¶ 46, at 15 (Augustine Mendonça).
  4. ^ CIC, Canon 16, §3; CCEO, Canon 1498, §3.
  5. ^ CIC, Canon 16, §2, translated in The Canon Law Letter and Spirit 16 ("Interpretatio authentica per modum legis exhibita eandem vim habet ac lex ipsa et promulgari debet; si verba legis in se certa declaret tantum, valet retrorsum; si legem coarctet vel extendataut dubiam explicet, non retrotrahitur.").
  6. ^ CIC, Canon 16, §1; CCEO, Canon 1498, §1.
  7. ^ Pope John Paul II, apostolic constitution Pastor Bonus, Article 155, 80 Acta Apostolicae Sedis 841 (1988).
  8. ^ Caparros, et al., p. 1629
  9. ^ Caparros, et al., p. 1633.
  10. ^ C. Cum Dilecti, 6 de donat.
  11. ^ a b c "To Prelate Auditors, Officials and Advocates of the Tribunal of the Roman Rota on the occasion of the inauguration of the Judicial Year (January 21, 2012) | BENEDICT XVI". www.vatican.va. Retrieved 2022-02-20.

Bibliography edit

Attribution
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Words (in Canon Law)". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. The entry cites:

External links edit

  • 1983 Code of Canon Law for the Latin Rite (CIC)
  • 1990 Code of Canon Law for the Eastern Rites (CCEO)
  • Apostolic Constitution Pastor Bonus, June 28, 1988, by Pope John Paul II
  • Interpretationes Authenticae, Latin text of authentic interpretations through 1998, on Vatican website
  • , from a 2000 canon law course at the Pontifical College Josephinum in Columbus, Ohio

interpretation, catholic, canon, regarding, canon, catholic, church, canonists, provide, obey, rules, interpretation, acceptation, words, order, that, legislation, correctly, understood, extent, obligation, determined, contents, authentic, interpretation, tabl. Regarding the canon law of the Catholic Church canonists provide and obey rules for the interpretation and acceptation of words in order that legislation is correctly understood and the extent of its obligation is determined Contents 1 Authentic interpretation 1 1 Table of authentic interpretations 2 Rules of interpretation 2 1 Words 3 Benedict XVI s opinion 4 Notes 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksAuthentic interpretation editSee also Regulae Juris Catholic canonical use An authentic interpretation is an official and authoritative interpretation of a statute issued by the legislator of the statute In canon law an authentic interpretation has the force of law Besides the Supreme Pontiff Pope who has plenary legislative power several other authorities in the Catholic Church have various grades of legislative power Primary examples are diocesan bishops and their equivalents episcopal conferences and particular councils 1 Any of these legislators can issue authentic interpretations of their own 2 and their predecessors laws 3 Authentic interpretations supersede even administrative decisions of ordinaries and judgments of ecclesiastical courts because neither of these acts have the force of law which authentic interpretations have 4 The effect of an authentic interpretation is contingent on the extent of the interpretation An authentic interpretation which is presented by way of a law has the same force as the law itself and must be promulgated If it simply declares the words which are certain in themselves it has retroactive force If it restricts or extends a law or explains a doubtful one it is not retroactive 5 Legislators also can entrust the power to authentically interpret their laws to another 6 For the 1983 Code of Canon Law the Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches and other Papal laws the Supreme Pontiff has delegated authority of authentic interpretation to the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts 7 The following table lists the authentic interpretations that this dicastery has issued with Papal approbation Table of authentic interpretations edit Latin Canon s Publication Summary Can 87 1 AAS v 77 1985 p 771 Diocesan bishop cannot dispense from canonical form for the marriage of two Catholics Can 119 1º AAS v 82 1990 p 845 Relative majority suffices on the third scrutiny Can 127 1 AAS v 77 1985 p 771 Superior does not have the right of voting unless it is an existing custom in the community Can 230 2 AAS v 86 1994 p 541 542 Both lay men and women can serve at the altar Cann 346 1 and 402 1 AAS v 83 1991 p 1093 Bishops emeriti may be elected to the Synod of Bishops Cann 434 and 452 AAS v 81 1989 p 388 Auxiliary bishops cannot fill office of president of an episcopal conference Can 455 1 also cann 31 3 AAS v 77 1985 p 771 General decrees includes general executory decrees Can 502 1 AAS v 76 1984 p 746 747 Consultor continues in office even when no longer a member of presbyteral council Consultors need not be replaced unless the minimum required number is lacking Can 509 1 AAS v 81 1989 p 991 It is not required to select the president of a chapter of canons by election Can 684 3 AAS v 79 1987 p 1249 Religious includes religious in temporary vows Can 700 AAS v 78 1986 p 1323 1324 Religious to be notified of dismissal after confirmation by Holy See Congregation for Religious and Secular Institutes to receive suspensive recourse against dismissal Cann 705 7 AAS v 78 1986 p 1323 1324 A religious bishop does not enjoy active and passive voice in his own institute Cann 705 7 AAS v 80 1988 p 1818 1819 Religious appointed judges of the Roman Rota are not exempt from the religious Ordinary Can 767 1 AAS v 79 1987 p 1249 Diocesan bishop cannot dispense from the prescription that the homily is reserved to priests or deacons Can 830 3 AAS v 79 1987 p 1249 Imprimaturs must indicate the name of the Ordinary giving his permission and where and when the permission was given Can 910 2 also Can 230 3 AAS v 80 1988 p 1373 Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion cannot exercise their function when ordinary ministers who are not impeded from distributing the Eucharist are present in the church even though not celebrating the Mass Can 917 AAS v 76 1984 p 746 747 A person may receive Holy Communion on the same day only twice outside of the danger of death Can 951 1 AAS v 79 1987 p 1132 Mass offerings for multiple celebrations on the same day are to be sent to the proper Ordinary of the celebrant Can 964 2 AAS v 90 1998 p 711 8 A priest may choose to hear confession in a confessional with a fixed grille Can 1103 AAS v 79 1987 p 1132 Force and fear invalidate the matrimonial consent of non Catholics as well Can 1263 AAS v 81 1989 p 991 External schools of religious institutes of pontifical right are not subject to taxation by diocesan bishop Can 1367 9 AAS v 91 1999 p 918 Desecration includes any voluntary and gravely comptemptuous action towards the Eucharistic species Can 1398 AAS v 80 1988 p 1818 1819 Abortion includes the killing of a fetus in any way whatsoever at any time from the moment of conception onwards Cann 1522 and 1525 AAS v 78 1986 p 1324 Can reintroduce a case in another tribunal after instance is finished through preemption or renunciation Can 1673 3º AAS v 78 1986 p 1323 1324 The judicial vicar of the interdiocesan tribunal of the respondent cannot give the consent required for hearing a nullity case in the diocese of the plaintiff Can 1686 also Cann 1066 7 AAS v 76 1984 p 746 747 The pre nuptial investigation suffices to determine the invalidity of a prior marriage due to lack of canonical form a declaration of nullity via the documentary process is not required Can 1737 also Can 299 3 AAS v 80 1988 p 1818 A non juridical group with a grievance must take hierarchical recourse as individuals Rules of interpretation editIn general the authentic interpretation of a law may be made by the legislator or his successor or superior but when this is not the case recourse must be had to what is called magisterial or doctrinal interpretation It is for this latter mode that rules have been formed Words edit The specific words of a law are understood according to their usual signification unless it is certain that the legislator intended them to be understood otherwise When words are unambiguous they must not be twisted into another improbable signification If the intention of the legislator regarding words in question is known interpretation must accord therewith rather than with the usual signification of the words because in this instance the words are said not to be nude but rather clothed with the will of the legislator When a law is stated in general terms it is presumed that no exception was intended that is if the general law states no exception interpreters may not distinguish specific cases Regarding all interpretations however that signification of the words in question is to be preferred that favors equity rather than strict justice An argument can be made from the contrary signification of the words provided that it does produce a result that is absurd inappropriate or contradicted by another law Further the provisions of a prior statute are presumed not to be changed beyond the express signification of the words of a new law When a law is penal in nature its words are to be construed in their strictest sense and not to be extended to cases that are not explicitly stated but when a law concedes favors its words are to be interpreted in their widest sense In contracts words are to be taken in their full plena meaning in last wills in a wider plenior sense and in grants of favours in their widest plenissimi interpretation 10 When the signification of words is doubtful that sense is to be preferred that does not prejudice the rights of a third person i e a person whom the law does not directly affect or concern Words of a law are never presumed to be superfluous Words must be considered in their context An interpretation of words that renders the law in question futile is a false interpretation When words are in the future tense and even when they are in the imperative mood regarding the judge but not regarding the crime the penalty is understood to be incurred not ipso facto but only upon judicial sentence When words are doubtful they must be presumed to favor the subjects thereof and not the legislator Benedict XVI s opinion editAccording to Benedict XVI the instructions of the Magisterium regarding canon law and its interpretation are binding per se insofar as it teaches of the law The juridically binding instructions on canonical interpretation of the Magisterium are primarily given in the allocutions of the Supreme Pontiffs to the Tribunal of the Roman Rota 11 Pope Benedict XVI in his address of 21 January 2012 to the Roman Rota taught that canonical law can only be interpreted and fully understood within the Catholic Church in the light of her mission and ecclesiological structure and that the work of the interpreter must not be deprived of vital contact with ecclesial reality 11 All things considered the hermeneutics of canonical laws is most closely tied to the very understanding of the law of the Church In such realistic prospectiveness the interpretative undertaking at times arduous takes on meaning and purpose The use of the interpretive meaning foreseen by the Code of Canon Law in can 17 beginning with the proper meaning of the words considered in their text and context is no longer a mere logical exercise It has to do with an assignment that is vivified by an authentic contact with the comprehensive reality of the Church which allows one to penetrate the true meaning of the letter of the law Something then occurs similar to what I said about the inner process of St Augustine in biblical hermeneutics the transcending of the letter has rendered the letter itself credible note 1 In such a manner also in the hermeneutics of the law is it confirmed that the authentic horizon is that of the juridical truth to love to seek out and to serve It follows that the interpretation of canonical law must take place within the Church This is not a matter of mere external circumstance subject to the environs it is a calling to the same humus of Canon Law and the reality regulated by it Sentire cum Ecclesia takes on meaning also within the discipline by reason of the doctrinal foundations that are always present and operative within the legal norms of the Church In this manner is also applied to Canon Law that hermeneutics of renewal in continuity of which I spoke in reference to the Second Vatican Council note 2 so closely bound to the current canonical legislation Christian maturity leads one to love the law ever more and want to understand it and to apply it faithfully 11 Notes edit Benedict XVI 2012 Roman Rota Address citing Post Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Verbum Domini 30 September 2010 38 AAS 102 2010 p 718 n 38 Benedict XVI 2012 Roman Rota Address citing his Discourse to the Roman Curia of 22 December 2005 AAS 98 2006 pp 40 53 https w2 vatican va content benedict xvi en speeches 2005 december documents hf ben xvi spe 20051222 roman curia htmlReferences edit Canon L Socy Gr Brit amp Ir The Canon Law Letter and Spirit A Practical Guide to the Code of Canon Law 46 at 15 15 n 2 Gerard Sheehy et al eds Liturgical Press 1995 1983 Codex Iuris Canonici CIC Canon 16 1 Codex Canonum Ecclesiarum Orientalium CCEO Canon 1498 The Canon Law Letter and Spirit 46 at 15 Augustine Mendonca CIC Canon 16 3 CCEO Canon 1498 3 CIC Canon 16 2 translated in The Canon Law Letter and Spirit 16 Interpretatio authentica per modum legis exhibita eandem vim habet ac lex ipsa et promulgari debet si verba legis in se certa declaret tantum valet retrorsum si legem coarctet vel extendataut dubiam explicet non retrotrahitur CIC Canon 16 1 CCEO Canon 1498 1 Pope John Paul II apostolic constitution Pastor Bonus Article 155 80 Acta Apostolicae Sedis 841 1988 Caparros et al p 1629 Caparros et al p 1633 C Cum Dilecti 6 de donat a b c To Prelate Auditors Officials and Advocates of the Tribunal of the Roman Rota on the occasion of the inauguration of the Judicial Year January 21 2012 BENEDICT XVI www vatican va Retrieved 2022 02 20 Bibliography editNew Commentary on the Code of Canon Law ed by John P Beal James A Coriden and Thomas J Green Paulist Press 2000 ISBN 978 0 8091 0502 1 hardback ISBN 978 0 8091 4066 4 paperback 2002 Code of Canon Law Annotated second English edition ed by Ernest Caparros Michel Theriault and Jean Thorn 2004 ISBN 978 2 89127 629 0 Wilson and Lafleur ISBN 978 1 890177 44 7 Midwest Theological Forum Lawrence G Wrenn Authentic Interpretations on the 1983 Code Canon Law Society of America 1993 ISBN 978 0 943616 61 2 Pope Benedict XVI Address of His Holiness Benedict XVI for the Inauguration of the Judicial Year of the Tribunal of the Roman Rota 21 January 2012 https w2 vatican va content benedict xvi en speeches 2012 january documents hf ben xvi spe 20120121 rota romana html accessed 29 March 2016 Attribution nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Words in Canon Law Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company The entry cites Ethelred Taunton The Law of the Church London 1906 s v Lucius Ferraris Bibl Can 5 Rome 1889 s v Lex External links edit1983 Code of Canon Law for the Latin Rite CIC 1990 Code of Canon Law for the Eastern Rites CCEO Apostolic Constitution Pastor Bonus June 28 1988 by Pope John Paul II Interpretationes Authenticae Latin text of authentic interpretations through 1998 on Vatican website English translation of authentic interpretations from a 2000 canon law course at the Pontifical College Josephinum in Columbus Ohio Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Interpretation Catholic canon law amp oldid 1192104801, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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