canon law
From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
|
Date: 2008
canon law in the Roman Catholic Church, the body of law based on the legislation of the councils (both ecumenical and local) and the popes, as well as the bishops (for diocesan matters). It is the law of the church courts and is formally distinguished from other parts of ecclesiastical law, such as liturgical law. However, when liturgical law overlaps with canon law, canon law normally prevails. Canon law has had a profound influence on the law of countries where the Roman Catholic Church has been the state church. In the Middle Ages the church courts had very wide jurisdiction—e.g., in England, control of the law of personal property—and because they were well regulated, they tended to attract many borderline cases that might also have been heard by the developing royal courts (see benefit of clergy ).
Catholics of Eastern rites have their own separate codes of canon law, approved by the Roman Catholic Church. The term "canon law" is also used for ecclesiastical law in churches of the Anglican Communion. The Anglican Constitutions and Canons Ecclesiastical (1603) was a collection of rulings, not based on the old canon law, but given equal force with the canon law.
The Canon Law Code
The Code of Canon Law for the Latin Church, which became effective in 1983, is a revision of the Codex juris canonici [code of canon law], promulgated in 1917. The code itself, the culmination of centuries of legal growth, consists of 1,752 canons in seven books and supersedes all previous compilations. It does not contain all canon law, which continues to grow, but it is the base of the present-day law, and the study of canon law consists mainly in mastering the code and its application. Canon law lays down rules for the governance and regulation of the clergy and the church, including such matters as the qualifications, duties, and discipline of the clergy and the administration of the sacraments (more particularly the laws regarding holy orders and the sacrament of marriage). Canon law embraces both general laws applicable in the church universal, such as those on requirements for the priesthood and those on marriage, and local laws applicable only in certain dioceses.
Compilations of Canon Law
The early law grew particularly from the canons of church councils, from the letters of bishops regarding church discipline and governance, and later from papal letters, called decretals, that settled matters of ecclesiastical government and discipline. After the 4th cent. this legislation grew profuse, and attempts to collect and correlate the laws began early (see Constitutions, Apostolic ). These collections were private in that they seem not to have been authorized by the popes. They also contained material that was not genuine, as in the case of the False Decretals . It was not until the middle of the 12th cent. that the great genius of the canon law, Gratian , following after Ivo of Chartres , applied the methods of Roman law in bringing order out of the chaos of conflicting and uncoordinated legislation. His Concordia discordantanium canonum (c.1140) or Decretum Gratiani [Gratian's Collection of Decrees] became the basis for future compilations of the law.
The first decretal compilations authorized by the popes appeared in the 13th cent. Important among these later "official" collections were the Extravagantes or Liber extra of Gregory IX , so named because they were outside Gratian; the collection issued (1298) by Boniface VIII called Liber sextus [the sixth book] because it added to the five books of decretals promulgated by Gregory; the collection promulgated (1317) by John XXII , drawn mostly from the constitutions of Clement V at the Council of Vienne and called the Clementinae; the work commonly called Corpus juris canonici, which in 1500 combined all the preceding with the Extravagantes of John XXII and the Extravagantes communes (decretals from Boniface VIII through Sixtus IV that were not included in previous collections) and was to be the fundamental work in canon law for centuries. The Council of Trent (1545-63, with interruptions) by its decrees concerning the church and church discipline was a landmark in canon law.
Church legislation had become considerably confused by the time St. Pius X announced (1904) the undertaking of the Codex juris canonici. This was drafted by a commission of cardinals headed by Cardinal Gasparri. In 1917, when the code was finished, a permanent commission of cardinals was set up to interpret it. In 1959, Pope John XXIII convoked the Second Vatican Council and announced a revision of the code of 1917. In 1963 he appointed a pontifical commission for the revision; the revised code became effective in 1983.
Bibliography
See J. A. Abbo and J. D. Hannan, The Sacred Canons (2d rev. ed. 1960); S. Kuttner, Harmony from Dissonance: An Interpretation of Medieval Canon Law (1960); R. Metz, What Is Canon Law? (1960); T. L. Bouscaren and A. C. Ellis, Canon Law (4th rev. ed. 1966).
Author not available, CANON LAW.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
For permission to reuse this article, contact Copyright Clearance Center.
Related articles from HighBeam Research:
|
The canon of family law.
Stanford Law Review; 12/1/2004; Hasday, Jill Elaine; 42739 words;
... Exclusion of Federal Law from the Family Law Canon B. The Consequences of the Canon ... Exclusion of Welfare Law from the Family Law Canon B. The Consequences of the Canon ... recently turned to the constitutional law canon, (1) has most commonly understood ...
|
|
Constitutional law's loose canon: are we running software without the operating system?
Constitutional Commentary; 6/22/2000; Lively, Donald E.; 2819 words;
The canon of constitutional law, like any fundamental ... denominators of constitutional law casebooks should reveal the canon's general shadings ... a more multifaceted canon or even competing canons. Constitutional law traditionally has been ...
|
|
Cracking the code: rights in the church? You bet. The Code of Canon Law outlines dozens. We just need to learn to exercise them, this canon lawyers says.(expert witness)(interview with Ladislas Orsy)(Interview)
U.S. Catholic; 10/1/2007; 3167 words;
... S.J. Though some may think of canon law as the dark side of the Good News or a labyrinth of rules that affects ... Ladislas Orsy, who has taught canon law in Rome and the United States and ... problem today, and perhaps a reason canon law seems so removed from the lives ... it. At ...
|
|
The canon(s) of constitutional law: an introduction.
Constitutional Commentary; 6/22/2000; Tushnet, Mark V.; 4260 words;
... competing canons. Is there a canon of constitutional law?(1) A group of casebook authors ... short paper describing the canon of constitutional law, either as reflected in his ... focus of the constitutional law canon, another involves the canon ...
|
|
Experts: Canon law second in church property cases.(News)
The Boston Herald; 8/29/2002; Sullivan, Jack; 531 words;
Leading canon law experts said yesterday that civil statute ... Catholic Archbishop of Boston as owner, canon law recognizes local parishes as the property ... yesterday that interpretation is inaccurate. Canon law defers to civil laws in this instance ...
|
|
CANON LAW CHANGES SEEN A POSSIBILITY
The Boston Globe; 10/19/2002; Sacha Pfeiffer, GLOBE STAFF; 756 words;
... approved by American bishops in June, canon law experts warned that the bishops ... the solution may involve changes to canon law itself, not just to the Dallas policy ... and unchanging body of precepts - canon law could be revised in the process ...
|
|
Liturgy and Law: Liturgical Law in the System of Roman Catholic Canon Law
Pastoral Music; 6/1/2007; Strickland, Amy; 696 words;
... Law in the System of Roman Catholic Canon Law John M. Huels. Wilson & Lafleur ... latest in the Gratianus collection of canon law texts. Authored by John M. Huels, a tenured professor of canon law at Saint Paul University in Ontario ...
|
|
Text on Eastern canon law published
Ukrainian Weekly, The; 5/15/1994; Bohdan Hodiak; 649 words;
... Weekly, The 05-15-1994 Text on Eastern canon law published. Archimandrite Victor J ... Archimandrite Pospishil has published Eastern canon law for use by priests, religious and ... Catholic (CCEO) and the Latin (CIC) canon law and reference is made to the Eastern ...
|
|
The Early Development of Canon Law and the Council of Serdica.(Book Review)
Church History; 6/1/2005; Behr, John; 846 words;
The Early Development of Canon Law and the Council of Serdica. By Hamilton ... Landmark in the Early Development of Canon Law, which, as an Oxford doctoral thesis ... now part 1, Councils, Canons and Canon Law. In an appendix, Hess has also added ...
|
|
Canon Law Meets Unintended Consequences: The Church of England and the Clandestine Marriage Act of 1753*
Anglican and Episcopal History; 12/1/2003; Francis, Keith A; 9011 words;
... A Gentleman of the Temple, 1754 Canon law is "the collection of rules, found ... in an official parish register.17 Canon law specifically proscribed each of these ... which were not stated explicitly in canon law opened the possibility of secular ...
|
|
The Law and the Prophets: A Study in Old Testament Canon Formation
The Catholic Biblical Quarterly; 7/1/2002; Owens, J Edward; 716 words;
STEPHEN B. CHAPMAN, The Law and the Prophets: A Study in Old Testament Canon Formation (FAT 27 ... nomistic theory of OT canon formation in which the Law, Prophets, and Writings ... formation of the canon? Furthermore, is ... subordinate to the Law as problematic as ...
|
|
Canon City, Colo. Resident Speaks Up About Need For a Law Library.(Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News)
Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News; 6/26/2000; Harmon, Tracy; 693 words;
... federal inmates all have access to law libraries at local jails and prisons ... Stumpf to continue her search for a law he knew would shed light on public access to law books. I wanted to type in `Law Library' on my computer, but instead I typed in `Library Law' -- it was a mistake on my ...
|
|
A comparative constitutional law canon?
Constitutional Commentary; 6/22/2000; Finn, John E. Kommers, Donald P.; 5660 words;
... of abstraction, a constitutional law canon might be simply canonical cases ... a loosely defined constitutional law canon that governs the organization of ... it. III. MAKING THE CONSTITUTIONAL LAW CANON COMPARATIVE Much of our concern about ...
|
|
Archdiocese: Policy, canon law don't conflict.(News)
The Boston Herald; 11/2/2002; Convey, Eric; 612 words;
... believe there is no conflict between canon law and a proposed new policy for dealing ... believe our policy is in accord with canon law, spokeswoman Donna Morrissey said ... a time limit on allegations. But canon law, for the most part, requires that ...
|
|
The canon of constitutional law for undergraduate teaching: the melding of constitutional theory, law and interpretive empirical political science.
Constitutional Commentary; 6/22/2000; Kahn, Ronald; 4247 words;
... innovation in the taught canon and constitutional law textbooks, with insights ... Frederick Douglass, to the canon of constitutional law.(7) They argue for the inclusion ... may do more to expand the canon of constitutional law vertically, and get our ...
|
See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.
Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:
Surprised by Canon Law.(Surprised by Canon Law: More Questions Ask About Canon Law)(Brief article)(Book review)
Small Press Bookwatch; 5/1/2008; 125 words;
|
Tissa ouster not canonically legal, lawyer says. (Sri Lankan Catholic theologian Tissa Balasuriya's excommunication; canon law researcher Stefan Gigacz)
National Catholic Reporter; 8/1/1997; Schaeffer, Pamela; 565 words;
|
Did Phoenix bishop go too far? O'Brien accord with prosecutors raises canon law questions. (Church In Crisis).
National Catholic Reporter; 6/20/2003; Feuerherd, Joe; 729 words;
|
Independent canon law group founded. (Justice for Priests and Deacons program)(Brief Article)
National Catholic Reporter; 10/9/1998; Johnston, Rosemary; 408 words;
|
Canon law society probes issues of justice, due process at annual convention. (Nation).
National Catholic Reporter; 10/25/2002; Gabriel, Margaret; 1029 words;
|
Canon law says bishop doesn't own parishes. (law and church ownership of real property)
National Catholic Reporter; 12/19/1997; Schaeffer, Pamela; 378 words;
|
Society examines ordination of women deacons.(Canon Law Society of America to issue favorable recommendation in October 1995)(Brief Article)
National Catholic Reporter; 8/11/1995; Edwards, Robin T.; 377 words;
|
The lady has rights, too.(medieval canon law and a woman's right to marry by choice)(Brief Article)
National Catholic Reporter; 9/22/2000; MACY, GARY; 220 words;
|
Pope secretly approves changes to permit quicker trials, dismissal of priests. (Church In Crisis).(Canon law)
National Catholic Reporter; 3/7/2003; Allen, John L., Jr.; 802 words;
|
Married priest celebrating Mass in Saginaw: parish cites canon law, invites priest. (Saginaw, Michigan; Father Leo Lynch)
National Catholic Reporter; 2/26/1993; McCarthy, Tim; 884 words;
|
|
|