CHAPTER III CONCERNING BISHOPS COOPERATING FOR
THE COMMON GOOD OF MANY CHURCHES
I.
Synods, Councils and especially Episcopal Conferences
36. From the very first centuries of the Church
bishops, as rulers of individual churches, were deeply moved by the communion
of fraternal charity and zeal for the universal mission entrusted to the
Apostles. And so they pooled their abilities and their wills for the common
good and for the welfare of the individual churches. Thus came into being
synods, provincial councils and plenary councils in which bishops established
for various churches the way to be followed in teaching the truths of faith and
ordering ecclesiastical discipline.
This
sacred ecumenical synod earnestly desires that the venerable institution of
synods and councils flourish with fresh vigor. In such
a way faith will be deepened and discipline preserved more fittingly and
efficaciously in the various churches, as the needs of the times require.
37. In these days especially bishops frequently
are unable to fulfill their office effectively and
fruitfully unless they develop a common effort involving constant growth in
harmony and closeness of ties with other bishops. Episcopal conferences already
established in many nations-have furnished outstanding proofs of a more
fruitful apostolate. Therefore, this sacred synod considers it to be supremely
fitting that everywhere bishops belonging to the same nation or region form an
association which would meet at fixed times. Thus, when the insights of
prudence and experience have been shared and views exchanged, there will emerge
a holy union of energies in the service of the common good of the churches.
Wherefore,
this sacred synod decrees the following concerning episcopal
conferences:
38. 1.) An episcopal
conference is, as it were, a council in which the bishops of a given nation or
territory jointly exercise their pastoral office to promote the greater good
which the Church offers mankind, especially through the forms and methods of
the apostolate fittingly adapted to the circumstances of the age.
2. )
Members of the episcopal conference are all local
Ordinaries of every rite-excluding vicar generals-and coadjutors, auxiliaries
and other titular bishops who perform a special work entrusted to them by the
Apostolic See or the episcopal conferences. Other
titular bishops, legates of the Roman pontiff, because of their exceptional
office in the territory are not de iure members of
the conferences. Local Ordinaries and coadjutors hold a deliberative vote.
Auxiliaries and other bishops who have a right to attend the conference will
hold either a deliberative or a consultative vote, as the statutes of the
conference determine.
3.) Each episcopal conference is to draft its own statutes for
recognition by the Apostolic See. In these statutes, among other things,
offices should be established which will aid in achieving its purpose more
efficaciously, for example, a permanent board of bishops, episcopal
commissions and a general secretariat.
4.)
Decisions of the episcopal conference, provided they
have been approved legitimately and by the votes of at least two-thirds of the
prelates who have a deliberative vote in the conference, and have been
recognized by the Apostolic See, are to have juridically
binding force only in those cases prescribed by the common law or determined by
a special mandate of the Apostolic See, given either spontaneously or in
response to a petition of the conference itself.
5.)
Wherever special circumstances require and with the approbation of the
Apostolic See, bishops of many nations can establish a single conference.
Communications
between episcopal conferences of different nations
should be especially encouraged in order to promote and safeguard the common
good.
6.) It is
highly recommended that the prelates of the Oriental Churches, promoting the
discipline of their own churches in synods and efficaciously fostering works
for the good of religion, should take into account also the common good of the
whole territory where many churches of different rites exist. They should
exchange views at inter-ritual meetings in keeping with norms to be given by
the competent authority.
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