13. Now
as we are about to promulgate this Apostolic Constitution, laying down the new
physionomy of the Roman Curia, we wish to bring together the ideas and
intentions that have guided us.
First of all we wanted the image and features of this Curia to respond to
the demands of our time, bearing in mind the changes that have been made by us
or our predecessor Paul VI after the publication of the Apostolic Constitution Regimini
Ecclesiæ universæ.
Then it was our duty to fulfill and complete that renewal of the laws of the
Church which was brought in by the publication of the new Code of Canon Law
or which is to be brought into effect by the revision of the Oriental canonical
legislation.
Then we had in mind that the traditional dicasteries and organs of the Roman
Curia be made more suitable for the purposes they were meant for, that is,
their share in governance, jurisdiction, and administration. For this reason,
their areas of competence have been distributed more aptly among them and more
distinctly delineated.
Then with an eye to what experience has taught in recent years and to the
never ending demands of Church society, we reexamined the juridical form and
raison d’être of existence of those organs which are rightly called
"postconciliar," changing on occasion their shape and organization.
We did this in order to make the work of those institutions more and more
useful and beneficial, that is, supporting special pastoral activity and
research in the Church which, at an ever accelerating pace, are filling pastors
with concern and which with the same urgency demand timely and well thought out
answers.
Finally, new and more stable measures have been devised to promote mutual
cooperation between dicasteries, so that their manner of working may
intrinsically bear the stamp of unity.
In a word, our whole steadfast approach has been to make sure that the structure
and working methods of the Roman Curia increasingly correspond to the
ecclesiology spelled out by the Second Vatican Council, be ever more clearly
suitable for achieving the pastoral purposes of its own constitution, and more
and more fit to meet the needs of Church and civil society.
It is indeed our conviction that now, at the beginning of the third
millennium after the birth of Christ, the zeal of the Roman Curia in no small
measure contributes to the Church’s fidelity to the mystery of her origin,
since the Holy Spirit keeps her ever young by the power of the Gospel.
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