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ADDENDA: PROPER LAW
AND THE FORMATION GUIDE
The
Formation Guide is part of the Proper Law of the Institute. As members of a
Religious Institute, our identity is defined, and our rights and obligations
are set out in Ecclesiastical Law.
Ecclesistical Law
There are
three categories of ecclesiastical law - Universal, Particular, and Proper.
Universal
Law is promulgated by the Pope for the Universal Church and applies to all
Christ’s faithful. Universal law for all religious is found in the Code of
Canon Law, Canons 573 to 709.
Particular
Law is promulgated by a particular Bishop or Conference of Bishops and applies
only in a particular diocese or country. eg. Holydays of obligation, laws of
fasting.
Proper
Law is promulgated by the legitimate authority ( eg. a General Chapter) of a
group within the Church and applies only to the members of that group. (eg. The
Marist Brothers)
The
Proper Law of our Institute comprises, first and foremost, the Constitutions.
Other elements of Proper Law are in The Statutes, The General Chapter Statutes,
the General Chapter Rules of Procedure, the Vade Mecum, and, of course, the
Formation Guide. The concept of Proper Law is new in the Church and
derives from Vatican Council II.
Religious Life in Vatican II
Vatican
Council II was the first Council of the Church to treat comprehensively
religious life. One of its most significant insights is found in Perfectae
Caritatis 2:
"It
is for the good of the Church that institutes have their own proper characters
and functions. Therefore the spirit and aims of each founder should be
faithfully accepted and retained, as indeed should each institute’s sound
traditions, for all these constitute the patrimony of an institute."
ECCLESIASTICAL
LAW AND RELIGIOUS INSTITUTES
This
insight has been translated into the Code of Canon Law -
c 578
. The
intention of the founders and their determination concerning the nature,
purpose, spirit and character of the institute which have been ratified by
competent ecclesiastical authority as well as its wholesome traditions, all of
which constitute the patrimony of the institute itself, are to be observed
faithfully by all.
This
became a significant principle of the development of Church Law concerning
religious life. Hence, the Church has legislated that "for individual
institutes there is acknowledged a rightful autonomy of life, especially of
government..." (c 586 §1) and that " the competent authority of
the Church...(is) to take care that institutes grow and flourish according to
the spirit of the founders and wholesome traditions" (c 576).
PROPER
LAW OF THE INSTITUTE
One of
the ways in which the Church tries to ensure that this principle is, in fact,
operative in the life of a religious institute is through Proper Law, which, as
already mentioned, is an entirely new term in ecclesiastical law.
c 587
- §1.In order to protect more faithfully the particular vocation and vision
of each institute, its fundamental code or constitutions must contain, besides
what must be observed according to c 578, fundamental norms about governance of
the institute and the discipline of members, the incorporation and formation of
members, and the proper object of sacred bonds.
2. A code of this
kind is approved by the competent authority of the Church and can only be
changed with its consent.
3. In this code
spiritual ad juridical elements are to be suitably joined together; however,
norms are not to be multiplied unless it is necessary.
4. Other norms
established by the competent authority of the institute are to be suitably
collected in other codes, which can moreover be fittingly reviewed and adapted
according to the needs of places and times.
From this
it emerges that there is a hierarchy in Proper Law. Clearly, the fundamental
code is the Constitutions. Secondly , there are other codes which can be
fittingly reviewed and adapted. Thirdly, Proper Law contains both spiritual and
juridical elements. Fourthly, norms are not to be multiplied unnecessarily.
The
Formation Guide as one of the so-called "other codes" is part of our
Proper Law.
THE GENERAL CHAPTER AND
PROPER LAW
The
Church places the obligation of developing Proper Law for the whole Institute
on the General Chapter.
c 631
- §1. The General Chapter....Its foremost duty is this: to protect the
patrimony of the institute mentioned in c 578, and promote suitable renewal in
accord with this patrimony, to elect the supreme moderator, to treat major
business matters and to publish norms which all are bound to obey.
This
canon is translated into the Proper Law of the Institute in Constitutions 139.
In fact, to help institutes, the Church has stipulated in some seventy canons
of the Code of Canon Law, matters which must be developed in their Proper Law.
A glance at the references in our own Constitutions reveals how we have done
this.
THE FORMATION GUIDE
One of
those specific matters concerns the formation of the members of an institute.
c 659
- §1. In individual institutes after first profession the formation of all
members is to be continued so that they may lead more fully the proper life of
the institute and carry out its mission more suitably.
2. Therefore, proper
law must define the program of this formation and its duration, keeping in mind
the needs of the Church and the circumstances of human persons and times to the
extent that this is required by the purpose and character of the institute.
The
principal response of our Institute to this injunction is found in Chapter 6 of
the Constitutions. As that chapter makes clear however (C 95.1), the
Institute’s programme of formation is further elaborated in the Formation
Guide.
THE OBLIGATIONS OF PROPER LAW
As
religious, we "have as our highest rule of life the following of Christ as
proposed in the gospel and expressed in the Constitutions of the
Institute" (c 662) We therefore follow the spirit and prescriptions
of our Proper Law, of which, the Constitutions certainly forms the fundamental
part.
This is
not the place to enter into an analysis of Law, its obligations, and
appropriate interpretation. However, a couple of comments may be helpful.
Law
exists to protect some value. Ecclesiastical law must always remain fully
integrated with, and dependent on, religious and human values. Clearly, not all
the values promoted and supported by ecclesiastical laws are equal. As has
already been noted above, there exists a genuine hierarchy among them. The
temptation to rely solely on what is in print and is clear can be a serious
one. Equally, the task of interpreting and applying wisely, is a delicate one.
With
regard to Proper Law there are principles to help our interpretation.
For
example, we should remember that the name of any book of Proper Law expresses
its nature and purpose. Our present concern is The Formation Guide. That is
what it is. It presents a programme to guide the implementation throughout the
Institute, of that true Marist formation which is defined in Chapter 6 of the
Constitutions.
We should
recognise that any such text is not uniform with respect to literary form.
There are, for example, statements based on dogma, others based on theological
opinion. There are spiritual exhortations, there are affirmations borrowed from
empirical science, notably psychology. There are also juridical statements
based on Canon Law and the Constitutions, but clearly, not every one of its
sentences presents a prescriptive norm. If we don’t acknowledge these different
literary forms, we are reduced to a position of absurd legalism which has no
place in the application of ecclesiastical law.
SUPREME LAW
OF THE CHURCH
Ecclesiastical
Law is "to be applied with due regard for canonical equity and having
before one’s eyes the salvation of souls, which is always the supreme law of
the Church" (c 1752)
Equity is
an ancient concept in law which acknowledges that sometimes, and in a specific
case, a higher ethical value must take precedence over the strict application
of the letter of the law.The Church herself acknowledges that the salvation of
souls is such a value.
Hence,
legalism or literalism have no place in the application and interpretation of
ecclesiastical law. Hence too, the concept of dispensation forms part of
ecclesiastical law.
( eg.
Constitutions 130 - ...the Brother Superior General...can, for a time, dispense
a Brother, a community, or a Province from particular points of discipline of
the Constitutions.)
We do
well to remember that The Formation Guide is our specific response in the
Proper Law of the Institute to the demand of the Church that we define our
program of formation, "keeping in mind the needs of the Church and
the circumstances of human persons and times to the extent that this is
required by the purpose and character of the institute" (c 659, 2).
The
spirit of such a carefully nuanced prescription is reflected in our own Statute
103.3. Speaking of the Post-Novitiate formation it says -
"When
circumstances are such that other arrangements have to be made, the Brother
Provincial and his Council will examine what is the best way to achieve the
objectives aimed at in each stage".
Conclusion
All Law
is historically and culturally conditioned. It does not stand alone, but must
be understood in the context of the whole system. We need to distinguish the
essentials which are needed to uphold a value and protect the mystery, from the
accidentals that are no more than historical accretions.
The
acceptance of such facts, and the fact that there are many literary forms in
any Ecclesiastical Law (including our own Proper Law) has a liberating effect
on our appreciation of the role of law in our community. It eliminates the fear
that the law may strangle the mysteries.
Finally
we should remember in our approach to Ecclesiastical Law, that it is "the
salvation of souls, which is always the supreme law of the Church" (c
1752)
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