Pope
Francis reforms Church law in marital nullity trials
(Vatican
Radio) Pope Francis issued two Apostolic Letters motu proprio on
Tuesday, by which he introduced reforms to the legal structures of the Church,
which deal with questions of marital nullity. One of the Letters motu
proprio, known by its Latin title, Mitis Iudex Dominus Iesus –
or “The Lord Jesus, Clement Judge” – reforms the Code of Canon Law (CIC)
governing the Latin Church, while the other, Mitis et misericors Iesus or
“Clement and merciful Jesus” – reforms the Code of Canon Law for Oriental
Churches (CCEO).
According
to the prefatory remarks attached to both Letters, the reforms are the result
of an expert group appointed to study the current state of law and practice in
the Church as far as marriage law is concerned. The Holy Father goes on in the
preface to explain that the reforms are guided by seven specific criteria,
ample excerpts of which Vatican Radio offers below in its own unofficial
English translation:
- That there be only
one sentence in favor of executive nullity – It appeared
opportune, in the first place, that there no longer be required a twofold
decision in favor of marital nullity, in order that the parties be
admitted to new canonically valid marriages: the moral certainty reached
by the first judge according to law should be sufficient.
- A single judge
under the responsibility of the Bishop – The constitution of a single
judge in the first instance, who shall always be a cleric, is placed under
the responsibility of the Bishop, who, in the pastoral exercise of his own
proper judicial power shall guarantee that no laxity be indulged in this
matter.
- The Bishop is judge – In order
that the teaching of the II Vatican Council be finally translated into
practice in an area of great importance, the decision was made to make
evident the fact that the Bishop is, in his Church – of which he is
constituted pastor and head – is by that same constitution judge among the
faithful entrusted to him. It is desired that, in Dioceses both great and
small, the Bishop himself should offer a sign of the conversion of
ecclesiastical structures, and not leave the judicial function completely
delegated to the offices of the diocesan curia, as far as matters
pertaining to marriage are concerned.
- Increased brevity
in the legal process – In fact, beyond making the marriage annulment
process more agile, a briefer form of trying nullity cases has been
designed – in addition to the documentary process already approved and in
use – which is to be applied in cases in which the accusation of marital
nullity is supported by particularly evident arguments. In any case, the
extent to which an abbreviated process of judgment might put the principle
of the indissolubility of marriage at risk, did not escape me [writes Pope
Francis – ed.]: thus, I have desired that, in such cases the Bishop
himself shall be constituted judge, who, by force of his pastoral office
is with Peter the greatest guarantor of Catholic unity in faith and in
discipline.
- Appeal to the
Metropolitcan See – It is fitting that the appeal to the
Metropolitan See be re-introduced, since that office of headship of an
Ecclesiastical province, stably in place through the centuries, is a
distinctive sign of the synodality of the Church.
- The proper role of
the Bishops’ Conferences – The Bishops’ Conferences, which
must be driven above all by the anxious apostolic desire to reach the
far-off faithful, should formally recognize the duty to share the
aforesaid conversion, and respect absolutely the right of the
Bishops to organize judicial power each within his own particular Church.
There-establishment
of vicinity between the judge and the faithful, in fact, shall not be
successful if the stimulus does not come from the Conferences to the single
Bishops, along with the necessary assistance, to put into practice the reform
of the marital nullity process.
- Appeal to the
Apostolic See –
It is fitting that the appeal to the ordinary Tribunal of the Apostolic
See, i.e. the Roman Rota, be maintained: this, in respect of a most
ancient juridical principle, so that the bond between the See of Peter and
the particular Churches be reinforced – having care, in any case, in the
discipline of the use of said appeal, to contain any and all abuse of
right, in order that the salvation of souls be given no cause for harm.
Indeed,
the prefatory remarks make clear from the very start, that the single most
important principle guiding the Holy Father’s action and the work of reform
undertaken, is that of salus animarum – the salvation of souls
– which is the suprema Ecclesiae lex – the supreme law of the
Church.

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