Kanonika 29. The Apostolic See and the Eastern Catholic Churches: from the Tridentine Era to the Present

Kanonika 29. The Apostolic See and the Eastern Catholic Churches: from the Tridentine Era to the Present

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Language: english

Author: Sean T. Doyle, J.C.D.

Kanonika Series n. 29 | Publisher: Orientalia Christiana & Valore Italiano

ISBN 978-88-97789-70-3 | PP. 624 | 2019

In the present work the author studies how efforts at understanding the juridic relationship between the Apostolic See and the Eastern Catholic Churches over the past roughly five hundred years have led to the increased recognition of the juridic autonomy of those Churches. The work first focuses on the early jurisprudence concerning the binding force of papal legislation on Eastern faithful, highlighting an important though unapproved decision made by a particular congregation of the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith in 1631, which declared that the popes did not intend to bind the subjects of the sees of the schismatic patriarchs by certain types of apostolic constitutions except in three particular cases. The work then reviews the jurisprudence of Pope Benedict XIV, who cited this decision three times in his writings; the events of the pontificate of Pope Pius IX, particularly those surrounding the First Vatican Council when the preconciliar commission on the Churches of the Eastern rite sought to suppress the praxis based on this decision; the period of the first codification of canon law, when this decision was reaffirmed in praxis; and, finally, the Second Vatican Council and the second codification period, when this decision became the basis for canon 1492 of the Eastern code. This study emphasizes the impact that the jurisprudence surrounding the 1631 decision has had on how the understanding of Eastern juridic autonomy has developed in the Catholic Church. It also shows how the current canonical norms impacting Eastern autonomy can be better understood in light of this historical development.

Sean T. Doyle, J.C.D. (1985, Glenside, Pennsylvania). Having obtained a bachelor’s degree from Fordham University, he graduated from the Catholic University of America with a License in Canon Law in 2012, and with a Doctorate in Canon Law in 2018. He currently works for both the Metropolitan Tribunal and the Chancery Latin Archdiocese of Philadelphia.