enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Dispensation (Catholic canon law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dispensation_(Catholic...

    The Holy See has at times granted dispensations from the celibacy requirement for former Anglican priests and former Lutheran ministers. [9] Papal dispensation is a reserved right of the pope that allows for individuals to be exempted from a specific Canon law. Dispensations are divided into two categories: general, and matrimonial.

  3. Obreption and subreption (Catholic canon law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obreption_and_subreption...

    Subreption in Catholic Canon law is "a concealment of the pertinent facts in a petition, as for dispensation or favor, that in certain cases nullifies the grant", [3] "the obtainment of a dispensation or gift by concealment of the truth". [2] The terms are also used in the same senses as in Catholic canon law in Scots law. [2]

  4. 1983 Code of Canon Law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1983_Code_of_Canon_Law

    The forms of teaching are the ministry of the Divine Word in the forms of the preaching of the word of God and the catechetical instruction, the missionary action of the church, the Catholic education in schools, Catholic universities and other institutes of higher studies and the ecclesiastical universities and faculties, the instruments of ...

  5. List of excommunicable offences in the Catholic Church

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Excommunicable...

    Any cleric who wears multicoloured clothing not in keeping with his clerical status, whose clothes are not at least ankle-length, or any head of a cathedral, Catholic college or chaplain to a cardinal who fails to wear a head covering in public, or clerics who pay too much attention to their hair or beards, or clerics who use silk and velvet ...

  6. Jurisprudence of Catholic canon law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jurisprudence_of_Catholic...

    The Catholic Church developed the inquisitorial system in the Middle Ages. [7] This judicial system features collegiate panels of judges and an investigative form of proceeding, [8] in contradistinction to the adversarial system found in the common law of England and many of her former colonies, which utilises concepts such as juries and single ...

  7. Indult - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indult

    In Catholic canon law, an indult is a permission or privilege, granted by the competent church authority – the Holy See or the diocesan bishop, as the case may be – for an exception from a particular norm of church law in an individual case.

  8. Privilege (Catholic canon law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Privilege_(Catholic_canon_law)

    The distinction between privilege and dispensation was not always clearly observed, and the term dispensation rather than privilege was used, even when the nature of the act made it clearly a privilege. Indeed, medieval canonists treated privileges and dispensations

  9. Petrine privilege - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petrine_Privilege

    Petrine privilege, also known as the privilege of the faith or favor of the faith, is a ground recognized in Catholic canon law allowing for dissolution by the Pope of a valid natural marriage between a baptized and a non-baptized person for the sake of the salvation of the soul of someone who is thus enabled to marry in the Church.