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  2. Ecclesiastical judge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecclesiastical_Judge

    The official body appointed by the qualified ecclesiastical authority for the administration of justice is called a court (judicium ecclesiasticum, tribunal, auditorium) Every such ecclesiastical court consists at the least of two sworn officials: the ecclesiastical judge who gives the decision and the clerk of the court (scriba, secretarius, scriniarius, notarius, cancellarius), whose duty is ...

  3. Ecclesiastical court - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecclesiastical_court

    A single judge can handle normal contentious and penal cases. A college of at least three judges, however, must try cases involving an excommunication, the dismissal of a cleric, or the annulment of the bond of marriage or of sacred ordination (can. 1425 §1). The bishop can assign up to five judges to a case that is very difficult or important ...

  4. Ecclesiastical jurisdiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecclesiastical_jurisdiction

    The judicial power described above, jurisdiction strictly so called, was given by Christ to the Catholic Church, was exercised by the Apostles, and transmitted to their successors. [ 2 ] From the beginning of the Christian religion , the ecclesiastical judge, i.e. the bishop, decided matters of dispute that were purely religious in character ...

  5. Roman Rota - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_Rota

    An appeal may be had to the pope himself, who is the supreme ecclesiastical judge. [4] The Catholic Church has a complete legal system, which is the oldest in the West still in use. [5] The court is named Rota because the judges, called auditors, originally met in a round room to hear cases. [6]

  6. Judge rules former Catholic Cardinal Theodore McCarrick not ...

    www.aol.com/judge-rules-former-catholic-cardinal...

    MADISON - A Wisconsin judge on Wednesday ruled that a former Catholic cardinal is not competent to stand trial, due to a diagnosis of dementia, suspending charges of sexually assaulting a boy in ...

  7. Judicial vicar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judicial_vicar

    Other judges, who may be priests, deacons, religious brothers or sisters or nuns, or laypersons, and who must have knowledge of canon law and be Catholics in good standing, assist the judicial vicar either by deciding cases on a single judge basis or by forming with him a panel over which he or one of them presides.

  8. Judge in Catholic bankruptcy recuses over church donations

    www.aol.com/news/blatant-conflict-judge-recuses...

    A federal judge overseeing the New Orleans Roman Catholic bankruptcy recused himself in a late-night reversal that came a week after an Associated Press report showed he donated tens of thousands ...

  9. Analysis: Right-wing groups, Catholic Church are behind ...

    www.aol.com/analysis-activist-groups-behind...

    A right-wing think tank, a national conservative advocacy group and the Catholic Church in Oklahoma are behind the latest effort to change how state appellate judges and justices are appointed ...