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But much of the law is divine…therefore there can really never be massive changes in this areas:What a dumb question. Only God can change Divine Law.
The Pope, however, can change Ecclesiastical law, each and every jot and tittle.
Cardinal Ottaviani said:“Jesus Christ, the divine founder of the Church, could indeed have left many things to the decision of men in regard to the social organisation of the Church: nevertheless, in fact He did not so leave them, but He Himself willed to establish all things which regard the fundamental constitution and organisation of the Church in so far as it is a perfect society. Consequently the principal part of the public law is divine, containing the immutable and permanent laws concerning the nature of the church, her authority and teaching office … Examples of divine public law are: the statutes by which the Church is granted full and independent legislative, judicial, and coercive power in affairs which in any manner pertain to her end; also, the statutes which pertain to the primacy of jurisdiction of the Roman Pontiff over the whole Church, and the constitution of the sacred hierarchy; similarly, those by which the Church is granted the faculty, free and independent from any power, of acquiring, keeping and administering temporal goods in order to achieve ends proper to herself. Examples of human public law are: norms relative to the institution and rights of patriarchal sees; certain rights contained in concordats; certain norms concerning the government of the Church during the vacancy of the Apostolic See and the election of the Roman Pontiff.” (1)
(1) Cardinal Ottaviani,* Institutiones Iuris Publici Ecclesiastici *[Rome, Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis, 1958], p. 10-11, (citing Pope St. Pius X, constitution Vacante Sede Ap., 25 Dec. 1904.)