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Giggly_Giraffe
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Would the Bishops allow a Priest to become an elected official (Govenor, Mayor, President, ect?).
How about a Deacon?
A Nun?
How about a Deacon?
A Nun?
A deacon, priest, and bishop are clerics, and there is specific canon about permanent deacons. There could be a dispensation given to allow a bishop or priest to hold political office but is is not normal. There is also a normal restriction on religious and members of societies of apostolic life.Would the Bishops allow a Priest to become an elected official (Govenor, Mayor, President, ect?).
How about a Deacon?
A Nun?
For sake of my historical curiosity, does anyone know when did this become the norm? The Middle Ages and Renaissance are littered with examples of clergymen, up to and including Cardinals, exercising huge temporal power as a matter of course. Obviously I can see very good reasons for the customary rule today (as you say, a dispensation could be perhaps granted if it was ever an issue), but anyone know when it changed?A deacon, priest, and bishop are clerics, and there is specific canon about permanent deacons. There could be a dispensation given to allow a bishop or priest to hold political office but is is not normal. There is also a normal restriction on religious and members of societies of apostolic life.
Josef Tiso was an active priest and head of the Slovakian government under the Third Reich - not the best example (in the human being sense) but a recent example nevertheless.For sake of my historical curiosity, does anyone know when did this become the norm? The Middle Ages and Renaissance are littered with examples of clergymen, up to and including Cardinals, exercising huge temporal power as a matter of course. Obviously I can see very good reasons for the customary rule today (as you say, a dispensation could be perhaps granted if it was ever an issue), but anyone know when it changed?
This was a gradual change, not an immediate one. Once the Protestant Reformation took place, it became increasingly difficult for priests to serve in state capacities. I am not familiar with any universal rules against it Pope John Paul II, who went on to include it in 1983 code, but over time it was became to be seen as increasingly unsustainable, though in most cases local bishops were left to make that determination.For sake of my historical curiosity, does anyone know when did this become the norm? The Middle Ages and Renaissance are littered with examples of clergymen, up to and including Cardinals, exercising huge temporal power as a matter of course. Obviously I can see very good reasons for the customary rule today (as you say, a dispensation could be perhaps granted if it was ever an issue), but anyone know when it changed?
Although I can’t remember the details I recently watched a PBS special about the impeachment of Nixon and there was a Catholic priest that was in Congress at that time and voted for the impeachment and gave a commentary as to why he voted that way. So that would be somewhat recent history.For sake of my historical curiosity, does anyone know when did this become the norm? The Middle Ages and Renaissance are littered with examples of clergymen, up to and including Cardinals, exercising huge temporal power as a matter of course. Obviously I can see very good reasons for the customary rule today (as you say, a dispensation could be perhaps granted if it was ever an issue), but anyone know when it changed?
Although I can’t remember the details I recently watched a PBS special about the impeachment of Nixon and there was a Catholic priest that was in Congress at that time and voted for the impeachment and gave a commentary as to why he voted that way. So that would be somewhat recent history.
This was a gradual change, not an immediate one. Once the Protestant Reformation took place, it became increasingly difficult for priests to serve in state capacities. I am not familiar with any universal rules against it Pope John Paul II, who went on to include it in 1983 code, but over time it was became to be seen as increasingly unsustainable, though in most cases local bishops were left to make that determination.
That said, in the US we had two notable instances in the 1970s of priests serving in Congress. Father Robert Drinan, SJ of Massachussetts served in the US House of Representatives in the 1970s, and is remembered for his liberal Democratic stances, and wearing his clerics while on the House floor, most notably during the Watergate impeachment vote in 1974. The other case was just after Wategrgate, but also in the 1970s, when Father Robert John Cornell, O.Praem. also served in the U.S. House, representing Wisconsin. He was also a liberal Democrat, though I don’t recall his being as strident as Drinan was. Both of these clerics did not seek re-election in 1980 when Pope John Paul II insisted that clerics not serve in elected offices. This order was as a result not of the two priests in Congress, but also situations in El Salvador and other Latin American countries.
Thank you all!!Josef Tiso was an active priest and head of the Slovakian government under the Third Reich - not the best example (in the human being sense) but a recent example nevertheless.
So, it wasn’t a blanket prohibition but, for many centuries, clerics were advised to refrain from whatever would be seen as foreign to their state.Because, moreover, priests set an example, they should be living models of virtue and constancy. They should be cautious, however, not to get too involved in civilian or political affairs, and let them often recall this passage from St. Paul, “No one serving as God’s soldier entangles himself in worldly affairs, that he may please him whose approval he has secured.” papalencyclicals.net/Leo13/l13hun.htm
In 1966, Pope Paul VI issued moto proprio De episcoporum muneribus, which reserver to the Holy See, dispensations for clergy to assume political office with lay jurisdiciton or administration. The 1983 Canon Law does not include this reservation of dispensation to the Holy See, but there needs to exist “a just and reasonable cause”.For sake of my historical curiosity, does anyone know when did this become the norm? The Middle Ages and Renaissance are littered with examples of clergymen, up to and including Cardinals, exercising huge temporal power as a matter of course. Obviously I can see very good reasons for the customary rule today (as you say, a dispensation could be perhaps granted if it was ever an issue), but anyone know when it changed?
In the Philippines it is forbidden. When a priest ran for the office of Governor he was suspended from priestly duties.Would the Bishops allow a Priest to become an elected official (Govenor, Mayor, President, ect?).
How about a Deacon?
A Nun?
To sidetrack into the Anglican Church, as you brought up Henry VIII; there is a long long history of secular rules getting deeply involved in the Church, and using the Church to further personal secular ends (think Constantine onwards really). So I suppose Henry felt he was in good company! Article 21 of the Anglican 39 Articles (they were of different number and scope in Henry’s day, but the idea was still included), which still at least nominally reflects the doctrine in the Church of England, states thatInterestingly, here is this children’s book about St Anthony of Padua in our Adoration Chapel. I guess he was born Fernando Martins, and gave up all inheritance and titles due to him when he entered achool (to be a priest) around 1200. I guess the cannon laws must have been in place for a long time.
So, this is leading me to wonder how Henry 8th felt that mixing religion and politics was justified. Historically, I may be wrong, but this faction seems to open the can of worms mixing the two … Or maybe it’s just the FeanciscN order?
and Article 37General Councils may not be gathered together without the commandment and will of Princes…
In other words, the monarchy, a secular and political entity, has superiority over the church, and the church can’t do much without the state’s permission (it’s still, at least technically, the case today, in the CofE - even though for a long time and I think still today, Anglican clergymen are banned by law from the House of Commons here).The King’s Majesty hath the chief power in this Realm…unto whom the chief Government of all Estates…whether they be Ecclesiastical of Civil, in all causes doth appertain.