Is this still the teaching/policy of the Roman Church today? That Lutherans (NB “and their descendants”) cannot own property?
This is neither a teaching nor a policy. It is a
sentence declared upon a particular group of peple, a juridic act under the law. To understand it, one must understand the law then and now.
Is it still in force today? No, for several reasons:
- The people upon whom the sentence was declared are dead.
- The “descendants” are no longer Catholics, therefore juridic acts do not apply to them. At the time, historically, when this occurred, the children of the heretics would have still been considered Catholics and therefore subject to the law in force in Christendom. This is no longer the case.
- Current canon law abbrogates prior laws.
(1) Doesn’t section X (the bit quoted above) claim that the Bull is irrevocable?
No. This is a misunderstanding of what the law says. The "no one"s referred to would be secular princes, bishops, or others of a lower rank than the Pope and contemporary to him. The Pope can always change the law, as can his successors. A Church council in union with the Pope can change the law. True then, true now.
(2) Do you think that the Roman Pontiff has the right de jure divino to deprive people of property?
Yes, he does. As has been pointed out, in today’s world where the Pope exercises no temporal authority that is not practical but it is certainly his right-- the secular government would be his agent… true in times gone by but not today. Although, Popes and Bishops still have the authority regarding ecclesial goods.
The current code of canon law speaks to the various penalties for delicts including the pretty much boiler plate items listed in Leo’s bull such as privation of offices, beneifces, etc.
But presumably Catholics would be bound by conscience to treat this as law if still in force, coming as it does from the Supreme Pontiff, and clearly addressed as it is to the Catholic Church.
Yes and no. Leo is no longer our supreme pontiff. Catholics would not be bound by conscience to treat this as a law, because it is not a law. It is a sentence, imposed for specific delicts agasint specific people. It woul be up to the current Pope to make any sort of decree regarding what, if any, action a Catholic should take in this matter.
whether it is still the position of the Roman Church.
Again, yes and no.
Yes, the Church and specifically the Pope has the authority over Catholics to deprive them of eclessial goods, property, offices, benefices, etc. Since the secular government is no longer an agent of the Church, it has no civil authority to deprive Catholics of other types of goods or honors. It is certainly the Church’s right, one which they cannot exercise at this day and time.
Current canon law outlines what punishments are currently in place for various delicts.
As regards non-Catholics, the current code of canon law makes no claim to have jurdisdiction over non-Catholics.
I fail to see how they could apply to anything other than private property. If you can point me in the direction of anything which would suggest otherwise, please do so.
Nor do I. It certainly does speak to private property. In essence, these folks have been declared outlaws in the Holy Roman Empire. If only those pesky Electors and Princes would have been sufficiently cooperative, the split might have healed and the heretical movement snuffed out and the heretics brought back into the fold. It was an effective threat in prior times, too bad for Leo this was not the moment in history to use the big guns in that manner. The Princes saw opportunity.