Everyone subject to the legislator is bound in
conscience to observe the
law. A violation of the
law, either by
omission or by act, is punishable with a penalty (q.v.). These penalties may be settled beforehand by the legislator, or they may be left to the discretion of the judge who imposes them. A violation of the
moral law or what one’s
conscience judges to be the
moral law is a
sin; a violation of the exterior penal
law, in addition to the
sin, renders one liable to a punishment or penalty; if the will of the legislator is only to
oblige the offender to submit to the penalty, the
law is said to be “purely penal”; such are some of the
laws adopted by civil legislatures, and it is generally admitted that some ecclesiastical laws are of this kind. As
baptism is the gate of entrance to the
ecclesiastical society, all those who are
baptized, even non-Catholics, are in principle subject to the
laws of the
Church; in practice the question arises only when certain acts of
heretics and
schismatics come before
Catholic tribunals; as a general rule an irritant
law is enforced in such a case, unless the legislator has exempted them from its observance, for instance, for the form of marriage. General
laws therefore, bind all
Catholics wherever they may be. In the case of particular
laws as one is subject to them in virtue of one’s
domicile, or even quasi-domicile, passing strangers are not subject to them, except in the case of acts performed within the territory.