Hmm, was just thinking in addition to all this:
Did the earlier canon law refer to actions conducted by individuals or merely to actions conducted by individuals or groups in the name of the Church?
In other words, if an individual acted in his own name, say, to associate with an excommunicated person or to do him some kindness or to send letters to him, would this have been permissible, but, if he acted in some way in the name of the Church, such would have been impermissible? Did “civilia iura” (“iura” meaning “rights” often in a very technical juridical sense) apply more to the Church in its official capacity rather than necessarily to individuals?
it would depend on what was the intent of the law. You also cannot read Canon Law the same way you read American Law. Canon Law (esp back then) was written the same way other laws in Europe were written - with the assumption that the reader understands the context and indent.
American Laws on the other hand are written in a way to “avoid gray areas.” American Laws are written so that what the Law says is what the Law is. The American Legal system is really the first protestant legal system. So it’s very similar to sola scriptura. While the European Legal Systems (even in the protestant countries) take tradition into consideration (scripture & tradition), which makes sense since all of Europe was Catholic until the 1500s & because the Ancient Rome & the Jewish People did the same thing.
Also, is the authority of the Church in enacting canon law throughout time seen as always precisely correct for each period of time (if that is how it is to be seen) based on Christ’s statement that “whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven”, etc.? So, then, does this mean that whatever laws the Church enacts are always perfect no matter what they are and when they are enacted even ifthey are changed or abrogated later?
Yes, I think you can make that argument. But keep in mind that not all Canon Law deals with discipline. Some Canons are simply administrative laws/rules for the running of the Church (similar to bi-laws in some organization). There are several different categories of Canon Law and different applications & target audiences – some of which isn’t self evident if you do not understand the context, intent and the culture of the time.
For a moment, let me provide you with a Canon which was changed for good intent, but now I personally believe should be changed back. The current Canon calls for the faithful to fast for 1 hour before receiving communion. The intent was to encourage Catholics to receive the communion more regularly. In those times, you had Catholics who were in a state of Grace & came to Mass every week; yet only received Communion once a year at Easter. So the communion Fast was changed to encourage the faithful to receive.
However, today, we many people who receive unworthily. I believe this happens because it is very hard to break the 1 hour communion fast, unless you practically live next door to the Church. So in the minds of many, the only people who remain in their seats during communion are non-Catholics, divorced & remarried without annulment, excommunicated, & mortal sinners. Therefore, people who are not in a state of grace may feel compelled to receive because they feel everyone’s eyes staring at them if they remain seated (even though most don’t notices them).
If the Church changed the discipline back to a 3 hour fast, then more people would stay in their seats during communion because if you are remain in your pew, the first thing someone will assume is that you didn’t fast, not that you committed a mortal sin. Basically, the sinners and divorced can hide in the pews without feeling like everyone is watching them.
Example: let’s say a teenager commits a mortal sin. If he/she doesn’t stand up to receive, mom & dad may ask, “why didn’t you receive? We had breakfast 2 hours ago.” So the teen might feel compelled to receive to hid his/her sins from mom & dad. But if the fast was 3 hours, the teen could always grab a piece of bread before leaving home and tell his/her parents they didn’t receive communion because they ate a piece of bread. A three hour fast would allow the teen to “hide” his/her sin from the public by simply having a piece of bread. So in my opinion, a change back to 3 hours would be good and would be addressing a different societal/cultural change that wasn’t relevant when when the fast used to be 3 hours.
I pray that I am making sense?