Understanding what's what in canon law

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It’s kind of confusing me. I thought the CCC was pretty much the bottom line. But then I discovered it’s really just a general gloss for Catholics in general, and that local Church law will trump whatever’s in the CCC? This is related exclusively to… liturgical matters, but not moral ones? What is “doctrinal” anyways?

And by local Church, they mean something like Latin Church or Byzantine Catholic, right? And, furthermore, the Canon Code posted by the Vatican is by the Latin Church’s authority?

And then, when the USCCB says that meat doesn’t necessarily need to be given up on Fridays, but something else in its place, that… trumps… the Canon Code?? That’s obviously not a moral law being changed but a… liturgical…?

How does anyone keep this stuff straight? Obviously the many pieces of the Catholic Church have their own rites and whatnot, but we all agree on every moral issue, including things like Assumption of Mary (is that… what kind of issue is that called?)

Oy vey. :confused:
 
The CCC contains the teaching, the belief, of the Church. It is a catechetical and “constitutional” document, you might say. It is where the Church says, “Here, this is what we believe, so believe it.” This is relatively unchanging in substance.

The CIC (Code of Canon Law) is a sort of body of juridical and administrative laws, bylaws, protocols, and so on. To a certain extent, it can and does change. This is not (in theory) necessary for the Church to survive, but it is necessary on a practical and human level for the Church to have any semblance of smooth operation. The CIC essentially contains all law except liturgical law, which is in the liturgical books themselves. However, some liturgical canons are in the CIC, but not many.

Local Church=diocese or its equivalent. It does not mean Latin Church or whatever.

Local Church=diocese/equivalent; Sui iuris Church=Latin Church/any of the Eastern Churches

The Code of Canon Law is canon law for the Latin Church. The Code of Canons for Eastern Churches is canon law for the Eastern Churches, more or less.

What the USCCB says about meat on Fridays is a derogation, a permission, that the Holy See gives to the conference of bishops to decide, if they so choose to do. Well, in like 1966, the US bishops did decide something else, which is our current law/practice/whatever of doing penance on Fridays, or just giving up meat or whatever. The obligation to do penance is a divine command and remains, and no bishop, indeed no Pope, can change that. What the law is concerned with is how, precisely, we do that. This is not really a liturgical matter.

How do I keep it all straight? I don’t know.

Your questions are very mixed.
 
Thanks! :)The questions are indeed mixed, a reflection of the confusion I had and the very limited amount of time I had to write them (I get periodic lulls at work… what better to do than post on Catholic Forums?)
 
Thanks! :)The questions are indeed mixed, a reflection of the confusion I had and the very limited amount of time I had to write them (I get periodic lulls at work… what better to do than post on Catholic Forums?)
nothing!
 
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