Anathema:
A formal condemnation by the Church of a certain theological
position that is contrary to Catholic faith and morals.
Canon
law: The implementation and interpretation of
law within the Church. This allows the Church to function
smoothly in carrying out her work of saving souls.
Censure:
Another name for a medicinal penalty, or a penalty
intended to help the offender repent and return to
the heart of the Church. The Code of Canon Law presently
contains three censures: suspension, interdict, and
excommunication.
CIEL:
French acronym for the “International Center of
Liturgical Study,” ciel is also the French word for
“heaven.” One of the most dynamic lay initiatives
to arise from the Ecclesia Dei movement, CIEL is a
group of young intellectuals seeking to promote non-polemical
academic dialogue on the 1962 liturgy, while strengthening
the Ecclesia Dei movement’s foundation in the Second
Vatican Council, fidelity to the Holy See and diocesan
bishops, and communion with the rest of the Church.
In October 2000, CIEL launched an official United
States delegation.
Code
of Canon Law: A legal compilation of seven books
that contain the basic laws of the Latin Church. (Eastern
Catholics have their own Code of Canons of the Eastern
Churches.) The seven books are as follows: General
Norms; People of God; The Teaching Office of the Church;
The Sanctifying Office of the Church; Temporal Goods;
Penal Law; and Procedural Law.
Custom:
A common practice arising within a church community
that through constant repetition becomes the law within
that community, even if the custom is not written
down anywhere. Canon law holds that custom is the
best interpreter of the law. For example, it is the
custom in some parishes to kneel for consecration
before the Sanctus, whereas it is the custom in other
parishes to kneel after the Sanctus.
Discipline
of the faith: A practice of the faith that is
not of itself doctrinal, but is meant to help us observe
the Church’s teaching. In other words, it is something
the Church asks us to do in order to help us focus
on God’s commandments.
Declare
sentence: A public declaration by the competent
Church authority that someone has incurred an automatic
penalty according to canon law. This is different
from an imposed penalty, in which a judge imposes
a penalty after a Church trial.
Ecclesia
Dei Adflicta: Pope John Paul II’s 1988 apostolic
constitution declaring Archbishop Lefebvre and the
SSPX excommunicated. In order to help reconcile the
traditionalists with the Church, this document also
expands permission for bishops to allow the Tridentine
Mass in their diocese.
Ecclesia
Dei movement: A movement in full communion with
the Roman Pontiff and the Catholic Church that adheres
to the 1962 liturgical Missal according to the special
permission granted by Pope John II in his 1988 Apostolic
Constitution Ecclesia Dei Adflicta.
Episcopal
vaganti: A wandering bishop not recognized by
the Church, or a bishop who claims an official title
not recognized by the Church.
Excommunication:
The Church’s highest censure or medicinal penalty,
in which the offender is completely cut off from the
daily life of the Church, including sacraments.
Excommunication ferendae sententiae: An excommunication
imposed as the result of a judgment of a church
tribunal.
Excommunication
latae sententiae: reserved to the Apostolic See:
An automatic excommunication (latae sententiae) that
only the Roman Pontiff and his Roman Congregations
can remove (thus “reserved to the Apostolic See”).
Expiatory
penalty: A penalty imposed as a penance, in order
to help the offender repair the damage he has done.
For example, a Catholic doctor who has repented of
the crime of abortion, and had his excommunication
removed by the diocesan bishop, may be asked to read
Pope Paul VI’s papal encyclical Humanae Vitae as an
expiatory penalty.
Faculty:
The power and permission from the Church to carry
out certain acts, such as hearing confessions.
Ferendae
sententiae: A penalty imposed after a Church trial
in which the offender has been judged guilty of some
crime.
General
Norms: The first book of the Code of Canon Law,
which contains all the basic legal principles through
which the rest of canon law is interpreted. For example,
canon 18 is a general norm stating that in the interpretation
of canon law, those laws that give us favors are to
include as many cases as possible, whereas laws that
punish us are to include as few cases as possible.
Indult
Mass: A Mass offered according to the 1962 Liturgical
Missal with the permission of the legitimate diocesan
bishop by a priest in full communion with Rome.
Jurisdiction:
The
power to carry out certain acts among a portion of
Christ’s faithful. For example, a priest has the jurisdiction
to marry people in his parish, but needs the permission
of the pastor in a parish across town before marrying
people in that parish.
Latae
sententiae: An automatic penalty imposed by virtue
of the law. For example, a Catholic doctor who performs
an abortion is excommunicated latae sententiae under
canon law. So long as it is publicly proven he performed
an abortion and has not repented, a bishop can simply
declare the sentence of excommunication without going
through the process of a Church trial.
Latin
Church sui iuris: Formerly known as Latin Rite
Catholics, the Latin Church sui iuris is composed
of those Catholics who descend from the Catholic Church
in the West, as opposed to the Christian East. For
example, a Melkite Catholic would belong to the Melkite
Church sui iuris. The Roman Catholic Church is composed
of twenty-two Churches sui iuris.
Legislate:
To pass a law (lex) with the intention of binding
the faithful to that law.
Licit/illicit status: The lawfulness or unlawfulness
of a certain act that may or may not affect the validity
of that act. For example, an SSPX priest says Mass
illicitly because, according to the Catholic Church,
it is unlawful for him to say Mass. However, his Mass
is still valid because the bread and wine are transubstantiated
into the Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity of Jesus Christ
when he says the words of consecration.
Medicinal
penalty: A penalty not so much intended to punish
the offender as to force him to repent and be restored
to the Church. For example, a Catholic doctor who
commits an abortion is excommunicated in order to
force him to repent of his crime. Once he is truly
repentant, he has the right to have the excommunication
removed and to receive an expiatory penalty.
Mere
ecclesiastical law: A law of the Church that is
only disciplinary in nature and thus can be changed
or dispensed from to meet the needs of the Church.
For example, the law that a Catholic cannot marry
a catechumen is merely an ecclesiastical law. The
bishop can dispense from this law for a good reason.
Mystici
Corporis: Pope Pius XII’s papal encyclical on
the Church as the Mystical Body of Christ.
Novus
Ordo Missae: The
liturgical missal revised by Pope Paul VI after the
Second Vatican Council, which is presently used in
the Latin Church sui iuris.
Papal
mandate: The
approval given by the Roman Pontiff to a bishop in
order to licitly consecrate another bishop.
Penalty:
A punishment given by the legitimate Church authority
to someone who acts contrary to canon law.
Priestly
Fraternity of St. Peter (FSSP): A society of apostolic
life, similar to a religious order, composed of priests
who have been entrusted by Pope John Paul II with
the apostolate of ministering the sacraments to Catholics
according to the 1962 liturgical missal. It is the
largest and best-known priestly institute to arise
out of the Ecclesia Dei movement.
Promulgate:
To put forward a new law or teaching within the Church.
Quo Primum Tempore: St. Pius V’s papal bull codifying
the Latin liturgy around the time of the Council of
Trent.
Roman
Pontiff: The bishop of Rome, who occupies the
see founded by St. Peter and St. Paul, and who succeeds
St. Peter as visible head of the Church. “You mean
the Pope?” Not necessarily, because St. Peter founded
the See of Antioch before coming to Rome, and thus
traditionally, some of the Eastern Patriarchs also
legitimately claim the title “Pope.” However, there
is only one Roman Pontiff in the Church at any given
time.
Schism:
To break communion with or refuse to subject oneself
to the Roman Pontiff or the Church in communion with
him.
Sedevacantist:
One who believes the Chair of Peter has been empty
(sede vacante) since at least the time of the Second
Vatican Council. Most sedevacantists, in fact, believe
the last valid pope was Pius XII.
Society
of St. John (SSJ): A society of apostolic life
founded in the Diocese of Scranton, Pennsylvania,
with the aspiration of restoring Catholic culture
in secular society. Along with the FSSP, the SSJ is
one of the most popular institutes of consecrated
life working within the Ecclesia Dei movement in North
America.
Society
of St. Pius X (SSPX): The society of priests and
seminarians founded by Archbishop Lefebvre to preserve
the pre-Vatican II liturgy. Soon thereafter, they
came to reject the Second Vatican Council. In 1988,
the SSPX followed Lefebvre into schism when he consecrated
four SSPX priests as bishops without Rome’s approval.
State
of necessity: An emergency situation in which
canon law no longer applies because of a greater need
for the good of souls. For example, because of Communist
persecution in China, a bishop there can ordain a
seminarian to the priesthood without requiring that
he first finish all his seminary studies.
Subjection
to the Roman Pontiff: To submit oneself in obedience
to the teaching and discipline of the Pope in Rome.
Supplied
jurisdiction: An emergency or unknown situation
in which the Church provides jurisdiction in a certain
case that is otherwise lacking. For example, a newly
ordained priest lacks the faculty to hear confessions
because he hasn’t passed his jurisdiction exam yet.
Suppose that on his way to his jurisdiction exam he
comes across a car accident in which a Catholic is
seriously injured. The Church would supply this newly
ordained priest with jurisdiction to hear the dying
Catholic’s confession.
Supreme
Legislator: The Roman Pontiff when he’s using
his authority to legislate or interpret canon law.
Suspension:
A censure of a cleric in which his rights, obligations
and faculties arising from holy orders are removed.
For example, a suspended priest is no longer permitted
to celebrate Mass or hear confessions.
Tradition:
The deposit of faith left by Christ and His apostles,
which has been passed down to us through the Church,
whose job it is to mediate and interpret for the faithful.
Traditional Mass: A Mass offered according to the
1962 liturgical missal, the last liturgical missal
before the reforms of Pope Paul VI.
Traditionalist
movement: A movement seeking to preserve, and
in some cases completely restore, the Tridentine Mass
within the Latin Church sui iuris. It is divided into
various camps, both inside and outside the Catholic
Church.
Tridentine
Mass: Another commonly used name for the 1962
Missal which, apart from some minor changes, closely
resembles the liturgical missal codified by Pope St.
Pius V around the time of the Council of Trent in
the sixteenth century.
Valid/invalid
status: Validity determines the effectiveness
of the act one is attempting to carry out, regardless
of whether such an act is licit or illicit (canonically
legal or illegal). For example, we’ve already noted
that a Mass is valid when said by an SSPX priest,
although illicit. However, if a layman were to dress
up as a priest and attempt to celebrate Mass in public,
such a Mass would be not only illicit, but invalid
as well — it would lack the effects of a true Mass.
This is because a non-ordained person cannot transubstantiate
the bread and wine into the Body, Blood, Soul and
Divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Read
Related Article: "My
Journey out of the Lefebvre Schism"