code of canon law of 1917の例文
- The Code of Canon Law of 1917 reaffirmed that in the Latin Church, the decision rested with the Pope.
- "Romanum decet Pontificem " was later incorporated into the Code of Canon Law of 1917 in canons 240, 2; 1414, 4; and 1432, 1.
- Since its founding, and especially since Pope John XXIII called for the revision of the first Code of Canon Law of 1917, the Society has offered its services in the United States for the revitalization and proper application of church law.
- The wearing of a headcovering was for the first time mandated as a universal rule for the Latin Rite by the Code of Canon Law of 1917, which code was abrogated by the advent of the present ( 1983 ) Code of Canon Law.
- The Archbishop of Lima and Primate of Peru, Cardinal Juan Land醶uri Ricketts, OFM, who for many years was also president of the Peruvian Episcopal Conference, encouraged the Sodalitium of Christian Life in its beginnings and in 1977 he approved their statutes as a private association of the faithful, according to the Code of Canon Law of 1917, which then governed Church institutions.
- From that time, while the word " simple vows in the Society of Jesus were also regulars in the proper sense according to the Constitution " Ascendente " of Pope Gregory XIII . Before the publication of the Code of Canon Law of 1917, writers were not agreed on the question whether the religious of other orders can properly be called regulars before solemn profession, but it was agreed that novices of religious orders were regulars only in the wider meaning of the word.
- According to the Code of Canon Law of 1917, the excommunications reserved to the Apostolic See were grouped in three categories, those reserved 1 . simply, 2 . in a special manner, 3 . in a most special manner ( each solvable by the Pope and by those priests the Pope had delegated the faculty to absolve for precisely that degree ); and below the excommunications reserved to the bishop ( which is now principally true of every excommunication ), there was yet a category of excommunications reserved to noone ( i . e ., that could be solved by any confessor ).