At noon on Friday, Pope Francis received in audience the
participants in the Plenary meeting of the Supreme
Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura.
Address of His Holiness, Pope Francis
for the
participants in the Plenary Assembly
of the Supreme
Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura
Your Eminences,
Dear Brothers in the Episcopate and in the Priesthood,
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
This, your Plenary Session, gives me the opportunity to
receive all of you who work in the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura, expressing to each one my gratitude for the
promotion of the correct administration of justice in the Church. I greet you
cordially and I thank the Cardinal Prefect for the words with which he
introduced our meeting.
Your activity is geared to fostering the work of the
ecclesiastical tribunals, called to respond adequately to the faithful who turn
to the justice of the Church to obtain a correct decision. You do your utmost
so that they function well, and you support the responsibility of bishops in forming
suitable ministers of justice. Among these, the Defender of the Bond carries out an important function, especially
in the process of matrimonial nullity. It is necessary, in fact, that he be
able to fulfill his own part with efficacy, to facilitate the attainment of
truth in the definitive sentence, in favor of the pastoral good of the parties
in question.
In this regard, the Apostolic
Signatura has offered significant contributions. I am thinking in
particular of the collaboration in the preparation of the Instruction Dignitas connubii, which explains the applicable
trial norms. Placed in this line also is the present Plenary Session, which has
put at the centre of its works the promotion of an effective defense of the
matrimonial bond in the canonical processes of nullity.
The attention given to the ministry of the Defender of the Bond is without a doubt
opportune, because his presence and his intervention are obligatory for the
whole development of the process (cf. Dignitas
connubii, 56, 1-2; 279, 1). Foreseen in the
same way is that he must propose all sorts of proofs, exceptions, recourses and
appeals that, in respect of the truth, foster the defense of the bond.
The mentioned Instruction
describes, in particular, the role of the Defender
of the Bond in the causes of nullity for psychic incapacity, which in some
Tribunals constitute the sole reason for nullity. It underlines the diligence
that he must put in assessing the questions addressed to the experts, as well
as the results of the opinions themselves (cf. 56, 4). Therefore, the Defender of the Bond who wishes to
render a good service cannot limit himself to a hasty reading of the acts, or
to bureaucratic and generic answers. In his delicate task, he is called to try
to harmonize the prescriptions of the Code of Canon Law with the concrete
situations of the Church and of society.
The faithful and complete fulfillment of the task of the Defender of the Bond does not constitute
a pretension damaging to the prerogatives of the ecclesiastical judge, to whom
corresponds solely the definition of the cause. When the Defender of the Bond exercises the duty to appeal, also to the Roman Rota, against a decision which he
holds damaging to the truth of the bond, his task does not abuse that of the
judge. In fact, the judges can find, in the careful work of him who defends the
matrimonial bond, a help to their own activity.
The Second Ecumenical Vatican Council defined the Church
as a communion. Seen in this
perspective are the service of the Defender
of the Bond and the consideration that is reserved to him, in a respectful
and attentive dialogue.
A final, very important annotation as regards the workers
committed in the ministry of ecclesial justice. They act in the name of the
Church; they are part of the Church. Therefore, it is necessary to always keep
alive the connection between the action of the Church that evangelizes and the
action of the Church that administers justice. The service to justice is a
commitment of apostolic life: it must be exercised by keeping one’s gaze fixed
on the icon of the Good Shepherd, who bends down to the lost and wounded sheep.
At the conclusion of this meeting, I encourage you all to
persevere in the search for a limpid and correct exercise of justice in the
Church, in response to the legitimate desires that the faithful address to
Pastors, especially when, confidently, they ask to have their own status authoritatively clarified. May
Mary Most Holy, who we invoke with the title Speculum
iustitiae, help you and the whole Church to
walk on the path of justice, which is the first form of charity. Thank
you. Continue your good work!
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