Synodality — Participation — Co-Responsibility. Remarks on the Determinants of the Aggiornamento of Church Law Cover Image

Synodality — Participation — Co-Responsibility. Remarks on the Determinants of the Aggiornamento of Church Law
Synodality — Participation — Co-Responsibility. Remarks on the Determinants of the Aggiornamento of Church Law

Author(s): Andrzej Pastwa
Subject(s): Law, Constitution, Jurisprudence, Theology and Religion
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego
Keywords: ecclesiology; communio principle; synodality; participation; co-responsibility; aggiornamento of Church law

Summary/Abstract: In the communio Ecclesiae reality, of a unitarian, charismatic, and institutional structure, the crucial concepts of participation and co-responsibility are firmly anchored in the juridical and canonical discourse. This is the way in which the horizon of the subject matter reveals itself, the study of which — from the point of view of the title triad: synodality — participation — co-responsibility — will never lose its relevance. What is, at the same time, important is the idea of “synodality,” which is adequately recognized as the sacra potestas of a sacramental origin (ontological aspect), which gains the dynamism of libertas sacra (existential and dynamic aspect) through the charisms of the Holy Spirit, thus leading to the inseparability of its personal and synodal aspects. Therefore, in the attempt to illuminate the determinant of the aggiornamento of the Church law in this study, it was appropriate, on the one hand, to consistently refer to the essence of the idea of the communio hierarchica, according to which Christ makes selected servants participate in his authority by means of an office, the exercise of which always remains a diaconia in the community of faith. On the other hand, in reference to the contemporary understanding of communio fidelium, the axis of scientific reflection was to be the communion-creative phenomenon of charisms — gifts of the Holy Spirit that awaken in the People of God synodal co-responsibility for the good of the entire Church community. In both cases — without losing sight of the obvious truth that, in the sacramental structure of the Church (communio), both hierarchical and charismatic gifts converge in the service of the bishop, who updates — according to the logic of the Vaticanum II aggiormamento and the ecclesiological principles of the Council: collegiality, the title synodality and subsidiarity — the fullness of Christ’s service: as Prophet, Priest, and King.

  • Issue Year: 2019
  • Issue No: 7
  • Page Range: 95-114
  • Page Count: 20
  • Language: English
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