Fundamental Rights: Comparison of the Approaches in the Canon Law and in the Civil Law Cover Image

Fundamental Rights: Comparison of the Approaches in the Canon Law and in the Civil Law
Fundamental Rights: Comparison of the Approaches in the Canon Law and in the Civil Law

Author(s): Stanislav Přibyl
Subject(s): Christian Theology and Religion, Law, Constitution, Jurisprudence, Constitutional Law, Civil Law, Human Rights and Humanitarian Law, Canon Law / Church Law
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego
Keywords: Church law; civil law; natural law; human rights; fundamental rights and freedoms; duties and rights of the faithful; constitution; the Code of Canon Law; salvation; law; law making; Christians...

Summary/Abstract: The Code of Canon Law of 1983 came up with a list of obligations and duties of the Catholic faithful. This list is analogical to those of the charters of fundamental rights and freedoms found in the documents of international law and in the constitutions of democratic countries. the inspiration of church law by civilian law was a reality from the very beginnings of the development of Canon Law: first by Roman Law, in the modern world by complex codifications of civil law, and after Vatican II also the idea of universal human rights. The specifics of the Catholic Church in relation to a democratic state is the incorporation of the subject of law into the Church through baptism which brings, above all, duties and obligations. Thus the catalogue which may now be seen in the Code contains first and foremost a list of duties, not rights, which are not stressed in the modern state. In fact, the modern state has very few demands; often just the payment of taxes and compulsory school attendance. The article deals with the individual obligations and rights found in the Code of Canon Law and compares them with their analogies in constitutions. The concept of civil and canonical norms tends to get closer primarily in the case of inspiration by natural law, whereas the obligations of the faithful represent a specifically ecclesiastical goals, for which no analogy in civil law can be found. After all, the supreme law of the Church is the salvation of souls, indeed, the state does not have such a supernatural goal.

  • Issue Year: 2020
  • Issue No: 6
  • Page Range: 73-95
  • Page Count: 23
  • Language: English
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