Pope
Benedict Threatens Automatic Excommunication For Violating Secrecy
Pope Benedict XVI,
who shocked the world last week by becoming the first pope in more than six
centuries to step down, has changed the Roman Catholic conclave law to, among
other things, allow for a quicker process to select a new pontiff.
Benedict’s resignation takes place on Thursday.
The pope also amended the conclave law to allow for the
automatic excommunication of any non-cardinal who broke the absolute oath of
secrecy of the College of Cardinals during the proceedings to select the new
leader of the Catholic Church.
“[Such] an infraction will incur the penalty of automatic
excommunication," the pope’s order stated.
Under the prior rules, any such person who violated the pact of
secrecy was subject to punishment at the discretion of the new pope.
Catholic News Service (CNS) reported that the pope
spelled out the new rules in an apostolic letter issued "motu
proprio" (at his own initiative) on Feb. 22, the feast of the Chair of St.
Peter. The document was not released by the Vatican until Feb. 25.
"The Holy Father wanted to make things immediately clear
and not pass the burden of deciding the penalty on to his successor," said
Archbishop Celata, according to CNS.
However, it is not clear what punishment would be meted out in
the event a cardinal broke the vow of secrecy.
Excommunication is a grave punishment for Catholics, excommunication
-- or exclusion from the communion -- represents the “principal and severest
censure … that deprives the guilty Christian of all participation in the common
blessings of ecclesiastical society. Being a penalty, it supposes guilt; and
being the most serious penalty that the Church can inflict, it naturally
supposes a very grave offense.”
In addition, the excommunicated person does not cease to be a
Christian, “since his baptism can never be effaced,” but he is considered “as
an exile from Christian society and as non-existent, for a time at least, in
the sight of ecclesiastical authority.”
Literally thousands of people have been excommunicated from the
Catholic Church over the centuries -- some leading to serious historical
changes.
Perhaps the most famous excommunication in history occurred in
1538, when Pope Paul III expelled England’s King Henry VIII from the Catholic
Church, leading to the separation of the Roman church from the Church of
England.
Henry’s many infractions included annulling his marriage to
Catherine of Aragon and marrying Anne Boleyn, dissolving the monasteries and
declaring himself “Supreme Head of the Church of England."
Other famous
excommunications involved Napoleon Bonaparte for annexing the Papal States and
Rome; as well as Joan of Arc, whose excommunication was later nullified
following her execution.
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