Theological Studies
57 (1996)
THE ORDINATION OF MALE INFANTS
MICHAEL SLUSSER
Duquesne University
it has been the common opinion of Catholic theologians that the Church has the power to ordain male infants, that
U
is, that ordination conferred on them is valid, though not licit since
NTIL RECENTLY,
they do not meet several of the requirements of canon law. That opinion,
however widespread, depended on an analysis of the basis of the validity
of orders which may no longer be persuasive in the light of the decree
Inter insigniores of October 15, 1976, and Pope John Paul II's letter
Ordinatio sacerdotalis of May 22, 1994. In this note, I shall try to
document the shift in theological reasoning which has taken place and
to draw some appropriate conclusions.
THE DOCTRINE OF THE MANUALS
The validity of ordination conferred on baptized male infants is recognized by a cross section of the dogmatic and moral manuals of the last
two centuries, continuing right up to the post-World-War-II period. I
have no reason to doubt that other manualists are in agreement with
those whom I have consulted: Eduardo Regatillo (1882-1975), 1 Ludovico Fanfani (1876-1955), 2 Hieronymus Noldin (1838-1922), 3 Franz
Diekamp (1864-1943), 4 Arthur Vermeersch (1858-1936), 5 Gennaro
Bucceroni (1841-1918), 6 Adolphe Tanquerey (1854-1932), 7 and August
Lehmkuhl (1834-1918). 8 All of them specifically mention the case of
male :infants. Fanfani, for example, says,
Here it must be noted (a) that infants who have been validly, albeit completely
illicitly, ordained are given the choice when they reach their sixteenth year
1 E. F'. Regatillo and M. Zalba, Theologiae Moralis Summa (Madrid: Biblioteca de
Autores Cristianos, 1954) 3.512-14.
2
Ludovicus J. Fanfani, Manuale theorico-practicum Theologiae Moralis (Rome: Ferrari, 1951) 4.625-27.
3 H. Noldin, Summa Theologiae Moralis iuxta Codicem Juris Canonici, 30th ed., ed.
A. Schmitt and Godefridus Heinzel (Innsbruck: Feliciani Rauch, 1954) 3.399-400.
4
Franciscus Diekamp, Theologiae Dogmaticae Manuale, 6th ed., ed. Adolph M. Hoffmann (Paris: Desclee, 1934) 4.412-14.
5 Arthurus Vermeersch, Theologiae Mora/is Principia, Responsa, Consilia (Rome: Universita Gregoriana, 1923) 3.557-58.
6 Januarius Bucceroni, lnstitutiones Theologiae Moralis, 6th ed. (Rome: Institutum Pii
IX, 191.5) 3.574.
7
Ad. Tanquerey, Synopsis Theologiae Moralis et Pastoralis, 8th ed. (Rome: Desclee,
1921) 1.728.
8
Augustinus Lehmkuhl, Theologia Moralis, lOth ed. (Freiburg-im-Breisgau: Herder,
1902) 2.420-21.
313
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THEOLOGICAL STUDIES
of choosing for the clerical state or not; and if they do not wish to take on the
obligations associated with holy orders, they are permitted (although ordained)
to live as laymen do (cf. also can. 214, §1). (b) The same applies to the insane,
if they should recover the use of reason. 9
Noldin adds a rationale for the doctrine:
A boy is validly ordained before he has use of reason: for an infant is
capable of those sacraments which do not demand a condition which he
cannot fulfill, like matrimony, and which do not require the ability to sin,
like penance and extreme unction; for orders does not require the recipient
to do anything. But a boy ordained in this way is given the choice, after
he has sufficient use of reason, either of ministering in the order he has
received or of passing over to worldly commitments; but when he has chosen
he is thenceforth bound to fulfill the obligations of the order he has received
and to persevere in it. 10
Regatillo claims that this applies even to episcopal ordination: "An
infant and the like is capable of ordination, even episcopal, although
he is unable to consent and refuse. This is common doctrine." 11 Diekamp
likewise holds that "all orders can be validly bestowed on infants who
lack the use of reason." 12
Vermeersch lists among validly ordained subjects the following: "the
chronically insane, boys in infancy, and those who consent while forced
by grave fear." 13 But he comments: "An ordained infant is bound by
no obligation, unless when he is fully sui compos and past the age of
puberty, even the age of majority, he approves his ordination." Bucceroni gives a similar list:
9 Fanfani 626: "Hie notandum: a) quod infantibus valide, etsi omnino illicite, ante
usum rationis ordinati, optio datur, cum ad annum decimum sextum pervenerint, optandi
pro statu clericali vel non; et si noluerint obligationes Ordinis adnexas acceptare, eis
permittitur ut, quam vis ordinati, more laicorum vivant (cfr. etiam can. 214, §ll. (b) Idem
dicatur de amentibus, si ad usum rationis redierint."
10
N oldin 399: "Puer ante usum rationis val ide ordinatur: infans enim capax est illorum
sacramentorum, quae non exigunt condicionem, quam ipse praestare nequeat, ut matrimonium, et quae non exigunt capacitatem peccati, ut poenitentia et extrema unctio;
atqui ordo nullum actum a suscipiente ponendum exigit. Eiusmodi autem puero ordinato
post sufficientem usum rationis optio datur vel ministrandi in ordine suscepto vel transeundi ad vota saecularia; electione facta demum tenetur obligationes ordinis suscepti
implere atque in eo perseverare." At this point Noldin has a note to an instruction of
Pope Benedict XIV, Eo quamvis tempore, of May 4, 1745; the latter text will be considered separately below.
11
Regatillo and Zalba 513: "lnfans et similis capax est ordinationis, etiam episcopalis,
licet consentire et dissentire nequit. Est doctrina communis."
12 Diekamp 414: "lnfantibus usu rationis carentibus omnes ordines valide conferri
possunt."
13 However he adds, "Invalide ordinatur dormiens, ebrius adultus qui antea non habuerit intentionem recipiendi ordinem; qui exteriore vi rapitur ad ordinationem; qui
iocando vel fabulam recitando se ordinandi praesentat."
ORDINATION OF MALE INFANTS
315
Wherefore these are incapable of orders: a woman, a hermaphrodite in whom
the female sex is dominant, and a nonbaptized man. But by contrast these are
validly ordained: infants, the chronically insane, the blind, the mute, those
without hands, etc., although by natural law they are irregular. But St. Thomas
says that boys before they have attained the use of reason cannot validly
receive the episcopate. 14
Tanquerey merely specifies that, although these infants are validly
ordained even though they lack the intention of receiving the sacrament, they must be given the choice at age sixteen ofliving as laymen
if they wish. 15 The final author in my sample, Lehmkuhl, says that an
infant is validly ordained in the same way he receives other sacraments,
and by the same rationale, but must be given a way out of the obligation
of celibacy and the other burdens of priesthood. 16
THE TEACHING OF POPE BENEDICT XIV
Several of these authors 17 cite as an authority for the possibility of
ordaining male infants an instruction of Pope Benedict XIV, Eo quamvis tempore, of May 4, 1745, which deals with problems encountered
by Latin missionaries working in Egypt. 18 The third dubium which
the pope answers concerns boys ordained to the diaconate in the Coptic
Church: When they reach the legal age for marriage, is it legal for the
missionaries to give them a dispensation to enter into not just a first
but a second marriage, without a special indult from the Holy See? 19
The fourth asks if these deacons are bound to the recitation of the
divine office. Pope Benedict XIV notes that the ordination of boys to
the diaconate was known to occur in the Eastern churches, and he cites
some of the studies available to him. 20 It does not seem likely that
the Coptic boy-deacons were ordained on the basis of any theory that
ordination could be conferred on those who lacked the use of reason.
Rather it is likely that because small Christian communities and their
priest might want to celebrate the liturgy with rites which called for the
assistance of a deacon (a much more frequent requirement in Eastern
14
Bucceroni 574.
Tanquerey 728; his language is almost identical to Fanfani's.
16
Lehmkuhl421.
17
Regatillo, Noldin, Diekamp, Vermeersch, and Tanquerey.
18
This instruction is conveniently available as no. 357 in Codicis !uris CanoniciFontes,
ed. Peter Gasparri (Rome: Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis, 1937) 1.890-903.
19
Ibid. 891: "An Cophitis proprio Ritu in aetate puerili ad Diaconatus Ordinem promotis, ubi legitima ad contrahendum Matrimonium aetas advenerit, liceat nedum primum, sed alterum .{llJJl{U.l.P .inr~
.M?J.-;\numunr, tlX" 'lt' llli,vensanoms ot'Jtentae a f'Y. Missionariis absque ullo speciali indulto Apostolico."
20 These included a manual of mission work in the Orient by a Capuchin, Carolus
Franciscus a Breno (Carlo Francesco da Breno, Manuale missionariorum orientalium
[Venice: Balleoniana, 1726]; a work on conversion by "Thomas a J esu," probably the
Augustinian Tomas de Jesus; and letters from Cairo by a Jesuit missionary, B. Bernat,
as published by one of the Bollandists. I have not seen any of these sources myself.
15
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THEOLOGICAL STUDIES
liturgy than in Western, at least from the Middle Ages on), the economic
decision was taken to ordain a boy, perhaps one of the priest's own
sons, to serve in the liturgy.
The pope extends his answer to the dubia to great length, 21 and the
entire text throws light on relations between the Roman Church and
all the Oriental Churches in the 18th century. But it is the first part
of his answer, where he lays out in the abstract the principles ofW estern
canon law on the matter, which has drawn the attention of the manualists:
H9. No one is so ignorant as to be unaware of the various orders and grades
of ministry in the Western Church. Those who are to be initiated with first
tonsure are endowed with reason, which is presumed by the age of seven. As
to the minor orders, although the sacred canons do not set a fixed age, still
they are customarily conferred between the seventh and fourteenth year, provided the development of the qualities called for by Trent (session 23, chapters
5 and 11) in the one to be ordained keeps pace with his age. But the same
Council lays down the law that the age of twenty-two is necessary for the
subdiaconate, twenty-three for the diaconate, twenty-five for the presbyterate,
and thirty for the episcopate, making a distinction between the sacred orders
and the episcopate that for the former it is sufficient to have begun the year
in question, but for the episcopate the thirtieth year must be complete.
§20. But if it should happen, in contempt of such wisely instituted legislation,
that not only minor but also sacred orders be conferred upon an infant by a
bishop who possesses lawful authority, the theologians and canonists are in
agreement in their opinion that this ordination is valid but illicit, provided it
is not marred by a substantial defect of matter, form, or intention on the part
of the ordaining bishop. The contrary view, which has few supporters and
which has never persuaded the highest tribunals and congregations, may be
disregarded. Nevertheless, it is equally certain and verified that those who
have been promoted by this conferral of orders are not bound by the obligation
to preserve chastity nor by the other burdens imposed by the church, since
each person's choice of state in life depends on his free will, and we are bound
to keep our own promises to the Most High, not those of others.
§21. For the old discipline of the church has become obsolete, which subjected
those promoted to the priesthood and episcopacy by coercion or force to the
yoke of servitude and observance of the burdens and laws imposed upon the
respective order, despite every protestation of the one ordained or promoted
against the force which was used, and despite their heartfelt declaration that
they refused the order they had received. Likewise, although until the twelfth
century parents used to dedicate their sons while still infants by placing them
in monasteries, and to hand them over to the service of God, forever barred
from leaving the monastery walls, that law was abrogated by the milder decrees
of Clement III, Celestine III, and the Council of Trent, since the rights of nature
and free will seemed to cry out against it.
§22. However, there remain weighty theologians who have looked into the
matter in greater detail. They say that infants who have been promoted to
sacred orders should be carefully questioned, when they have become sui com21
Ibid. §§17-53, pp. 894-903 ofGasparri's edition.
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ORDINATION OF MALE INFANTS
317
pos,. on whether or not they intend to remain in the order conferred upon
them. If they openly consent, with firm and deliberate mind, in that case [the
theologians] think they are bound by the vow of chastity; otherwise it is all
right for them to pass over to secular pursuits, the power of exercising their
order having been suspended.
The reader can see that the manualists have fairly extracted the
bottom line from the pope's instruction, as regards a narrow question.
Some of the broader pastoral concerns and principles which Pope Benedict XIV employs are lost without their context. 22 But despite those
pastoral concerns, the pope takes it as certain that the bishop can
ordain male infants and nothing can stand in his way. Where does this
certainty come from?
THE TEACHING OF ST. THOMAS AQUINAS
In the Supplementum to the Summa theologiae, q. 39, a. 2, Thomas
considers whether boys, even those who lack the use of reason, can
receive orders. This article and article 1 ("Utrum sexus femineus impediat ordinis susceptionem") occur together in Thomas's Comm. in libro
IV Sententiarum, dist. 25, q. 2, a. 1, qa 1-2, where they are prefaced
by the note that they concern whether anyone is impeded by defect of
nature ("propter defectum naturae") in contrast to defects which are
due to misfortune. 23
Three objectiones argue against the possibility of ordaining male
infants: first, the decree of Pope Nicholas quoted by Peter Lombard in
distinction 25 sets minimum ages for the various orders; second, order
is more worthy than matrimony and thus requires at least as much
attainment of the use of reason; third, since the act which realizes the
power of orders requires the use of reason, so too must the power itself.
Against these arguments Thomas cites the fact, based on a decretal of
Gregory IX, 24 that orders are not repeated in the case when underage
22 Students of the new Code of Canon Law will no doubt note in particular the pope's
strong argument for the free choice of a state in life, currently reflected in canon 219.
23 Peter Lombard does not deal with the issue at all in the Sentences, but that Thomas
was no innovator when he raised the question in connection with IV dist. 25 is shown
by the fact that Bonaventure raises in the same place in his commentary on the Sentences
the question about who can receive orders-whether one must be male, have the use of
reason, have an intact body, and be in a free condition (Bonaventure, Comm. in Libro
IV Sententiarum, dist. 25, a. 2, q. 1-4). Bonaventure does not distinguish between defects
of nature and misfortunes; see below for a summary of his view on the ordination of
male infants.
24 "Ille qui est ante annos discretionis promotus ad ordines, sine iteratione ipsorum
quandoque in eis conceditur ministrare, ut patet Extra, de Clerico per saltum promoto.
Hoc autem non esset si ordinem non suscipisset. Ergo puer potest ordines suscipere."
The text referred to is from the Decretals of Gregory IX, 1.5, tit. 29, c. 1, "De clerico per
saltum promoto," which can be read in Corpus I uris Canonici, 2nd Leipzig edition by Emil
Ludwig Richter, with additional notes by Emil Friedberg, Pars Secunda: Decretalium
Collectiones (Graz: Akademische Druck- und Verlagsanstalt, 1955), col. 833-34. The
text, which begins "Tuae litterae," is a reply from Innocent III to the Bishop of Bologna,
who has heard of a presbyter who was ordained to the presbyterate without having been
ordained a deacon. The presbyter said that he had been informed by trustworthy people
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THEOLOGICAL STUDIES
boys who were ordained begin to exercise those orders, and the parallel
with baptism and confirmation, which likewise impress a character
and can be received by boys.
Thomas points out that children who have not reached the use of
reason are barred from the sacraments which require an action of the
recipient; but since powers are conferred before actions take place there
is no intrinsic reason why these powers cannot be conferred as long as
their immediate implementation is not required. Applying this to orders, he says that the times prescribed for worthy conferral of minor
orders are neither binding nor intrinsically necessary for the sacramental sign, though they are needed de honestate, that is, for it to be done
right. Major orders, however, require the use of reason both de honestate
and because the law demands it, on account of the vow of continence
which the recipient makes and the sacraments which are entrusted to
him. Episcopal orders, since they involve pastoral care, also necessarily
require the use of reason. The necessity in these cases is legal necessity
(de necessitate praecepti), not a necessity intrinsic to the sacramental
sign itself (de necessitate sacramenti), for Thomas dismisses the position
of those who see such a necessity of the use of reason as supported
"neither by reason nor by authority."
Bonaventure, in his Commentary on the Sentences, takes a similar
position in the end, after noting that "some say that the ordained must
have the use of reason, or nothing whatever happens." He cites as an
authority the same decretal of Gregory IX, the practice of ordaining
boys to minor orders, and the validity of early confirmation; and goes
with "the other opinion of the elders that use of reason is required for
the order of bishop de necessitate sacramenti, for the other holy orders de
necessitate praecepti, and for minor orders de honestate et congruitate." 25
The reader's attention is called to the distinction which Thomas and
Bonaventure make between de necessitate praecepti and de necessitate
sacramenti. This distinction runs throughout Thomas's question 39,
which is devoted to impediments to the sacrament of order, namely,
being female, lacking the use of reason, being a slave, being a murderer,
having been born out of wedlock, and physical defects or mutilation.
None of these impediments stands in the way of ordination de necessitate sacramenti except not being male; all of them stand in the way de
necessitate praecepti.
that he had been, at the same time as he had received minor orders, before he had
reached the age of discretion (infra annos discretionis). Pope Innocent III told the bishop
that the presbyter should do penance, and then be ordained deacon, "since what is not
known to have happened is not understood to have been repeated (quia non intelligitur
iteratum quod factum esse nescitur)." If this is the text to which Thomas is referring, it
offers extremely slender evidence for the ordination of infants.
25 Bonaventure, Comm. in libra IV Sententiarum, dist. 25, a. 2, q. 2, c.: "et ideo dicunt
quod usus rationis requiritur in ordinato, alioquin nihil omnino fit." The text is taken
from the edition by Pacificus M. Perantoni, Bonaventure, Opera Theologica Selecta (Quarracchi: Collegium S. Bonaventurae, 1949) 4.640-41.
ORDINATION OF MALE INFANTS
319
To see what Thomas himself meant by the distinction, we have only
to turn to the previous article (or quaestiuncula in the Commentary
on the Sentences): if something required de necessitate sacramenti is
missing, the person receives "neither the sacrament nor the reality it
effects (neque sacramentum neque rem sacramenti)." If what is lacking
is de necessitate praecepti, the recipient receives "the sacrament but
not the reality it effects (sacramentum, sed non rem sacramenti)."
Why is the female sex incapable of participating in the integral sign
of the sacrament of order? It is a problem of signification: "Since any
loftiness of station cannot be signified in the female sex-since woman
has a status of subjection-therefore she cannot receive the sacrament
of order." 26 This difficulty does not stand in the way of a slave, because
a slave's subjection comes not from nature but from circumstance. 27 In
short, due to woman's natural subjection the sign cannot convey the
loftiness of station which order confers, and when the sign fails so does
the reality which it effects.
When these articles are compared with the treatments of order by the
manualists, it is apparent that the manualists equated de necessitate
sacramenti with what is necessary for validity, as contrasted with liceity. That is not exactly what Thomas meant by it, since he was less
concerned with canonical matters than with the integrity of the sensible
sign itself; but since without the integrity of that sacramental sign
there literally was no sacrament for Thomas, it was reasonable for the
manualists to say that what was done was not valid. Whether it is still
reasonable to handle the issue in that fashion is doubtful, however,
especially since the recent magisterial pronouncements on the ordination of women.
THE NEWER REASONING
Any reader who, after reading Thomas Aquinas's argument in
Summa theologiae, Suppl. q. 39, a. 1, reads Inter insigniores and Ordinatio sacerdotalis cannot help but be struck by their studious avoidance
ofThomas's focus on woman's natural subjection to man and its incapacitating consequences. 28 The new documents pick up and amplify
another old theme, the express will of Jesus Christ in choosing those
whom he would associate with himself in his ministerial priesthood.
26
"Cum igitur in sexu femineo non possit significari aliqua eminentia gradus, quia
mulier statum subiectionis habet; ideo non potest ordinis sacramentum suscipere."
27 ST, Suppl., q. 39, a. 3, ad 4.
28
The official commentary published by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops
in an appendix to the USCC translation of Inter insigniores makes thai point explicitly,
saying "that some arguments adduced on this subject in the past are scarcely defensible
today. The most famous is the one summarized by Saint Thomas Aquinas: quia mulier
est in status subiectionis [sic]" (Declaration on the Question of the Admission of Women
to the Ministerial Priesthood, with Commentary [Washington: U.S. Catholic Conference,
1977] 22).
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THEOLOGICAL STUDIES
This motif was hardly prominent among the manualists, though not
entirely neglected as a factor determining who could be a subject of
ordination. 29 If this shift toward the express will of Jesus as the principal factor in determining capacity for ordination is applied to our case
of male infants, it points to some significant conclusions.
The first is that if validity of the conferral of orders is determined
by the will of Jesus Christ for his Church, then apparently in order to
maintain the conclusion of Thomas and the manualists we should need
to suppose that small boys (and the chronically insane) lie within the
scope of Christ's will as expressed at least implicitly in Scripture. If
that were the case, then it would be only the law which sets qualitative
standards of age, character, and training, de necessitate praecepti. Can
it be true that on this point canon law is the hero, saving the Church
from its Savior by assuring us of leadership by those who are best
qualified? This question may seem cruel and even rhetorical, but it
points up a difference between Eastern and Western Christianity which
is absolutely vital at a time when Rome seriously hopes to enter into
communion with Orthodoxy. It is virtually impossible in an Eastern
perspective to imagine such a huge gap between church law and the
known will of Jesus Christ as the manuals portray on this issue, and
it is unimaginable that church law and the decisions of churchmen
would improve greatly on Christ's own provisions for the Church. In
the scenario proposed above for the Coptic boy-deacons, the bishop
would have seen his actions as relaxing the canons for the spiritual
good of the faithful, in the spirit of Christ's pastoral love and without
creating a binding precedent for other situations. I do not believe that
many Roman Catholic leaders and thinkers fully appreciate the profound implications of the difference between East and West on matters
of sacramental validity, but failure to do so could undermine further
progress toward the reestablishment of communion.
Second, if Christ's express will is the basis on which the conditions
for validity of ordination must be established, why should we continue
to say that ordination conferred upon male infants is valid? Nothing
in the Gospels or the tradition of the early centuries suggests that
anyone ever thought Jesus intended to entrust a special participation
in his priestly functions to infants. Someone might object, on the basis
of the first sed contra argument in Summa theologiae, Suppl. q. 39, a.
2, that if orders conferred on infants were not valid, it would imperil
the spiritual well-being of people who relied on the validity of the later
ministry of these boys. But first, we should emulate the skepticism of
Pope Benedict XIV, who wondered how many cases there really could
29 It is mentioned summarily by Noldin ("Constat ex institutione Christi, qui solis
viris ordines conferri voluit," citing CIC 1917, can. 968, 1) and at greater length by
Diekamp ("Christus nulli feminae, ne matri quidem suae sanctissimae, potestatem sacramenta perficiendi tradidit"). Otherwise the express will of Christ does not enter into
these manualists' discussion of why women cannot be ordained.
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ORDINATION OF MALE INFANTS
321
be of convert Coptic boy-deacons who needed dispensations to enter
first or second marriages; 30 was this a big problem? Second, if the
tradition was wrong to consider such ordinations valid and should have
ordained those boys in adulthood if they went on to be priests, those
who relied on the ministry of such priests in good faith and in an
ignorance shared by their legitimate pastors will surely not suffer
harm. Third, such a change in the conditions for validity need not
be retroactive.
That leads us to a final conclusion, the need to revise the Codex Juris
Canonici, canon 1024, which at the moment reads simply, "Only a
baptized male receives sacred ordination validly." 31 It cannot be objected that church law can affect only issues of liceity, of what is de
necessitate praecepti. In the case of matrimony, the Council of Trent in
its decree "Tametsi" changed the conditions for validity on precisely
the point at issue here, rendering candidates for matrimony unable to
marry unless certain legal requirements were met. 32 That same principle could be used in the case of ordination, by setting as a condition
for validity of the sacrament that the candidate must be certified as
qualified for orders by the ordinary or major superior. Qualification for
orders could even be defined, if desired, perhaps through using the
admirable criteria spelled out in canon 1029: "Sound faith ... upright
intention ... the requisite learning ... a good reputation ... sound
morals and tested virtues, and other fitting qualities of body and soul." 33
There is, in short, much to recommend and nothing to prevent the
Church from ceasing to claim, even in the most abstract and theoretical
way, that it has the power to ordain male infants.
30 At the end of Eo quamvis tempore, in §53, he seeks further information from the
missionaries, including the question, "An Diaconi Ritus Cophti attingant hodie eximium
ilium numerum, qui a Scriptoribus praefertur."
31 Sacram ordinationem valide recipit solus vir baptizatus.
32
Council of Trent, Session XXIV, November 11, 1563: "Qui aliter, quam praesente
parocho vel alio sacerdote, de ipsius parochi vel ordinarii licentia, et duobus vel tribus
testibus matrimonium contrahere attentabunt: eos sancta synodus ad sic contrahendum
omnino inhabiles reddit, et huiusmodi contractus irritos et nullos esse decernit, prout
eos praesenti decreto irritos facit et annullat" (Conciliorum Oecumenicorum Decreta, ed.
G. Alberigo [Basel: Herder, 19621 732).
33 The full Latin text of the canon reads: "Ad ordines ii soli promoveantur qui, prudenti
iudicio Episcopi proprii aut Superioris maioris competentis, omnibus perpensis, integram
habent fidem, recta moventur intentione, debita pollent sci entia, bona gaudent existimatione, integris moribus probatisque virtutibus atque aliis qualitatibus physicis et psychicis ordini recipiendo congruentibus sunt praediti."
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