GUEST speaker at a recent Gold Coast canon law conference, Irish
priest Monsignor John Kennedy, has a great gift to offer the faithful.
Msgr Kennedy's gift as a canon lawyer is to assist Catholics in making often agonising decisions to remain true to their faith.
Two topics Msgr Kennedy explored at the recent Canon Law Society of
Australia and New Zealand Conference, attended by 80 international canon
lawyers, and later discussed with The Catholic Leader, were perfect
illustrations of the practical concerns of canon law.
One topic, seemingly very close to Msgr Kennedy's heart in this
discussion, was that of Church decisions involving marriage between
people with an intellectual disability.
The other dealt with the historical development of the Pauline
Privilege - the so-called Privilege of the Faith. Its aim is to assist
parties in the celebration of a sacramental marriage where there has
been a previous marriage that was not sacramental in character.
Msgr Kennedy said he was working on a doctoral thesis on the marriage of the developmentally disabled.
"I've spent seven years working on it at the Pontifical Gregorian
University in Rome, as I have a full-time job at the Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith in the Vatican," he said.
"In this time I have delved into areas of law/science, sociology, psychology and medicine to understand the issue."
Among factors driving Msgr Kennedy's studies are two significant life experiences.
"I have a dear uncle, now 69, who (has an intellectual disability)," he said.
"Also as a young lad I can remember living in Dublin beside the
city's clinic to provide medical assistance and job training for people
with physical and mental disabilities.
"I would pass this centre every day in my childhood on the way to school.
"Seeing these people and with the religious education I was getting
at school, I'd often wonder and question how they fitted in to the
overall picture."
Msgr Kennedy said as time passed and he became a priest he came to
think "how lovely it would be to do a thesis on the rights of such
people to marry".
"I started with the thought it doesn't matter if the thesis gets read
widely or not, the great thing will be to help me understand my uncle,
and others like him, better."
There was also a very practical reason behind such a study.
"Under Church law, everyone has the right to get married," he said.
"But, canon law stipulates certain persons would not be able to marry validly.
"In terms of marriage between two such people, the final decision is the bishop's.
"However, Canon 777 paragraph 4 says parish priests/pastors have a
responsibility to provide catechesis to people with a disability.
"And in the case of two such people wishing to marry, the parish
priest needs to be able to have the tools to decide whether the couple
(with intellectual disabilities) truly understand the commitment they
are making.
"My thesis aims to give guidance in reaching such a decision."
Msgr Kennedy, through his studies, quickly found "one thing was for certain".
"If you look at the whole question of developmental disability, no one size fits all," he said.
So the whole endeavour might sound quite impossible.
Msgr Kennedy said, however, by using the tools of canon law together
with the research of a broad range of experts in the field of
developmental disability he was making progress.
"It's another example of how canon law can be applied practically in daily life," he said.
Given this outlook, Msgr Kennedy's response to United Kingdom
celebrity barrister Geoffrey Robertson's recent comments that the Church
should abandon canon law is no surprise.
"Canon law is essentially about protecting people's rights and helping them to understand their responsibilities," he said.
"As human beings we need law - for example growing up in a family we
all know there are rules even though they're never written down.
"And when children are behaving there's no need for rules ... the law
only comes into play when people don't do what's important and don't do
the right thing."
Msgr Kennedy also emphasised the Church's canon law was constantly evolving.
"There is always the need to adapt to change in areas that haven't been thought of before," he said.
"For example, the Church's child sexual abuse legislation has had to
adapt to current law based on developments in the last 10 years.
"Now lay people are encouraged to bring cases of this abuse forward.
"It's now not only seen as a sin but also a crime.
"Such changes are examples of how the law constantly needs to be purified, refined and adapted to new circumstances."
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