Addressing the Vatican court primarily responsible for hearing
requests for marriage annulments, Pope Francis said judges on church
tribunals should show “imperturbable and impartial balance” as well as
the “delicacy and humanity proper to a pastor of souls.”
The Pope made his remarks today to officials of the Roman Rota at a meeting to inaugurate the tribunal’s judicial year.
“You are essentially pastors,” he told the officials. “As you carry
out your judicial work, do not forget that you are pastors. Behind every
file, every position, every case, there are persons who wait for
justice.”
Pope Francis has said that church law on marriage is a topic that
exemplifies a general need for mercy in the Church today, and that it
will be among the subjects of discussion at this October’s extraordinary
Synod of Bishops on the “pastoral challenges of the family in the
context of evangelization.”
In his speech to the Rota, the Pope said a judge on a Church tribunal
must sympathise with the “mentality and legitimate aspirations” of the
community he serves, and thus render “justice that is not legalistic and
abstract, but appropriate to the needs of concrete reality.”
Such a judge “will not be content with superficial knowledge of the
reality of the persons who await his judgment, but will recognize the
need to understand deeply the situations of the parties,” the Pope said.
“The legal dimension and the pastoral dimension of ecclesial ministry
are not in conflict,” Pope Francis said. “The church’s legal activity,
which takes the form of service to the truth in justice, has in fact a
profoundly pastoral meaning, because it is aimed at the good of the
faithful and of the edification of the Christian community.”