Vatican City, 24 January 2014 (VIS) –
“Your ministry, dear judges and employees of the Roman Rota
Tribunal … is a service peculiar to the God of Love, who is close
to every person. While you perform your judicial duties, do not
forget that you are pastors! Behind every plea, every position, every
case, there are people who seek justice”.
With these words the Pope addressed the
prelate auditors, employees and collaborators of the Tribunal of the
Roman Rota, whom he encountered today for the first time during his
pontificate for the opening of the judicial year, recalling that “the
legal dimension and the pastoral dimension of ecclesial ministry are
not opposed to one another, as both contribute to the aims and the
unity of action proper to the Church”.
“Ecclesial judicial activity, which
takes the form of service to the truth in justice, has indeed a
profoundly pastoral meaning, as it aspires to the pursuit of the good
of the faithful and the edification of the Christian community. …
Furthermore, dear judges, through your specific ministry you offer a
competent contribution to facing emerging pastoral issues”.
Pope Francis went on to briefly outline
the profile of the ecclesiastical judge from human, judicial and
pastoral perspectives. With regard to the first, the judge is
required to demonstrate “a mature humanity, expressed in serenity
of judgement and detachment from personal views. Human maturity also
includes the capacity to identify with the mentality and legitimate
aspirations of the community in which the judge serves. In this way
he becomes an interpreter of the animus communitatis which
characterises the part of the People of God that is the subject of
his work, and is able to practice a form of justice that is not
legalistic or abstract, but instead adapted to real needs”.
With regard to the judicial aspect,
aside from the juridical and theological prerequisites, in the
exercise of his ministry the judge must display “expertise in law,
the objectivity of judgement and equity, judging with imperturbable
and impartial neutrality. Furthermore, in his work he must be guided
by the aim of protecting the truth, with respect for the law, without
neglecting the tact and humanity appropriate to a pastor of souls”.
Finally, considering the pastoral
profile, “as an expression of the pastoral care of the Pope and the
bishops, the judge is required to show not only confirmed competence,
but also a genuine spirit of service. He is a servant of justice,
called to handle and judge the condition of the faithful who turn to
him with trust, in imitation of the Good Shepherd who tends to his
injured sheep. For this, he is inspired by pastoral charity; that
charity that God has poured into our hearts … and which also
constitutes the soul of the role of the ecclesiastical judge”,
concluded the Holy Father.
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