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  1. Can. 1217 §1. After construction has been completed properly, a new church is to be dedicated or at least blessed as soon as possible; the laws of the sacred liturgy are to be observed. §2. Churches, especially cathedrals and parish churches, are to be dedicated by the solemn rite.

    • BOOK I. GENERAL NORMS. TITLE I. ECCLESIASTICAL LAWS (Cann. 7 - 22) TITLE II. CUSTOM (Cann. 23 - 28) TITLE III. GENERAL DECREES AND INSTRUCTIONS (Cann. 29 - 34)
    • BOOK II. THE PEOPLE OF GOD. PART I. THE CHRISTIAN FAITHFUL (Cann. 204 - 207) TITLE I. THE OBLIGATIONS AND RIGHTS OF ALL THE CHRISTIAN FAITHFUL (Cann. 208 - 223)
    • BOOK III. THE TEACHING FUNCTION OF THE CHURCH (747 - 755) TITLE I. THE MINISTRY OF THE DIVINE WORD (Cann. 756 - 780) CHAPTER I. THE PREACHING OF THE WORD OF GOD.
    • BOOK IV. FUNCTION OF THE CHURCH (Cann. 834 - 848) PART I. THE SACRAMENTS. TITLE I. BAPTISM (Cann. 849 - 878) CHAPTER I. THE CELEBRATION OF BAPTISM. CHAPTER II.
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  3. Canon is another name for a law in the Code of Canon Law. (Adjective form is canonical.) Canon Law is a code of ecclesiastical laws governing the Catholic Church. In the Latin or Western Church, the governing code is the 1983 Code of Canon Law, a revision of the 1917 Code of Canon Law.

  4. Oct 24, 2013 · Canon 515.1 provides the definition of a parish: it is a community of Christs faithful that has been established in a stable manner within a particular Church, the pastoral care of which has been entrusted to a parish priest [i.e., the pastor] under the authority of the diocesan bishop.

  5. Can. 512 §1. A pastoral council consists of members of the Christian faithful who are in full communion with the Catholic Churchclerics, members of institutes of consecrated life, and especially laity—who are designated in a manner determined by the diocesan bishop. §2.

  6. The Holy See reviews the norms to assure that they are not in conflict with Catholic doctrine and universal legislation These norms may be a clarification or refinement of Canon law, but may not supercede Canon law Diocesan Bishops have to follow norms only if they are considered “binding decrees”

  7. The canon law of the Catholic Church (from Latin ius canonicum) is "how the Church organizes and governs herself". It is the system of laws and ecclesiastical legal principles made and enforced by the hierarchical authorities of the Catholic Church to regulate its external organization and government and to order and direct the activities of ...