Wednesday, March 19, 2014

CHILDLESS MARRIAGE IN AFRICA AND INDISSOLUBILITY: A CANONICAL APPRAISAL



CHILDLESS MARRIAGE IN AFRICA AND INDISSOLUBILITY: A CANONICAL APPRAISAL

By Titus Ik. Nnabugwu

Introduction:

For some time now, some African scholars have been agitating that the canonical concept of marriage does not quite correspond to the African concept and that in most places in Africa; the canonical form of marriage is rather superfluous. The church marriage is simply viewed as a blessing of the traditional marriage. Immediately after the traditional marriage, the parties consider themselves married and in most cases resume cohabitation and sexual intimacy. The society mostly considers them married, and does not frown at their cohabitation. Some men even wait till the woman is visibly pregnant before they can talk of approaching the priest for “blessing” or the church marriage. Those who discover that their wives cannot be pregnant after the church marriage find themselves carrying a heavy burden that is at times worsened by the pressures from the society to take a second wife. It is in the light of all these that I shall attempt to look into the Canonical concept of marriage, the African concept of marriage, and then the problem of a childless marriage in Africa in relation to the teaching of the church on indissolubility of marriage.

The canonical concept of marriage:

            Marriage is a natural reality, and the very core of this natural reality is the union of a man and a woman. It is this union that we find in the Bible described in terms of “two becoming one flesh” (Gen. 2:18), a natural institution ordered to partnership and procreation.  The Second Vatican Council described marriage as an intimate partnership of life and love, established by the creator and endowed by him with its proper laws. It is rooted in the contract of its partners, that is, in their irrevocable personal consent[1]. The Latin Code of Canon law, based on the teaching of Vatican II Council, began its exposition on marriage with a theological statement regarding the nature of marriage. In Can. 1055 §1, it states: “The marriage covenant by which a man and a woman establish between themselves a partnership of their whole life, and which of its own very nature is ordered to the well-being of the spouses and to the procreation and upbringing of children, has, between the baptized been raised by Christ to the dignity of a sacrament”.
            The Code makes it clear that the spouses commit themselves to each other by means of an irrevocable covenant. This covenant implies a relationship, which recognises the spiritual quality of the spouses and their capacity to enter into an agreement, which demands the gift of the whole person to one another. Hence the covenant, which has its root and foundation in the free choice of the spouses, involves an interpersonal relationship that is total, involving their spiritual, emotional and physical joining. This is why some people said that the term covenant (foedus) rather than contract is a more accurate theological description of marriage consent, for it refers to a personal commitment, which cannot be revoked[2]. In effect, it is the consent that brings marriage into being. This consent is said to be an act of the will by which a man and a woman, through an irrevocable covenant, mutually give and accept each other in order to establish marriage (Can. 1057 §2).  Marriage, thus understood, implies an acceptance or a relationship ordered to the procreation and education of children and marked by total fidelity and permanence. This is why Can. 1056 states: “The essential properties of marriage are unity and indissolubility, which in Christian marriage obtain a special firmness in virtue of the sacrament”.
The unity of marriage refers to the fact that marriage is a monogamous relationship, that is, between one man and one woman. Accordingly, all forms of polygamy are excluded, whether it is polygyny, where one man has several wives, or polyandry where one woman has several men, or “group marriages” where several men “marry” several women[3]. Such practices run counter “to the plan of God… because it is contrary to the equal personal dignity of man and women who in matrimony give themselves with a love that is total and therefore unique and exclusive”.[4] The indissolubility of marriage on the other hand refers to the fact that every valid marriage cannot be dissolved by the parties themselves or by any human power.[5] These two properties of unity and indissolubility are therefore intrinsic to every marriage. This is so because it is the natural dimension of the union, and more concretely, the nature of man created by God himself that provides the indispensable key for interpreting the essential properties of marriage. The Pope, in his allocution to the Roman Rota said: “Marriage is indissoluble: this property expresses a dimension of its objective being, it is not a mere subjective fact. Consequently, the good of indissolubility is the good of marriage itself; and the lack of understanding of its indissoluble character constitutes the lack of understanding of the essence of marriage. It follows that the “burden” of indissolubility and the limits it entails for human freedom are no other than the reverse side of the coin with regard to the good and the potential inherent in the marital institution as such”[6]. Indissolubility as a property of marriage is therefore not to be considered as an ideal but as a natural law requisite of universal applicability. It only acquires certain firmness for Christians. Consequently, between two Christians who have been configured to Christ through baptism, their marriage assume a different dimension, namely, that of being a sacrament.
            This is why the Church teaches that after the marriage of two baptized persons, if a sexual intercourse, performed in a human way (humano modo), takes place between them, then the marriage in question has become radically indissoluble, both intrinsically and extrinsically. In other words, neither the parties themselves nor an external authority can dissolve the marriage[7]. Hence Can. 1141 states: “A ratified and consummated marriage cannot be dissolved by any human power or for any reason other than death”. In other words, the Church understands marriage as a life commitment, which is to be entered into freely after a mature deliberation and an adequate preparation.

The African concept of Marriage:

            In the African traditional system, marriage has been described as the legalising of a special relationship to which the society gives its approval between a man and a woman. It places each of the partners under legal and social obligations to the other and to the society[8]. In a broader and traditional context, African marriage is not simply an affair between two people, a man and a woman who decided to be husband and wife, but rather a marriage between two families or even between two clans, which even continues after the death of the husband. This communal nature of customary law marriage is based on the African extended family system. Since there are many ethnic and tribal groupings on the African continent, we shall use mostly the Igbo’s of Nigeria as our reference point in our articulation of the African concept of marriage.
            The Bishops of Africa and Madagascar at their SECAM meeting of 1981 at Yaounde, Cameroun stated quite categorically that Marriage in Africa aims at Fecundity[9]. The desire for a child is often an absolute. This is why the purpose of marriage in Igboland was described by Ndulue as business, the business of begetting children. According to him, “Marriage in Igbo culture is business. But it is not business in the economic sense nor is it business of flirting and lovemaking. It is the business of ‘looking for the fruit of the womb’, which are children. Secondly, it is business of bringing two kindreds (ikwu na ibe) or families closer together. For the Igbo, to be without children is to miss ‘immortality’ of some sort. In the same perspective, a childless woman is a monstrosity”[10]. This appears to be the same opinion of Ojemen when he said: “It is safe to say that all Nigerian men and women entering into marriage do so with the intention of having children. Childless couples, sustained by marital love alone over a life time, are rare in this country, and as I stated earlier, most Nigerian men have already pre-planned their course of action in case not enough children are born or no male child appears to carry on the family name… It does not take much time before divorce and/or polygamy sets in”[11]. So for most Africans, the procreative role of the family overshadows every other role of the family. Hence it is said to be a truism that Africans marry in order to raise children and thus perpetuate the family lineage. Fertility is often seen as a participation in the great mystery of life as a force that runs from one generation to the other. It is a question of life and death for the lineage.
            In effect, the concept of marriage for the African is very closely tied to children and fecundity. The aspect of companionship and marriage for the good of the spouses is clearly overshadowed by this dominant interest and concentration on children. This is why it is important to raise the issue of whether the African or Nigerian Christians of today really understand that Christian marriage is a sacrament, and therefore exclusive and perpetual in nature, with or without children.

The Bane of Childless Marriages in Africa:

            Childlessness in marriage is one of the major causes of marital maladjustment and final break down in Africa. Highlighting the issue and how embarrassing it is to the parties concerned, Patience said: “After about three years of marriage, the family members start to bother about the late arrival of a baby in the family. The spouse concerned feel so uncomfortable and will always try to avoid the village people. They feel very reluctant visiting home during festivals like the new yam festival and Christmas/New year celebrations. The woman is always stressed and this could lead to intermittent miscarriages and abortion. Childlessness is an ill wind in the marriage that blows no couple any good”[12].  In the same vane, H. Okeke said: “The value of children in marriage continues to be such a dominant one that the fortunes and fates of many African marriages hang on its fruitfulness”[13]. Talking about the sacrament of marriage and childlessness in Edo, Nigeria, Ibineweka also pointed out the adverse effects of childlessness in African marriages: “And for the African, childlessness is the greatest traumatic experience in marriage. Childlessness of marriage can be the source of personal misery for the couple, the members of their extended families and friends and the community at large. Invariably it leads to polygamy or concubinage, or divorce, or marital infidelity or proxy sexual union[14]. Pope John Paul II in his first historic visit to Nigeria in 1982, while speaking to Christian families in Onitsha, Igboland, acknowledged the bane of childless marriages in Africa in clear and unmitigated terms when he said: “ I know that in your country the childless couple bear a heavy cross, one that has to be borne with courage all through life. To couples who cannot have children of their own I say: You are no less loved by God; your love for each other is complete and fruitful when it is open to others, to the needs of the apostolate, to the needs of the poor, to the needs of orphans, to the needs of the world”[15].          

Childlessness vis-à-vis Indissolubility:

            The crucial question that readily comes to mind as a result of this emphasis on fertility and fruitfulness in African marriages is whether the childless marriages of African baptized Christians are really considered indissoluble by the couples concerned. At the moment of the exchange of consent, are they actually consenting to a Christian marriage with the properties of unity and indissolubility? Is the quality of fertility a condition sine qua non attached by the parties to the marriage? In Europe and North America, because of the increase in divorce, it is now a known fact that the validity of some marriages are challenged under the heading of exclusion of indissolubility as a result of what is referred to as the “divorce/annulment mentality” of one of the parties at the time of the exchange of consent. Cormac Burke made a direct admission of this when he said: “We live in a divorce culture – at least in the West, where people take it for granted that divorce is a solution to a broken down marriage. This mentality undoubtedly favours simulation”[16]. This is why we are asking the question: Is this “fertility mentality” of the African against the indissolubility of marriage? Is it capable of vitiating the consent of the parties on the day of their marriage? I had earlier on maintained that this fertility mentality could amount to an error of quality that is directly and principally intended[17].
            It will definitely be an exaggeration to say that as a result of the premium placed on children by Africans, they enter into marriage excluding its property of indissolubility, should it become childless. It would appear that rather than indissolubility, it is the property of unity that is put even put into question. This is because, it is not uncommon to find African men who, finding themselves in the situation of a childless marriage, do keep their first wives; but then marry other women to bear children for them. When we talk of children, the emphasis is even more on male children. This is because, where a woman gives birth to only female children, the possibility is that the husband will still marry a second wife to give him a male child, who will answer his name and continue his lineage.  In a situation where the man finds himself impotent or sterile, he may prefer that his wife “goes outside” secretly to beget the pregnancy from other men. This is where the problem of conscience comes in for many women who are good Christians and are also “pious”. Many of them come to the Tribunal to say that their only crime was their refusal to give in to such a sinful arrangement by her husband’s family. More often than not, a lot of accusations are made against the woman to push her out and bring in a “more obedient” and “accommodating” woman. This goes to show that for the African, childless marriage remains a very big temptation, even for devout Christians. The issue of legal adoption for childless couples is still considered by many to be quite foreign and a problem to the traditional African mind.
            The Church today acknowledges the social dimension of marriage as well as its character as a contract. But it insists that the heart of marriage lies in its being an inter-personal sexual relationship of life-giving love, and one which is therefore permanent and exclusive. The African Christian must then know that the property of indissolubility is in no way an optional extra, open to the free choice of the couple. It flows from the very nature of the love they are pledging to each other[18]. This is clearly stated by Vatican II: “As a mutual gift of two persons, this intimate union, as well as the good of the children, imposes a total fidelity on the spouses and argues for an unbreakable oneness between them”[19]. John Paul II in his apostolic Exhortation on the Family reaffirmed this: “It is a fundamental duty of the Church to reaffirm strongly, as the synod Fathers did, the doctrine of the indissolubility of marriage. To all those who, in our times, consider it too difficult, or indeed impossible, to be bound to one person for the whole of life, and to those caught up in a culture that rejects the indissolubility of marriage and openly mocks the commitment of the spouses to fidelity, it is necessary to reconfirm the good news of the definitive nature of that conjugal love that has in Christ its foundation and strength”[20].
            What the Vatican Fathers and John Paul II are telling the African baptized Christians who find themselves childless, after many years of married life, is that their predicament should not lead them into forgetting the indissolubility of their marriage. In spite of the heavy cultural pressure and demand on them, they are to remember that by utilizing all their human resources, together with the good will, and by, above all, confiding in the assistance of divine grace, they can and should emerge from their moments of crisis renewed and strengthened. They must always recognize the fact that they are bound to each other forever by a bond that demands a love that is ever renewed, generous and ready for sacrifice[21].

Conclusion:

            In this write up, we tried to highlight the teaching of the Church regarding marriage, as well as the influence of childlessness in African marriages. One thing that stands out very clearly is that African marriage aims at fecundity and that every childless marriage in Africa is a very big cross for the couple concerned. As a result of this premium placed on children, it would appear that the “fertility mentality” is diametrically opposed to the good of indissolubility and that it favours simulation, just like the “divorce mentality” of the West. But then no one will fail to see that this type of mentality can also be a means for doing one’s best to escape from unhappiness, brought about by childlessness or divorce, without escaping from a real and binding and conscious obligation. This is why we advocated that couples in Africa, who find themselves in a childless situation, should not forget that the consent they exchanged on the day of their marriage is irrevocable and for life, and that the good of indissolubility is the good of marriage itself.



                       
Endnotes
[1] Vatican II Council, Gaudium et spes, no.48
[2] John McAreavey, The Canon Law of Marriage and the Family, Dublin 1997, p.21.
[3] cf. The Canon Law: Letter and Spirit, p.574.
[4] John Paul II, Familiaris Consortio, n.19d.
[5] The natural bond of marriage, that is, marriage between two unbaptized persons, can however be dissolved in certain situations by virtue of “the power of the keys” (Can. 1141 ff).
[6] John Paul II, Allocution to the Roman Rota, Jan. 28, 2002, n.4.
[7] It is important to note that there is a big difference between dissolution of marriage and a declaration of nullity. If a marriage is ratified but not consummated, the Pope or the Supreme Pontiff through his vicarious Power can dissolved such a marriage. But when a ratified marriage is subsequently consummated by sexual intercourse, performed in a human manner, the union becomes absolutely indissoluble, and not even the Pope can dissolve such a marriage. On the other hand, a declaration of nullity means a competent ecclesiastical Tribunal after a judicial investigation, pronouncing a marriage null and void, if there was at the time of the marriage (ab initio) either an impediment, a defect of consent, or a defect of the canonical form of marriage.
[8] Prudence C. Nwobi, Marriage and Family counselling, Enugu, 1997, p.1.
[9] cf. Francisco Urrutia, “The Challenges on Canonical Marriage Arising from Africa” in Studia Canonica,23(1989), p. 14
[10] Christopher C. Ndulue, Womanhood in Igbo Culture, Enugu, 1995, p.58.
[11] Cosmas Ojemen, “Canonical requirements of Matrimonial Consent in the Nigerian Context” in B. Etafo & H. Okeke (eds.), Marriage and the Family in Nigeria, Onitsha 1993, p.36.
[12] Patience Nwobi, Op.cit; p.25.
[13] H.O. Okeke, “From «Domestic Church» to «Family of God»: the African Christian Family in the African Synod” in Neue Zeitschrift für Missionswissenschaft, 52 (1996/3), p.203.
[14] cf. Felix Ibineweka, The Sacrament of Marriage and Childlessness in Edo, Pastoral Problems and Possible Solutions (Rome 1987) p.105-113.
[15] John Paul II, February 13, 1982, “To Christian Families in Onitshain L’Osservatore Romano, March-April 1982, p.8.
[16] Cormac Burke, “Simulation of Consent” in W.H. Woestman (ed.), Simulation of Marriage Consent:Doctrine, Jurisprudence, Questionaire, Ottawa 2000, p.22.
[17] cf. Titus Ik. Nnabugwu, “Grounds of Nullity in Canonical Jurisprudence”
A Paper presented at a Seminar on Marriage Tribunals at BORACC, Nkpor October 13-15, 1999.
[18] Cf. Kevin T. Kelly, Divorce and Second Marriage: Facing the Challenge, London 1996, p. 16.
[19] Vatican II, The Church in the Modern World (Gaudium et spes), n.48.
[20] John Paul II, The Christian Family in the Modern World (Familiaris Consortio), n.20.
[21] John Paul II, Allocution to the Roman Rota, January 28, 2002.

RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS OF A PARISH PRIEST



RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS OF A PARISH PRIEST
By Rev. Fr. Titus Ik. Nnabugwu


INTRODUCTION:
Before we begin to examine the rights and obligations of the parish priest, it is important to note that the present understanding of the parish and the parish priest in the 1983 code of canon law was inspired by the teachings of the Vatican II Council, especially the conciliar documents on priestly ministry, namely, Christus Dominus and Presbyterorum Ordinis. It is equally important to understand the two concepts, parish and  parish priest. What is a parish? Who is a parish priest and how does one become a parish priest?

Definition of a Parish:
With the Vatican II Council’s understanding of the Church in Lumen gentium as a people of God, a community of faith, hope and charity, the 1983 Code of Canon Law described the parish as a certain community of Christ’s faithful established on a stable basis within a particular church, whose pastoral care under the authority of the diocesan bishop, is entrusted to a parish priest as its proper pastor (can.515, §1). A parish, as a general rule, is territorial, embracing all the faithful in a given area. However, whenever it is judged useful, a personal parish based on rite, language or nationality can also be established. It is the diocesan Bishop who can establish, suppress or re-organize parishes, after consulting the presbyteral council. Once a parish is lawfully established by the Bishop, it acquires a juridical personality by virtue of the law itself (can. 515, §3), and so can acquire, administer and alienate property in its own name, with the Parish Priest as its sole juridical representative (can. 532).

The Parish Priest:
The definition of a parish priest, as found in can. 451, §1 of the 1917 code of canon law, was limited to the strictly juridical aspect. It defined a parish priest as a priest or moral person upon whom a parish is conferred in his own right with the care of souls to be exercised under the authority of the local ordinary. The 1983 code on the other hand, in can. 519, gives a descriptive definition of a parish priest that is rich in content, both theologically and pastorally: “The parish priest is the proper pastor of the parish entrusted to him. He exercises the pastoral care of the community entrusted to him under the authority of the diocesan Bishop, whose ministry of Christ he is called to share, so that for this community he may carry out the offices of teaching, sanctifying and ruling with the cooperation of other priests or deacons and with the assistance of lay members of Christ’s faithful, in accordance with the law”.
From the above definition, we see that it is the community that gives meaning to the office of the parish priest. The care of souls is the whole function of the parish priest, and in carrying out this function, he exercises the ministry of teaching, sanctifying and governing. He exercises his pastoral ministry under the direction of the diocesan Bishop, whose ministry of Christ he is called to share and whose special collaborator he is.(Lumen gentium, 28; Chirsitus Dominus, 30, Presbyterorum Ordinis, 4). Since all priests share in the ministry of the Bishop and are united among themselves in an “intimate sacramental brotherhood”, the parish priest should carry out his pastoral ministry in close collaboration with other priests, deacons and the laity.
The parish priest is, therefore, not a simple “delegate” of the diocesan Bishop for he enjoys an “ordinary” administrative power, which is joined ipso iure to his office. However, in the exercise of this power, he is under the authority of the diocesan Bishop.

Who Can Be a Parish Priest:
In the old law (cf. Can. 451 of 1917), a moral person like a monastry, or a religious Institute can be the parish priest of a parish. This was changed by Vatican II when it decreed that “Parishes may no longer be united to canonical chapters pleno iure” (Ecclesiae Sanctae, I, 21/2 ). The new Code went further to state that no juridic person can be a parish priest of a parish. However, it still permits a diocesan Bishop to assign a parish to a clerical religious institute like the Spiritans or to a clerical society of apostolic life like MSP, provided one priest is appointed as the parish priest of the parish or that one priest is made the moderator if the pastoral care is committed to a group of priests (can.520). So as a rule, a parish is entrusted to an individual priest or a moderator with his team, as its proper pastor and not to a religious institute.

The Appointment of a Parish Priest:
Can. 157 states that the diocesan Bishop has the right to freely confer all ecclesiastical offices in his own diocese. Consequently, the appointment to the office of parish priest belongs to the diocesan Bishop who is free to confer it on whomsoever he wishes (can. 523). If, however, the office of the parish priest is to be conferred upon a member of a religious institute, the religious is appointed by the bishop on presentation by, or at least with the consent of, the competent superior (can. 682).

The Qualities of a Parish Priest:
To be validly appointed a parish priest, the one appointed must be a priest, since the office of the parish priest carries with it the full care of souls and requires the order of priesthood. Even though the diocesan Bishop is free to appoint any priest he likes as parish priest, the good of souls demand that he appoints as parish priests only those priest whom he judges to be more suitable, taking into account their learning, piety, good character, prudence and zeal for souls. The one to be appointed a parish priest should be outstanding in sound doctrine and should possess those qualities needed for successful pastoral ministry in the parish in question (can. 521). In other words, a priest whose theology is not sound or whose moral life is scandalous should not be appointed a parish priest.

The Duration of the office of the Parish Priest:
The Code maintains that the parish priest should have the benefit of stability and is therefore to be appointed for an indefinite period of time (can.522). It is important to note that the appointment for an indefinite period of time does not mean an appointment for life-long tenure. It simply means that no time is fixed for the office of the parish priest. In this way, the stability of the parish priest as the good of souls requires, is safeguarded, as well as the liberty of the Bishop to remove or transfer him whenever it is necessary or useful.
The Bishop is, however, permitted to appoint a parish priest for a limited period or a fixed term if the conference of Bishops so decrees. In Nigeria, the Catholic Bishops Conference decreed as follows: “The Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria directs and decrees that the appointment of parish priests shall be “ad tempus” or for a specified period of time”(Particular Complementary Norms to the Revised Code, p.22). With this decree, the bishops in Nigeria can appoint parish priests for a fixed period, and can also remove or transfer them when necessary or useful, even before the expiry of the term.

The Removal or Transfer of a Parish Priest:
The diocesan Bishop can lawfully remove any parish priest from his parish whenever his ministry, even without grave fault on his part, suffers injury or is rendered ineffective as a result of any of the causes recognized in law or for some other similar reason in the judgement of the Bishop (Ecclesiae Sanctae, 20/1). The parish priest can be  lawfully removed from his parish for any one of the following reasons: behaviour which causes serious harm or disturbance to ecclesiastical communion or to the parish community e.g. public participation in partisan politics, continued manifest opposition to the decisions of Bishop or ecclesiastical authority ; ineptitude or permanent illness of mind or body which renders the parish priest incapable of carrying out his duties satisfactorily; loss of reputation or good name in the eyes of serious-minded parishioners or hostility towards him, which is not likely to disappear; serious neglect of parish work or duties, which persists after a warning; inefficient or bad administration of the temporal goods of the parish such as finance and property, resulting in serious harm to the Church (can.1740).
With regard to transfer, it is important to note that the one to be transferred is a parish priest who has already exercised his ministry in a satisfactory manner. The purpose of the transfer is to deploy his talents elsewhere for the good of souls and to the benefit of the Church. The law offers two reasons. Hence, the diocesan Bishop has always the right to transfer the parish priest for the good of souls or the necessity or advantage of the church (can.1748).
Therefore, a parish priest ceases from office by means of removal or transfer by the diocesan Bishop done according to the norms of law, by resignation submitted for a just cause and accepted by the Bishop, and by lapse of time if the parish priest has been appointed for a specified period of time(can.538, §1).

THE OBLIGATIONS AND RIGHTS OF THE PARISH PRIEST
The parish priest, as a member of Christ’s faithful, enjoys the general rights and obligations granted him by the law in can. 208 - 223. As a cleric, he equally enjoys the obligations and rights granted to all clerics in can.273 - 289. We shall concentrate here with only those obligations and rights granted him specifically as parish priest. It is important to point out that in the Church, rights are imbedded or collocated in the obligations.

1. The Ministry of the Word:
The first obligation of the parish priest is the ministry of the word of God (can. 528,§1). He has the obligation of ensuring that the word of God is proclaimed integrally to all in the parish. He must see to it that the faithful are instructed in the truths of faith, especially through homilies on Sundays and holy days of obligation, which may not be omitted without serious reasons. He must provide catechetical instruction to all the people committed to his care. He must ensure that children and adults are given special catechetical formation, and for this purpose, he is to utilize the resources of other priests, religious and laity (cann. 773, 776, 777). He must also strive with every effort to bring the gospel message to those in his parish who are not yet Christians and also those who are no more Christians (can.771). It is his duty to arrange for other forms of preaching, spiritual exercises or retreats in the parish (can. 770). Christus Dominus no.30 puts it succinctly this way: “In the exercise of their teaching office, it is the duty of pastors to preach God’s word to all Christian people, so that rooted in faith, hope, and charity they may grow in Christ, and that the Christian community may bear witness to that charity, which the Lord commanded. Pastors should bring the faithful to a full knowledge of the mystery of salvation through a catechetical instruction adapted to each one’s age. In imparting this instruction, they should seek not only the assistance of religious but also the cooperation of the laity”.

2. Liturgical celebrations:
The second basic responsibility of the parish priest is liturgical celebration. It is his duty to see that the liturgy in his parish is celebrated in accordance with the norms of the Church and that the laity participate in it actively, frequently and fruitfully (can. 528, §2). Since the Eucharist is the source and apex of all activities of the church, and the Eucharistic celebration the very heartbeat of the congregation of the faithful, the parish priest should make the Most Holy Eucharist “the center of the parish assembly of the faithful”. He should see to it that the faithful knowingly, devoutly, actively and frequently receive the Holy Eucharist and the sacrament of penance. He should also promote the spirit of prayer in the parish and the families of the parish.

3. Pastoral Care of Parishioners:
To be an effective pastor, the parish priest must know his flock. The parish priest, therefore, has the obligation to know his parishioners personally, visit their homes, share their concerns, anxieties and sorrows, especially at the time of death, comforting them. He should correct them prudently and patiently when they err. He has to assist the sick, especially those near death, solicitously comforting them with the sacraments and commending their souls to God. He has a special responsibility for the poor in his parish, the afflicted, the lonely, the immigrant, the exile and those with special problems. He has to assist the spouses and the parents in a special way to fulfill their proper duties and to grow in the Christian life within the family.
The parish priest has also the duty to recognize and support the proper role which the laity have in the mission of the Church, promoting their associations which have religious purposes. He has the obligation to cooperate with the Bishop and with the diocesan presbyterium, and to build up the parish community, by making them to realize that they are, at the same time, members both of the diocese and of the universal Church (can.529).

4. Functions specially entrusted to the Parish Priest:
In the 1917 code (can.462), certain functions were “reserved” to the parish priest. The new code refers to them as functions specially entrusted to the parish priest (can.530), which means that he has the major obligation or responsibility to ensure that they are fulfilled. They are as follows:
i         Administration of baptism.
ii        Administration of confirmation to the dying (can.883).
iii       Administration of Viaticum, anointing of the sick and imparting apostolic blessing.
iv       Assisting at marriage and imparting the nuptial blessing.
v        Performing of funerals.
vi       Blessing the baptismal font at paschal time, leading procession outside the church and giving solemn blessing outside the Church.
vii      More solemn celebration of the Eucharist on Sundays and holy days of obligation.

5. The Obligation of Residence:
The parish priest has the obligation to reside in the parish house near the Church in order to be easily available to the faithful. He has the obligation not to be absent from his parish if his absence is likely to cause harm to the spiritual welfare of his parishioners (can.533, §1). He must inform the bishop whenever he is to be absent from the parish for more than one week (can.533, §2).

6. The Right to Annual leave:
The Parish priest has the right to an annual holidays of one month, continuous or interrupted, not counting the days of annual retreat (can. 533, §2).

7. The Obligation to Celebrate Missa pro populo:
The parish priest is obliged to apply mass for the faithful entrusted to his care on Sundays and holydays of obligation. This special obligation is attached to the office of the parish priest, and it is personal. If he is legitimately impeded from this celebration, he should have this obligation fulfilled on the same days through another priest, or he himself can fulfill it on other days (can.534).

8. Keeping Parish Registers, the Seal, Archives:
The Parish priest has the obligation of providing for and carefully maintaining parish registers, that is, of baptisms, marriages and of deaths (can.535, § 1). He should also have a special book for Mass offerings (can.958). In the baptism register, he should enter one’s confirmation and whatever affects the canonical status of one by reason of marriage, adoption, reception of sacred orders, perpetual religious profession and change of rite (can.535, §2).
He has the obligation to keep the parish seal and to ensure that all the official documents are sealed with it.       He has the obligation to maintain an archive in which are to be kept the parish registers, the letters from the Bishop and other important documents (can. 535, §3&4).

9. Administering the parish property:
The parish priest acts in the name of the parish in all juridical transactions and so has the obligation to administer the property of the parish diligently in accordance with the law (can. 532; cann.1281-1288). He should be aware of what constitutes ordinary administration, of what constitutes extraordinary administration, and should observe those limits when contemplating the expenditure of monies or alienation of property (can.1281). Accountability to the faithful as indicated in can. 1287, § 2 is the responsibility of the parish priest in what pertains to him.

10. The right to dispense in certain Matters:
The parish priest has the right to dispense, in danger of death, when the local Ordinary cannot be approached, from all ecclesiastical impediments, except the impediment arising from the sacred order of priesthood (can. 1078).
He has the right to dispense from private vows, provided the dispensation does not injure the acquired rights of others (cf. can.1196, 1o). He has equally the right to dispense from the obligation of observing a holyday or day of penance, or commute the obligation into some other pious works, in individual cases, for a just cause and in accordance with the prescriptions of the diocesan Bishop (cf. can.1245).

11. The Obligation to make a Profession of Faith:
The parish priest has the obligation to make a profession of faith personally in the presence of the local ordinary or his delegate at the beginning of his term of office, in accordance with the formula approved by the Apostolic See (can.833, 6o).(cf. The Catholic Formulary, p.459).

CONCLUSION:
The Salvation of souls is the supreme law of the church. Hence the good of souls is and should be the ultimate criterion in structuring the parish and its ministry, in appointing, transferring and removing parish priests. The new code increased the discretionary power of the diocesan Bishop, which is evident in his freedom in appointing, removing or transferring parish priests. The Code also gave more responsibility to the parish priest. The parish priest should not see himself as a “Lord” and should relate well with his vicar for the good of the parish.
The parish vicar is obliged to assist the parish priest in carrying out the pastoral ministry to the whole parish. There should exist between them a fraternal relationship. Mutual charity, respect, understanding and acceptance should prevail between them. They should support each other by advice, practical help and example. The parish vicar as a coworker with the parish priest should be eager and fervent in his daily exercise of pastoral ministry under the direction of the parish priest. But then, both should have a common zeal for the spiritual welfare of the faithful and the needs of the parish. The parish priest should never consider any aspect of the parish work as below his dignity or meant only for the parish vicar. The parish priest should not see his rights and obligations as limited to taking charge of the “Sunday collections”.
 The Parish Priest must be conscious of his responsibility to be accountable to both the diocesan Bishop and to the parishioners, and the need to see his vicar as a collaborator. Every diocese has regulations and directives on the maintenance and remuneration of all priests in the diocese. The Parish priest and his vicar are obliged to keep to these directives; and they are to bear in mind that the goods, which they receive on the occasion of the exercise of an ecclesiastical office, and which are over and above what is necessary for their worthy upkeep and fulfillment of all the duties of their state, are to be used for the good of the Church and for charitable works (see can. 282, §2).
Fraternal charity, therefore, demands that the parish priest who shares his responsibility as pastor with his vicar should also show him love and concern by ensuring that he is adequately and promptly remunerated in line with diocesan directives. The “intimate sacramental brotherhood” that exists among priests should be seen and felt between the parish priest and his vicar.