Decretum Concilii Tridentini de seminariis post quatuor elapsis saeculis apparet potius tamquam lapis angularis atque principium efficax renovationis institutionis sacerdotalis. Re enim vera in ipso non exstat perfectum et ad finem deductum opus emendatorium, sed tantum eius praemissae, quae altaemen quam maxime aplae erant ad hoc opus perficiendum. Quartum autem una maximi momenti erat, scilicet ius modificationis, quod relate ad sua praescripta decretum Tridentinum episcopis concessit. Concessio huius iuris possibilitatem secumtulit multiformae evolutionis noviter creati instituti formationis sacerdotalis. Qua de re in parte tertia praesentis elucubrationis delineantur praecipuae species evolutionis seminarii dioecesani, quarum duae altioris mentionis dignae sunt. Prima species praefatae evolutionis consistit in evolutione ipsius instituti, i. e. eiusdem formae structuralis — sicdictae formae conciliariis — in dua sui iuris, etsi invicem se supplentia, instituta, scilicet minus et maius seminarium; altera autem in evolutione obligationis commorandi in seminario dioecesano clericis ad sacerdotium aspirantibus impositae. Haec bipartita evolutione, iure particulari promota, elaborata est nova seminarii dioecesani conceptio, quae postmodum in Codice Iuris Canonici recepta est. Notio huius conceptionis duabus notis fundamentalibus designatur, primo, divisione seminarii dioecesani in dua separata atque independentia instituta, i. e. minus et maius seminarium, secundo, obligatione habitandi in seminario omnibus alumnis studio sacrae theologiae vacantibus irrogata; ipsa autem conceptio exemplum praebet prespicuum influxus iuris particularis relate ad configurationem normarum iuris universalis. In ultima denique parte elucubrationis agitur de perspectivis futurae evolutionis instituti seminarii dioecesani sub specie decreti Concilii Vaticani II de institutione sacerdotali perscrutatis. Decretum enim „Optatam totius” talem evolutionem non solum possibilem reddit, sed etiam realem eius existentiam ostendit, quia duas gravissimi momenti in foro formationis clericalis res sublineat: primo, decretum maiora tantum seminaria sicut sensu stricto instituta formationis sacerdotalis agnoscit, minora autem solum sicut unum variorum mediorum ad vocationes sacerdotales fovendas ordinatorum considerat; secundo, singulis Episcoporum conferentis ius modificationis suorum praescriptorum attribuit. Quod autem ius in usum deductum valde utile esse potest ad fructuosam accomodationem instituti seminarii dioecesani exigentis temporis moderni expostulatam et ad profundam ameliorationem totius institutionis sacerdotalis. Relate ad ultimam quaestionem proposito quaedam in fine praesentis elucubrationis discussionis causa exponitur, quae praeter alia duo graviora postulata continet:
1. tirocinium pastorale diaconorum ad duos annos protractum, post finitum studium curriculum incipiendum;
2. susceptio ordinis presbyteratus tirocinio expleto una cum obligatione caelibatum servandi, qua obligatione tantummodo presbyteri astringantur subdiaconis diaconisque exceptis, vel possibilitas transitus ad statum diaconi permanentis aut reductionis ad statum laicalem.
Download files
Citation rules
Licence

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
The Copyright Owners of the submitted texts grant the Reader the right to use the pdf documents under the provisions of the Creative Commons 4.0 International License: Attribution-Share-Alike (CC BY-SA). The user can copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose.
1. License
The University of Silesia Press provides immediate open access to journal’s content under the Creative Commons BY-SA 4.0 license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Authors who publish with this journal retain all copyrights and agree to the terms of the above-mentioned CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
2. Author’s Warranties
The author warrants that the article is original, written by stated author/s, has not been published before, contains no unlawful statements, does not infringe the rights of others, is subject to copyright that is vested exclusively in the author and free of any third party rights, and that any necessary written permissions to quote from other sources have been obtained by the author/s.
If the article contains illustrative material (drawings, photos, graphs, maps), the author declares that the said works are of his authorship, they do not infringe the rights of the third party (including personal rights, i.a. the authorization to reproduce physical likeness) and the author holds exclusive proprietary copyrights. The author publishes the above works as part of the article under the licence "Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International".
ATTENTION! When the legal situation of the illustrative material has not been determined and the necessary consent has not been granted by the proprietary copyrights holders, the submitted material will not be accepted for editorial process. At the same time the author takes full responsibility for providing false data (this also regards covering the costs incurred by the University of Silesia Press and financial claims of the third party).
3. User Rights
Under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license, the users are free to share (copy, distribute and transmit the contribution) and adapt (remix, transform, and build upon the material) the article for any purpose, provided they attribute the contribution in the manner specified by the author or licensor.
4. Co-Authorship
If the article was prepared jointly with other authors, the signatory of this form warrants that he/she has been authorized by all co-authors to sign this agreement on their behalf, and agrees to inform his/her co-authors of the terms of this agreement.
I hereby declare that in the event of withdrawal of the text from the publishing process or submitting it to another publisher without agreement from the editorial office, I agree to cover all costs incurred by the University of Silesia in connection with my application.
Vol. 2 (1969)
Published: 2021-03-10

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.