Consultor

In the Catholic Church, title for various advisory positions
Part of a series on the
Hierarchy of the
Catholic Church
Saint Peter
Saint Peter
Ecclesiastical titles (order of precedence)
Liturgical titles
Consecrated and professed titles
  • icon Catholic Church portal
  • v
  • t
  • e
Scale of justice
Part of a series on the
Canon law of the
Catholic Church
Jus antiquum (c. 33-1140)

Jus novum (c. 1140-1563)

Jus novissimum (c. 1563-1918)

Jus codicis (1918-present)

Other

Sacraments

Sacramentals

Sacred places

Sacred times

Supreme authority, particular
churches, and canonical structures
Supreme authority of the Church

Supra-diocesan/eparchal structures

Particular churches

Juridic persons

Temporal goods (property)
Procedural law
Pars statica (tribunals & ministers/parties)

Pars dynamica (trial procedure)

Canonization

Election of the Roman Pontiff

Legal practice and scholarship
  • List of legal abbreviations

Academic degrees

Journals and Professional Societies

Faculties of canon law

Canonists

icon Catholicism portal
  • v
  • t
  • e

A consultor is one who gives counsel, i.e., a counselor.

In the Catholic Church, it is a specific title for various advisory positions:

  • in the Roman Curia, a consultor is a specially appointed expert who may be called upon for advice desired by a department. Consultors, who can be members of the clergy, female or male religious, or laity, and possibly even non-Catholics, are called upon according to need and according to their competence in specific fields. The decisions are then made by the cardinals and (since the Second Vatican Council) bishops who are members of the department, those of the greatest importance being made at plenary meetings, held in principle every year, at which even those members not resident in Rome take part, while those that are important but of ordinary character are taken at the more frequent ordinary meetings, and the day-to-day routine work is done by the prefect or president of the department, assisted by the secretary and under-secretary and the other members of the staff.
  • in a diocese, the college of consultors consists of priests charged with advising the bishop; some decisions require that they be given a hearing, others require their consent; when a sede vacante situation arises, the college of consultors is obliged to elect a diocesan administrator within eight days of receiving notice of the vacancy.[1]
  • in certain regular congregations (i.e. religious orders) consultors can advise the superior-general, (e.g. the six geographically diverse consultors to the superior general of the Passionists), provincial superior (e.g. Redemptorist Vice-provincials), or a local superior.

See also

Sources and references

  1. ^ canon 421 of the Code of Canon Law Archived January 2, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  • Catholic Encyclopedia
Authority control databases: National Edit this at Wikidata
  • Germany


Stub icon

This Catholic canon law–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e