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canon |
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canon noun act, behest, citation, code, command, commandment, criterion, decree, demand, dictate, dictum, direction, edict, established principle, fiat, funnamental principle, general rule, imperative, imposition, interdiction, law, legislation, lex, mandate, manifesto, norma, order, ordinance, precept, prescript, prescription, proclamation, pronunciamento, public announcement, regula, regulation, requirement, requisition, rescript, rule, rule of conduct, ruling, standard, statute, test, ultimatum, warrant, word, writ Associated concepts: canon law, canons of construction, canons of ethics, canons of judicial ethics, canons of justice, professional canon, rule of construction See also: article, belief, bylaw, code, codification, constitution, direction, directive, doctrine, dogma, edict, law, legislation, mandate, maxim, order, ordinance, pandect, precept, prescription, principle, regulation, rubric, rule, standard, statute CANON, eccl. law. This word is taken from the Greek, and signifies a rule or law. In ecclesiastical law, it is also used to designate an order of religious persons. Francis Duaren says, the reason why the ecclesiastics called the rules they established canons or rules, (canones id est regulas) and not laws, was modesty. They did not dare to call them (leges) laws, lest they should seem to arrogate to themselves the authority of princes and magistrates. De Sacris Ecclesiae Ministeriis, p. 2, in pref. See Law, Canon. LAW, CANON. The canon law is a body of Roman ecclesiastical law, relative to
such matters as that church either has or pretends to have the proper
jurisdiction over:
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Catholic Insight has previously defended the translation in the canon of the Mass of the Latin phrase "pro multis" to "for all. I, in turn, am puzzled about how either of these ever found its way into the canon of the Mass, Tridentine or otherwise. For the pope and our bishops, even though we will be remembering them formally in the Canon of the Mass (Is it still called the Canon? |
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