This seems to be the equivalent of a civil temporary injunction. Any bets on how soon it's made permanent?
From the National Catholic Register
By Carl Bunderson/CNA
The Archdiocese of Indianapolis said the Congregation for Catholic
Education was ‘following standard canon-law procedures’ and that it
awaits the final decision.
INDIANAPOLIS — The Vatican’s
Congregation for Catholic Education has temporarily suspended a decree
from the archbishop of Indianapolis that revoked the Catholic identity
of a Jesuit high school. The suspension will have effect while the
congregation considers an appeal of the decree.
The June decree
from Archbishop Charles Thompson said the archdiocese would no longer
recognize Brebeuf Jesuit Preparatory School as Catholic, after a
disagreement about the school’s employment of a teacher regarding a
same-sex “marriage.”
Jesuit Father Brian Paulson, head of the Jesuits' Midwest Province, has
led the appeal of the archbishop's decree. After Archbishop Thompson
declined to rescind the decree, Father Paulson turned to the
Congregation for Catholic Education to consider the matter.
The president of Brebeuf, Jesuit Father Bill Verbryke, said Sept. 23
that the congregation “has decided to suspend the archbishop’s decree on
an interim basis, pending its final resolution of our appeal.”
Father Verbryke added: “It is very important to understand, however,
what this temporary suspension of the archbishop’s decree does not mean.
It does not mean that the matter has been resolved, or that any
permanent decision has been made. It also does not mean that anyone
should infer that the Congregation for Catholic Education is leaning one
way or the other on any of the issues at hand.”
“The congregation has simply granted a temporary suspension of the
archbishop’s decree until it makes a final decision,” Father Verbryke
explained in a message to the school community.
Canon law provides for the automatic suspension of judicial decisions
and of decrees in penal cases when there is an appeal. In cases of
hierarchical recourse, where an act of governance by a bishop is
appealed, the suspension of the appealed decree is not automatic but is
often granted by a Curial department after weighing the circumstances
for and against the suspension, but not the merits of the appeal itself.
Father Verbryke noted that Archbishop Thompson had “very kindly informed
me that, as a result of this temporary suspension of his decree,
Brebeuf is free to resume our normal sacramental celebrations of the
Eucharist.”
The archbishop had already granted permission for daily Masses to be
said in the school's chapel, but had denied permission for Masses
offered on particular occasions, such as an Aug. 15 “Mass of the Holy
Spirit as a traditional opening-of-the-school-year Mass.”
The school's president said it is unknown how long the appeal process
will last, “but please be assured that we are sincere in our desire to
resolve our disagreement with the archbishop and resume the strong
relationship we had always enjoyed with the archdiocese since our
founding in 1962.”
He emphasized that the “process is ongoing in an environment of not only
deep love for our Church, but also, despite our differences on this
matter, deep respect for the archbishop. Ultimately, our desire is to
remain in full communion with the Catholic Church, without restrictions
on our celebration of the Eucharist, and that our identity as a Catholic
school be fully recognized and supported by the archdiocese.”
Kris Mackey, advancement and communications director for the Jesuits'
Midwest Province, told CNA that Father Verbryke's letter “mirrored the
letter” received from the Congregation for Catholic Education.
She added that the congregation's suspension of Archbishop Thompson's
decree was made at the congregation's discretion and that, adjacent to
its appeal, the province “had asked for the suspension during the time
that the decision-making is happening.”
While the congregation “granted Yes to the suspension,” Mackey
reflected, “of course they're discerning,” and how long the appeals
process will last is unknown.
“The two are kind of unrelated,” she said. The suspension does not
indicate the congregation is more likely to rule one way or another.
In a statement, the Archdiocese of Indianapolis said that the temporary
suspension was “following standard canon-law procedures” and that “this
is a common, temporary, measure that does not affect a final
determination.”
The local Church added that it awaits a final determination from the Congregation for Catholic Education.
The archdiocese had announced June 20 that “every archdiocesan Catholic
school and private Catholic school has been instructed to clearly state
in its contracts and ministerial job descriptions that all ministers
must convey and be supportive of all teachings of the Catholic Church.”
Teachers, the archdiocese said in June, are classified as “ministers”
because “it is their duty and privilege to ensure that students receive
instruction in Catholic doctrine and practice. To effectively bear
witness to Christ, whether they teach religion or not, all ministers in
their professional and private lives must convey and be supportive of
Catholic Church teaching.”
“Regrettably, Brebeuf Jesuit Preparatory School has freely chosen not to
enter into such agreements that protect the important ministry of
communicating the fullness of Catholic teaching to students. Therefore,
Brebeuf Jesuit Preparatory School will no longer be recognized as a
Catholic institution by the Archdiocese of Indianapolis.”
Layton Payne-Elliot, the Brebuef teacher in question, is civilly married
to Joshua Payne-Elliot, who was dismissed earlier this year from a
different Catholic high school in Indianapolis because contracting a
same-sex “marriage” violates archdiocesan policies and Catholic
teaching.
Joshua Payne-Elliot filed a lawsuit against the archdiocese in protest
of his dismissal one day after having reached a settlement with
Cathedral High School, where he had been employed.
The archdiocese has said that “religious liberty, which is a hallmark of
the U.S. Constitution and has been tested in the U.S. Supreme Court,
acknowledges that religious organizations may define what conduct is not
acceptable and contrary to the teachings of its religion, for its
school leaders, guidance counselors, teachers and other ministers of the
faith.”
In a news conference June 27, Archbishop Thompson stressed that
Payne-Elliot was removed not because he was homosexual but because he
had contracted a same-sex “marriage” in opposition to Church teaching on
marriage.
The conflict between Brebeuf and the archdiocese began with an
archdiocesan request that the contract of Layton Payne-Elliot not be
renewed because he is in a same-sex “marriage.”
The school leaders wrote in June that, “after long and prayerful
consideration, we determined that following the archdiocese’s directive
would not only violate our informed conscience on this particular
matter, but also set a concerning precedent for future interference in
the school’s operations and other governance matters that Brebeuf Jesuit
leadership has historically had the sole right and privilege to address
and decide.”
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