This
juridico-philosophical argument is a response to the juridical argument against
the sovereignty of the Holy See and for its status as an “instrumentality” of
the State of Vatican City, both objectively and specifically for the purpose of
civil suits in American courts against the Holy See in matters of clerical
sexual abuse.
1. The
State of Vatican City (SCV) was created by a bilateral treaty (Lateran Pacts) between
the Kingdom of Italy and the Holy See, both acting as sovereign entities.
Therefore, the Holy See is juridically prior to the SCV as a sovereign entity
with concurrent sovereign personality equivalent to states under international
law and by that fact constitutes it as a sui
generis sovereign state.
2. Therefore
the Holy See cannot be an instrumentality of the SCV, since an instrument which
is created by a given entity cannot be temporally prior to such entity, for the
created cannot have existed before the creator.
3. But
the Holy See existed before the creation of the SCV and existed independent of
it until 1929.
4. Therefore
the SCV was created as an instrumentality of the Holy See, in order to protect
the sovereign personality of the Holy See, in absolute independence of the
Pope, and the salvific mission of the Catholic Church against temporal
sovereigns.
5. Therefore
suits against the Holy See as instrumentality of the SCV are absurd and should
not be allowed.
6. It
also follows that the Holy See is the only sovereign personality of “The Vatican”
entity, and the SCV is an instrumentality to ensure the temporal sovereignty of
the Holy See (historical evidence of this being the “States of the Church”
themselves were created in the 700s as a protection for the Church and the
Papacy against temporal sovereigns; this has always been the function of the
terratoriality of the Holy See and was the reason why the Roman Question had to
be resolved with a grant of sovereign terratoriality).
Written
16 August 2013, 7:24 am.
This argument is written in response to the argument set forth by James
Fantau in Rethinking the Soverign Status of the Holy See: Towards a Greater
Equality of States and Greater Protection of Citizens in United States Courts,
19 Card. J. Int'l & Comp. L. 487 (2011).
Accessed in 2013 @ http://www.cjicl.com/uploads/2/9/5/9/2959791/cjicl_19.2_fantau_note.pdf
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