Page:Canons and Decrees of the Council of Trent Buckley.djvu/346

Rh From Book 5 of Decretals, tit I. on Accusations and Inquisitions and Denunciation of cap. 24.

(Sess. xxiv. de reform, cap. 5.)

After what maimer and how a prelate ought to proceed to inquire into and to punish the excesses of his subjects, is evidently inferred from the authorities of the New and Old Testament, from which subsequently proceeded the canonical enactments, as on a former occasion we distinctly noted, and now confirm by the approbation of the sacred council. For it is read in the Gospel, that the steward who had got into bad repute with his master, as though he had wasted his goods, heard from him: ''What is this I hear of thee? give an account of thy stewardship; for thou mayest no longer he steward. And in Genesis, the Lord says: I will go down and see, whether they have filled up the cry which indeed hath reached me.'' From which authorities it is clearly proved that not only when the subject, but even when the prelate transgresses, if it reach the ears of the superior by clamour and report, not indeed by the evil-intentioned and evil speakers, but by provident and reputable persons, and not once only, but frequently (which is intimated by clamour and evinced by general report), he ought, in presence of the seniors of the church, carefully to investigate the truth, to the end that, if the nature of the thing should require it, canonical severity may punish the offence of the delinquent, not as though he were the author and informer, but as though he were performing the duty of his office from the reports of fame or the denunciation of clamour. But although this is to be observed in the case of subjects, a more careful observation is to be made in the case of prelates, who are set up as it were as a mark for the arrow. And because they cannot please all, inasmuch as by their office they are obliged not only to reprove, but also to rebuke, nay, sometimes also to suspend, on some occasions even to bind, they frequently incur the ill-will and hatred of many, and become exposed to treachery; it is for this reason the