A
vicar general is the principal deputy of the
bishop of a diocese for the exercise of administrative authority.
As
vicar of the bishop, the vicar general
exercises the bishop's
ordinary executive power over the entire
diocese and, thus, is the highest official in a diocese or other
particular church after the diocesan bishop. The title normally
occurs only in Western Christian churches, such as the
Latin Rite of the
Catholic Church and the
Anglican Communion. The title for the
equivalent officer in the Eastern churches is
protosyncellus.
Catholic dioceses
In the Catholic Church, a diocesan
bishop
must appoint at least one vicar general for his
diocese, but may appoint more —larger dioceses or
archdioceses routinely have two or even three. The vicar general by
virtue of office is the bishop's agent in administration, acting as
second-in-command for diocesan executive matters (a priest in a
separate office, the
judicial vicar,
serves a similar role with regard to the exercise of ordinary
judicial power of governance in the diocese which is normally
exercised in ecclesiastical courts.) Vicars general must be
priests,
auxiliary bishops, or
coadjutor bishops —if a coadjutor bishop
exists for a diocese, the diocesan bishop is to appoint him as a
vicar general. Other auxiliary bishops are usually appointed vicars
general or at least episcopal vicars. A vicar general is a local
ordinary and, as such, acquires his powers
by virtue of office and not by delegation. He is to possess a
doctorate or at least a licentiate in
canon
law (
JCD,
JCL) or
theology (
STD,
STL) or be truly expert in
these fields.
The similarly titled
episcopal vicar shares in the
bishop's ordinary executive power like the vicar general, except
for the fact that the episcopal vicars' authority normally extends
over only a particular geographic section of a diocese or over
certain specific matters. These might include issues concerning
religious orders or the faithful of
a different rite. These too must be priests or auxiliary bishops.
The equivalent officer in the Eastern Churches is called the
syncellus.
Priests appointed as vicars general or episcopal vicars are freely
appointed or removed by the diocesan bishop, and should be
appointed for a fixed duration. They lose their office when the
term expires, or when the episcopal see
falls vacant.
Auxiliary bishops may also be removed from
the office of vicar general, but must at least be appointed
episcopal vicar. An auxiliary bishop who is an episcopal vicar, or
a coadjutor bishop who is vicar general, may only be removed from
office for a grave reason. Likewise, while they lose their vicar
general or episcopal vicar office
sede vacante, they
retain the powers of the office until the succeeding bishop takes
over the diocese. A coadjutor bishop has right of succession as
coadjutor, so if the see falls vacant he becomes the diocesan
bishop immediately.
(These offices should not be confused with the
vicar forane or "dean/archpriest", as such
vicars do not have ordinary executive
power.)
The appointment of a vicar general is also a useful tool for a
diocesan bishop who has additional functions attached to his
episcopate.
The most notable example is what occurs in
the diocese of Rome
. The
Pope is the diocesan bishop of Rome, but since
he must spend most of his time governing the Latin Church and the
global Catholic Church, his vicar general functions as the
de facto bishop of the diocese.
The
Vicar General of Rome also
serves the same role for the
suburbicarian diocese of
Ostia, the traditional
see of the
Dean of the College of
Cardinals, since it was merged with the diocese of Rome. The
Vicar General of Rome, who is normally a
cardinal, known as the
Cardinal Vicar, is one of the few church
officials in Rome to remain in office
sede vacante. The
current Vicar General of Rome is Cardinal
Agostino Vallini.
A similar example is found in the United States, where the
archbishop of New York functioned also as ordinary of the military
services from World War I until the 1980s: in addition to being
responsible for the archdiocese of New York, that same archbishop
was also responsible for the Military Ordinariate, which had the
status of an
apostolic
vicariate, and functioned as the equivalent of a diocese
defined by quality (that is, all Catholic members of the U.S.
military and their dependents) rather than by geography. The
archbishop had two separate administrations, therefore, and two
sets of vicars general to manage each. This arrangement ended with
the establishment of the wholly separate
Archdiocese
of the Military Services.
Anglican
Vicars-General retain important administrative and judicial
functions in the
Church of
England.
Following the
Act of Supremacy of
1534,
Henry VIII appointed
Thomas Cromwell as his vicar general, a
delegation of the powers with which Henry was invested by the Act
as a result of becoming supreme head of the Church of
England.
References