Pastor Bonus

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Pastor Bonus is an Apostolic Constitution promulgated by Pope John Paul II in 28 June 1988. It instituted a number of reforms in the process of running the Roman Catholic Church, as article 1 states "The Roman Curia is the complex of dicasteries and institutes which help the Roman Pontiff in the exercise of his supreme pastoral office for the good and service of the whole Church and of the particular Churches. It thus strengthens the unity of the faith and the communion of the people of God and promotes the mission proper to the Church in the world".

Among the changes formulated in the constitution is the integration of the Council for Public Affairs of the Church into the Secretariat of State as the Section for Relations with States (the Second Section).

The constitution also opened membership in dicasteries to the presbyteriate, diaconate, religious, and laity. For centuries, only cardinals were elegable for membership in the organs of the Holy See, but Pope Paul VI allowed diocesan bishops to be members following calls for collegiality at the Second Vatican Council. Pastor Bonus continued the opening of the central government of the church by allowing representatives of all the faithful to have a role in the Roman Curia.

It sets out the roles of the various dicasteries, the Ad limina visits, Pontifical Council and the other institutions listing their responsibilities and the tasks assigned to them.

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