The term "censure" and its general concept trace back to the
Roman Republic. In 311 A.U.C., the office of public
censor (
censores) was established. Their duties included maintaining a register (
census) of all Roman citizens and their classification, such as senators or knights. They also had disciplinary authority over manners and morals, with the power to impose penalties, including the degradation of citizens from their social class for reasons affecting the state's moral or material welfare. This form of punishment was known as censure (
censura). The Romans' strong emphasis on preserving the dignity of
citizenship parallels the Church's concern for the purity and sanctity of its membership. In the
early Church, members in good standing were listed in a register read at public gatherings, while those who were
excommunicated were removed from this list. These registers, known as
diptychs or canons, included the names of both living and deceased members. The
Canon of the Mass retains elements of this ancient practice. Initially, excommunication was the general term for all disciplinary measures used against delinquent Church members, with various forms corresponding to different levels of communion within Christian society. For example, grades among the
laity included , , and subdivisions like , and
flentes or
lugentes. Some Church goods, such as prayer, sacraments, attendance at the
Holy Sacrifice, and Christian burial, were common to all members, while others were specific to various clerical grades. Deprivation of these rights resulted in excommunication, meaning exclusion from the communion appropriate to one's Church grade, either wholly or partially. In earlier ecclesiastical documents, terms like excommunication were not always synonymous with censure or a specific type of censure; they could also refer to penance or punishment in a broader sense. later, in 1214, clarified its meaning in a response concerning ecclesiastical censure in pontifical documents. He formally distinguished censure from other ecclesiastical penalties, declaring that censure specifically referred to interdict, suspension, and excommunication. Following this clarification, canonists began to differentiate between two types of punishments: medicinal or remedial (censures) and vindictive punishments. Censures were primarily aimed at correcting or reforming the offender and would cease once this objective was achieved. Vindictive punishments (
poenæ vindicativæ), while not excluding the possibility of reforming the delinquent, were primarily intended to restore justice or societal order by imposing positive suffering. Examples of vindictive punishments include corporal or monetary penalties, imprisonment, life seclusion in a monastery, deprivation of Christian burial, and the deposition, degradation, or temporary suspension of clerics (e.g., suspension
latæ sententiæ for a specified period, which St.
Alphonsus Liguori considered a censure in certain cases). Confession penances are also considered vindictive punishments, as their primary purpose is to offer reparation for sins rather than reform the individual. Importantly, the irregularity arising from a crime is neither a censure nor a vindictive punishment; it is a canonical impediment that prevents individuals from fulfilling the sacred ministry, thus prohibiting the reception or exercise of holy orders. The issue of censures underwent a significant change in 1418 with the Constitution
Ad vitanda issued by
Pope Martin V. Before this constitution, all censured persons who were publicly known were to be avoided (
vitandi) and could not engage in religious or civil interaction (
in divinis or
in humanis). A censure, being a penal restriction on one's right to participate in certain spiritual goods of the Christian community, affected not only the individual under censure but also those who interacted with them in these spiritual matters. For instance, a suspended cleric was not permitted to participate in the sacraments or other religious services. However, Martin V's constitution specified that only those individuals who were explicitly and personally declared
vitandi by judicial sentence would henceforth be treated as such. The
Roman Inquisition clarified in 1884 that this formality was not required in the case of notorious excommunicates
vitandi due to sacrilegious violence against clerics. Martin V's declaration was intended to benefit the broader community of the faithful, allowing them to interact with tolerated excommunicates (
tolerati) as if they were not censured, due to the changing social conditions. In 1869,
Pope Pius X made substantial modifications to ecclesiastical discipline concerning censures through his constitution
Apostolicae Sedis moderationi. This document abrogated many
latæ sententiæ censures of common law, altered others, and created a new list of common law censures
latæ sententiæ. These changes significantly reduced the number of such censures and adjusted the Church's disciplinary measures in response to evolving circumstances. ==Nature of the penalties==