Source: https://canonlaw.ninja/?nums=273-289
Timestamp: 2019-04-23 22:26:51+00:00

Document:
Canon 273. Clerics are bound by a special obligation to show reverence and obedience to the Supreme Pontiff and their own ordinary.
Canon 274. §1. Only clerics can obtain offices for whose exercise the power of orders or the power of ecclesiastical governance is required.
Canon 275. §1. Since clerics all work for the same purpose, namely, the building up of the Body of Christ, they are to be united among themselves by a bond of brotherhood and prayer and are to strive for cooperation among themselves according to the prescripts of particular law.
Canon 276. §1. In leading their lives, clerics are bound in a special way to pursue holiness since, having been consecrated to God by a new title in the reception of orders, they are dispensers of the mysteries of God in the service of His people.
5. they are urged to engage in mental prayer regularly, to approach the sacrament of penance frequently, to honor the Virgin Mother of God with particular veneration, and to use other common and particular means of sanctification.
Canon 277. §1. Clerics are obliged to observe perfect and perpetual continence for the sake of the kingdom of heaven and therefore are bound to celibacy which is a special gift of God by which sacred ministers can adhere more easily to Christ with an undivided heart and are able to dedicate themselves more freely to the service of God and humanity.
Canon 278. §1. Secular clerics have the right to associate with others to pursue purposes in keeping with the clerical state.
Canon 279. §1. Even after ordination to the priesthood, clerics are to pursue sacred studies and are to strive after that solid doctrine founded in sacred scripture, handed on by their predecessors, and commonly accepted by the Church, as set out especially in the documents of councils and of the Roman Pontiffs. They are to avoid profane novelties and pseudo-science.
Canon 280. Some practice of common life is highly recommended to clerics; where it exists, it must be preserved as far as possible.
Canon 281. §1. Since clerics dedicate themselves to ecclesiastical ministry, they deserve remuneration which is consistent with their condition, taking into account the nature of their function and the conditions of places and times, and by which they can provide for the necessities of their life as well as for the equitable payment of those whose services they need.
Canon 282. §1. Clerics are to foster simplicity of life and are to refrain from all things that have a semblance of vanity.
Canon 283. §1. Even if clerics do not have a residential office, they nevertheless are not to be absent from their diocese for a notable period of time, to be determined by particular law, without at least the presumed permission of their proper ordinary.
Canon 284. Clerics are to wear suitable ecclesiastical garb according to the norms issued by the conference of bishops and according to legitimate local customs.
Canon 285. §1. Clerics are to refrain completely from all those things which are unbecoming to their state, according to the prescripts of particular law.
Canon 286. Clerics are prohibited from conducting business or trade personally or through others, for their own advantage or that of others, except with the permission of legitimate ecclesiastical authority.
Canon 287. §1. Most especially, clerics are always to foster the peace and harmony based on justice which are to be observed among people.
Canon 288. The prescripts of cann. 284, 285, §§3 and 4, 286, and 287, §2 do not bind permanent deacons unless particular law establishes otherwise.
Canon 289. §1. Since military service is hardly in keeping with the clerical state, clerics and candidates for sacred orders are not to volunteer for military service except with the permission of their ordinary.

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