The Bishops' Conference in General “The Second Vatican Council, in Christus dominus, noted that it is almost impossible, nowadays especially, for bishops to exercise their office suitably and fruitfully unless they establish closer understanding and cooperation with other bishops; and that outstanding examples of a more fruitful apostolate had been produced in countries where Conferences were established. In 1996, Pope Paul VI’s apostolic Letter Ecclesiae sanctae gave directions for the implementation of several Vatican II documents, including this teaching on Conferences. The 1983 Code of Canon Law, drawing on Christus dominus, defines Conferences in this way: The Bishops Conference, a permanent institution, is the assembly of the bishops of a country or a particular territory, exercising together certain pastoral offices for Christ’s faithful of their territory. By forms and means of the apostolate suited to the circumstances of the time and place, it is to promote, in accordance with the law, that greater good which the Church offers to humankind (Can. 447: cf. Christus dominus 38).”
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