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- catalog alternative "Privileged communication and the pastor.".
- catalog contributor b2541338.
- catalog created "[1964]".
- catalog date "1964".
- catalog date "[1964]".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "[1964]".
- catalog description "Bibliographical references included in "Notes and acknowledgments" (p. 147-154)".
- catalog description "Part One: The churches and the right to silence -- I. Why keep silent? -- Regina versus Hay-a classic case -- Canon law and the priest -- Pragmatism and the psychiatrist -- The uneasy freedom of the protestant pastor -- II. Where the pastor and the law meet -- Typical cases -- No clear interpretation -- III. How it all began -- The Bible -- The church fathers -- Papal recognition -- Papal legislation -- Current practice -- IV. The common law came out of England -- Anglo-Saxon England -- Post-Norman England -- Lyndwood -The English canonist -- Articuli Cleri-A misunderstood statute -- V. Anglicans and the right to silence -- Post-Reformation England -- The canons of 1603 -- Privileges of confession withdrawn".
- catalog description "VI. Luther reforms confession -- Luther reforms confession -- Luther's doctrine of confession -- Luther and the seal -- Later Lutherans and the right to silence -- VII. Confession in the reformed churches -- Zwingli -- Bullinger -- Calvin -- Reformed churches and the right to silence -- VIII. The churches re-examine confession -- Three reasons why -- Bonhoeffer's re-examination -- Thurneysen's corrective -- Tournier and Mowrer -- The experience at Taize -- The outlook ahead -- Part Two: The law and the right to silence -- IX. Some necessary definitions -- Privilege in general -- When communications are not privileged -- What relations, then, are privileged? -- Why grants the privilege to clergymen? -- X. Communications to clergymen under the common law -- The case of constance Kent -- Where the Priest had to tell -- Where the priest was silent -- The statement of Jeremy Bentham".
- catalog description "XI. Statutes about the right to silence -- Statements made to clergymen in pursuance of Church discipline -- Statements made to clergymen not in pursuance of church discipline -- Statements made by clergymen -- Status of person to whom statements are made -- Statements involving third persons -- Matters communicated otherwise than by oral statements -- Who, really, possesses the privilege? -- The current situation -- A.L.I. Model code -- XII. Unresolved issues needing attention -- Communications involving a third person -- Status of communications from married couples -- The scope of privileged communication -- Discipline enjoined by the rules and practice of the religious body -- The possessions of the privilege -- Confession to Laymen -- A model statue -- XIII. Guidance for pastors.".
- catalog extent "160 p.".
- catalog hasFormat "Right to silence.".
- catalog isFormatOf "Right to silence.".
- catalog issued "1964".
- catalog issued "[1964]".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Richmond, John Knox Press".
- catalog relation "Right to silence.".
- catalog spatial "United States.".
- catalog subject "340".
- catalog subject "BV845 .T5".
- catalog subject "Confidential communications Clergy United States.".
- catalog subject "Confidential communications Clergy.".
- catalog subject "KF8959.C6 T5".
- catalog tableOfContents "Part One: The churches and the right to silence -- I. Why keep silent? -- Regina versus Hay-a classic case -- Canon law and the priest -- Pragmatism and the psychiatrist -- The uneasy freedom of the protestant pastor -- II. Where the pastor and the law meet -- Typical cases -- No clear interpretation -- III. How it all began -- The Bible -- The church fathers -- Papal recognition -- Papal legislation -- Current practice -- IV. The common law came out of England -- Anglo-Saxon England -- Post-Norman England -- Lyndwood -The English canonist -- Articuli Cleri-A misunderstood statute -- V. Anglicans and the right to silence -- Post-Reformation England -- The canons of 1603 -- Privileges of confession withdrawn".
- catalog tableOfContents "VI. Luther reforms confession -- Luther reforms confession -- Luther's doctrine of confession -- Luther and the seal -- Later Lutherans and the right to silence -- VII. Confession in the reformed churches -- Zwingli -- Bullinger -- Calvin -- Reformed churches and the right to silence -- VIII. The churches re-examine confession -- Three reasons why -- Bonhoeffer's re-examination -- Thurneysen's corrective -- Tournier and Mowrer -- The experience at Taize -- The outlook ahead -- Part Two: The law and the right to silence -- IX. Some necessary definitions -- Privilege in general -- When communications are not privileged -- What relations, then, are privileged? -- Why grants the privilege to clergymen? -- X. Communications to clergymen under the common law -- The case of constance Kent -- Where the Priest had to tell -- Where the priest was silent -- The statement of Jeremy Bentham".
- catalog tableOfContents "XI. Statutes about the right to silence -- Statements made to clergymen in pursuance of Church discipline -- Statements made to clergymen not in pursuance of church discipline -- Statements made by clergymen -- Status of person to whom statements are made -- Statements involving third persons -- Matters communicated otherwise than by oral statements -- Who, really, possesses the privilege? -- The current situation -- A.L.I. Model code -- XII. Unresolved issues needing attention -- Communications involving a third person -- Status of communications from married couples -- The scope of privileged communication -- Discipline enjoined by the rules and practice of the religious body -- The possessions of the privilege -- Confession to Laymen -- A model statue -- XIII. Guidance for pastors.".
- catalog title "Privileged communication and the pastor.".
- catalog title "The right to silence; privileged communication and the pastor.".
- catalog type "text".