San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Pope’s new lay ministry to beef up faith teaching

- By Nicole Winfield

ROME — Pope Francis on Tuesday formally created a new lay ministry to encourage greater participat­ion of secular women and men in the teaching of the Catholic faith, especially in places where priests are in short supply.

The new law creating the lay ministry of catechists officially recognizes for the universal Catholic Church a practice that has been used for centuries in local dioceses, and goes out of its way to emphasize women’s participat­ion in it.

In many parts of the world, lay men and women introduce people to the Catholic faith, educate them on receiving the initial sacraments of baptism and Communion and accompany them in their faith journey.

Soon, the Vatican’s liturgy office will publish a specific rite of installati­on to be used around the world when these lay catechists formally begin their ministry. Individual bishops conference­s are being asked to develop guidelines to train them.

It’s the latest reform by Francis to address longstandi­ng complaints that lay people — and specifical­ly women — have been shut out of all levels of church decision-making, governance and participat­ion in favor of the allmale clerical class of priests, bishops and cardinals.

Earlier this year Francis issued another law decreeing that women can be installed in the lay ministries of lectors, to read Scripture, and acolytes to serve on the altar as eucharisti­c ministers. Such roles had been officially reserved to men even though exceptions were made.

Francis has firmly upheld Catholic doctrine that women cannot be ordained priests. He remains under pressure, however, to allow women to be deacons — ministers who perform many of the same functions as priests, such as presiding at weddings, baptisms and funerals. Currently, the ministry is reserved for men even though historians say the ministry was performed by women in the early church.

The head of the Vatican’s evangeliza­tion office, Monsignor Rino Fisichella, denied that the new lay ministries were a substitute for a possible female diaconate.

The Women’s Ordination Conference, which advocates for women priests, welcomed the new law as a long overdue affirmatio­n of the “authentic vocational calls ... and the unique ways women enrich the church.”

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