01 February 2018 | by Bernadette Kehoe
Stack commissions lay people to minister at funerals
The Tablet
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Lay funeral ministers have been commissioned for the first time in Wales by Archbishop George Stack.
Lay funeral ministers have been commissioned for the first time in Wales this week by Archbishop George Stack.
About 20 candidates have undergone training, culminating
in leading a “practice” funeral in a church - even with an empty coffin
lent by a funeral director.
Archbishop Stack said watching the lay ministers
conducting themselves on the altar and the reflections they offered was
beautiful: “When they had to
stand up in front of me and several priests present, they were
personally moving into a much more profound experience of ministry.
Despite being nervous, when I was offering comments and observations, or
emphasising things, we had some very significant encounters and
engagement.” Two of the new ministers being commissioned are religious
sisters who already have experience of receiving remains into church the
night before the funeral service.
Speaking to The Tablet, Archbishop Stack described the
initiative as a powerful way of lay people witnessing to their faith in
public: “I don’t see this as just a functional thing, about being more
efficient; it’s saying to lay people, ‘you have a lot to offer in terms
of your own faith.’ These lay ministers will be dealing with people at
their most vulnerable in a journey through bereavement that people are
making.”
Asked how the reaction to the idea of lay led funerals in Wales, he
said that when properly presented, people were delighted with the idea –
and that not everyone wants a Requiem Mass. One of the new lay
ministers has already been asked to conduct a funeral by a fellow
parishioner, when the time comes: “Particularly for people who are not
regular churchgoers, as they see ordinary people leading prayer and
being able to say something significant about bereavement and their own
personal faith in the resurrection, both at the funeral and in the
preparations beforehand, it is powerful peer ministry.”
Lay-led funerals have been happening in Liverpool for six years and more than 100 people have been trained. Co-ordinator
Maureen Knight said the ministers have been “accepted very well in most
places.” Typically they lead the service the night before the funeral
and then take charge of the graveyard or crematorium prayers. She said
when people do insist on having a priest, “we’ve always said, you can
have a priest but you may have to wait a bit longer.” The key benefit is
the “wonderful relationships” that are built up because bereaved people
are being ministered to by people in the parish who may have long
standing connections with their family.
But is Archbishop Stack offering this role to lay people because of the problem of a shortage of priests? sssHe said that is not the case: “When lay people open up their lives and express their own faith, that ha
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