Wednesday 16 March 2022
1- In the diocese of Essen, women to be ordinary ministers of baptism
2- Nuncio to Syria: After 11 years of war “we have fallen into obscurity”
3- President of the Nicaraguan bishops speaks out on the expulsion of the nuncio
4- The memorandum for the conclave circulating among the cardinals
5- Patriarch Sako: Canonization processes for Iraqi martyrs progressing
~
The diocese of Essen in Germany announced on Monday that lay people, including women, will now be allowed to administer baptisms due to the lack of priests available. Bishop Franz-Josef Overbeck said the decision is a reaction to a “difficult pastoral situation” and has commissioned 17 pastoral and community officers to administer the sacrament. They will carry out the task for a limited period of three years and with an exceptional permission under Church law. Theresa Kohlmeyer, head of the Faith, Liturgy and Culture department in the diocese of Essen, said that “over the past 2,000 years, the Church has repeatedly reacted to external circumstances.” She explains that in the baptismal journey, families today need to be accompanied and organized as closely as possible and the decreasing number of priests is an issue. (According to Church law in normal circumstances, a bishop, priest or deacon is the ordinary minister of the sacrament. However, in an emergency, the CCC notes that anyone can baptize a person who wants to be baptized; even a non-baptized person, with the required intention, can baptize, by using the Trinitarian baptismal formula.)
Katholisch.de, German
Nuncio to Syria: After 11 years of war “we have fallen into obscurity”
On March 15, 2011, the war in Syria began. Although it is spoken about little today with other news taking precedence, in 11 years this conflict has led to half a million deaths, 11.5 million displaced people and entire cities leveled to the ground. In an interview with the Holy See’s media outlet, Vatican News, Cardinal Mario Zenari, Apostolic Nuncio to Syria, pleads: “Don’t let hope die.” He highlights sadly the fact that the country has “disappeared from the media radar” in the last years and has been “falling into obscurity.” Cardinal Zenari explains Syria has been in a dire situation with many people emigrating, rampant food insecurity and a lack of economic rebuilding. He says that above all “it is important to remain close and be in solidarity.”
Vatican News, English