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The Dicastery for Divine Worship ruled on June 23, 2026: laypeople cannot preach during Mass. A decision that puts an end, "for a generation," to the standoff with the German Bishops' Conference—and serves as a reminder that liturgy is not negotiated in committee.
We had been following the dossier of the SSPX and the appeal of Leo XIV before July 1. The Roman decision of June 23, 2026, on lay homilies falls within the same thread: that of a Church which, under Leo XIV, reaffirms doctrinal lines where they had been blurred by ecclesiological progressivism.
On June 23, 2026, the Dicastery for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments published a statement summarizing a letter addressed to Bishop Heiner Wilmer, president of the German Bishops' Conference. The German bishops had requested, in March 2026, permission to allow lay people to preach during Mass as part of the Synodal Path (Synodaler Weg). The dicastery's response: no. "The door is closed for a generation," confided a Vatican source to La Croix (June 23, 2026). In the same move, Leo XIV publicly addressed the question of Vatican II, rejecting readings that would make it a break with Tradition (Le Salon Beige, June 23, 2026).
Liturgical law is clear. Canon 767 §1 of the Code of Canon Law stipulates that "the homily is reserved to the priest or deacon." The Congregation for the Clergy had already recalled in 1997, in the Instruction Ecclesiae de mysterio, that this reservation is not due to contingent discipline but to the very nature of the homily, which extends the priestly act of proclaiming the Word. What Rome rejects is not the competence of lay people to bear witness: it is the confusion of ministries which, since the Fathers of the Church, structures the liturgical life of the community.
The German Synodal Path had made this request a symbol of a grassroots reform of the Church. The Roman decision reminds us that the liturgy, forma fidei, is not a field for institutional experimentation.
The phrase "closed for a generation" carries significant weight. It means that Rome does not yield to media or institutional pressure, but it also indicates that the question is not theologically closed forever. The faithful attached to the liturgy as a properly priestly act will find in this decision a confirmation of Leo XIV's magisterial coherence.
How will the German Church, structurally secularized and financially dependent on the church tax (Kirchensteuer), absorb this refusal without provoking an institutional crisis? Rome has said no, but pastoral follow-up remains to be built. The risk of de facto autonomy for the German Church remains real.
"You have received one Lord, one faith, one baptism" (Eph 4:5). The unity of the Church is not negotiated in committee. Supporting the German bishops who resist internal pressure is an act of concrete communion; praying for their courage is a duty of ecclesial solidarity.
- **June 23, 2026**: Vatican rejects lay homilies in Germany.
- **Canon 767 §1**: Homily reserved to priests and deacons.
- **Synodal Path**: Symbol of grassroots reform demands.
- **Leo XIV**: Reaffirms continuity with Tradition.
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On dirait que Rome a choisi son camp : la tradition plutôt que les compromis. Dommage pour ceux qui espéraient un peu plus de souplesse.
C’est un peu triste, cette décision. On a l’impression que Rome préfère tout verrouiller plutôt que de faire confiance aux laïcs.
Dommage, cette décision donne l’impression qu’on veut tout contrôler plutôt que de faire confiance aux fidèles. On dirait qu’on fait un pas en arrière.
FSSPX : Léon XIV lance un dernier appel avant le 1er juillet