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The Dicastery for Divine Worship responded on June 23, 2026, to German bishops who had requested to open the homily to laypeople: no. The door is closed. Abbé Grégoire Masson analyzes the theological significance of this refusal, which is not a policy, but a doctrine.
We had followed the confrontation between the German Synodal Path and Rome on the issue of lay homilies. In March 2026, Bishop Heiner Wilmer, President of the German Bishops' Conference, had formally requested the Dicastery for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments to authorize laypeople to preach during Mass. The response came on June 23, 2026. It is clear.
In a letter made public on June 23, 2026, the Dicastery for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments refused the requested authorization. According to a Vatican source cited by La Croix, "the door is closed for a generation." Le Salon Beige published the following day, June 24, a doctrinal excerpt from the letter itself: "The homily constitutes an integral part of the liturgy; it is intrinsically linked to the proclamation of the Gospel and represents an exercise of the munus docendi—the power to teach—entrusted to ordained ministers by the sacrament of Holy Orders."
The formulation is precise and deliberate. It does not rely on revisable disciplinary norms but on the sacramental nature of the ordained ministry.
The homily is not a lecture inserted into the Mass. According to the Second Vatican Council, it is "part of the liturgy itself" (Sacrosanctum Concilium, n. 52). This liturgical integration explains why it cannot be entrusted to a layperson: this is not a question of intellectual competence or spiritual quality but of sacramental configuration.
The Code of Canon Law is explicit: "The homily, which is part of the liturgy itself and is reserved to the priest or deacon, is to be delivered" (CIC, can. 767, § 1). This reservation is not an old custom: it is the universal law of the Church, founded on the theology of the ministerial priesthood.
The munus docendi—the duty to teach—is one of the three functions (tria munera) received by the bishop and shared with the priest in the exercise of ministry: to teach, to sanctify, to govern. Entrusting the homily to a layperson would not be a delegation of competence: it would be the confusion of two states in the Church that Lumen Gentium carefully distinguishes: the ministerial priesthood and the common priesthood of the faithful, "which differ essentially and not only in degree" (Lumen Gentium, n. 10).
The German request is part of a broader logic of the Synodal Path (Synodalweg): aligning ecclesial structures with Protestant practices by granting laypeople functions symbolically reserved for ordained ministers. Rome has already refused the ordination of women, the blessing of homosexual couples in a context that would simulate a sacramental rite, and now lay homilies.
This is not an excess of centralism. It is the role of the Magisterium: to safeguard the deposit of faith against developments that, under the guise of pastoral updating, alter doctrinal substance. The problem of the German Church is not a lack of participatory structures. It is first and foremost a crisis of faith, measured by the collapse of religious practice, which no institutional reform can resolve.
For the faithful attached to the liturgy, this refusal is a confirmation: the Mass is not a civic assembly where roles are distributed according to sociology. It is the action of Christ the Priest, made present through the ordained ministry.
It would be naive to believe that this refusal closes the debate in Germany. The Bishops' Conference has not abandoned its synodal process. Some dioceses have already experimented de facto with lay interventions during Mass under alternative formulations ("homiletic sharing," "communal meditation"). Rome will have to monitor these workarounds.
The phrase "closed for a generation" also deserves critical scrutiny: it suggests the question could be reopened in twenty or thirty years. That is not what doctrine states. It may be what some Roman circles want to hear to ease a way out of the crisis. The distinction between revisable discipline and immutable doctrine remains the underlying issue.
Pope Leo XIV, recently questioned about Vatican II, recalled that the Council must be read in continuity with the Magisterium, not as a rupture. The Dicastery's decision aligns with this principle. It invites every Catholic to rediscover what the Mass truly means: not a self-celebrating assembly, but God's action in the flesh of His Church.
The homily, which is part of the liturgy itself and is reserved to the priest or deacon, is to be delivered at all Masses on Sundays and holy days of obligation celebrated with a congregation.
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C’est dommage, on aurait pu imaginer des laïcs bien formés partager leur foi pendant l’homélie, surtout quand le prêtre manque de temps pour préparer.
FSSPX : Léon XIV lance un dernier appel avant le 1er juillet