Homily

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FrenzyJen

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I have read the rules about who is permitted to preach a homily, but I am wondering if it is okay (as I believe this is what happened at the mass that I went to yesterday) if a layperson may read a homily written by the priest. The priest seemed a little off, like perhaps he was not feeling well, and instead asked the lector to read the homily.
 
No, that is not allowed. If the priest simply can’t preach the homily due to illness, then he is allowed to omit it since a homily may be omitted “for a grave cause”.
 
Can. 930 §2. A blind or otherwise infirm priest licitly celebrates the eucharistic sacrifice by using any approved text of the Mass with the assistance, if needed, of another priest, deacon, or even a properly instructed lay person.
 
It could be argued that the priest gave the Homily, since it was his own words, though transmitted by unconventional means. In our parish, we occasionally have a Homily “given” by the Archbishop, only he’s not there, and he is not even speaking live. His Homily is conveyed on a DVD, reconstructed on a laptop computer, piped into speakers and projected onto a big screen for all to hear and see. That would seem to suggest that the essential element of the Homily is the word, not the medium.
 
Can. 930 §2. A blind or otherwise infirm priest licitly celebrates the eucharistic sacrifice by using any approved text of the Mass with the assistance, if needed, of another priest, deacon, or even a properly instructed lay person.
Oh, that’s even better, not only because it is Canon Law, but further as it asserts that a “properly instructed lay person” could even pronounce the Eucharistic Prayer, if needed.
 
Father must still actually pronounce the words of institution, or else it is not a valid mass. Notice the canon does not say “read,” but “assist.”

Father does not have to give a homily at a daily mass. Lay people should not speak when it could be reasonably confused for a “homily.” Father needs to give a homily on Sunday if there is a congregation of even one, but it could be as simple as, “Today’s Gospel is about love.”
 
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