Please see below a letter from the Archbishop of Southwark regarding the news of a 4 week lockdown from Thursday 5th October.
In the coming days more information will be given regarding:
Whether or not Masses will be open to the public
What time the Church will be open for Private Prayer only (similar to what it was like before we reopened
Streaming will continue at 10am every Sunday throughout this period as it continues to do so.
Dear all,
A short while ago, the President of the Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales, Cardinal Nichols, and the Vice-President, Archbishop McMahon, released a Statement responding to the Prime Minister’s announcement earlier this evening of further widespread restrictions in England beginning on Thursday 5 November. In that televised statement, there had been no formal announcement concerning Places of Worship; however, the guidance later published on the government’s own website stated that places of worship will be required to end all acts of collective worship from that date, with the exception of funerals.
As has been made clear in the bishops’ statement, Faith communities have played, and continue to play, a vital role in offering support in diverse and essential ways to hundreds of thousands of people in all sections of the community, especially the most vulnerable and marginalised; and that this “critical service towards the common good of all is created and sustained by communal worship and prayer”.
For Catholics, loving our neighbour and loving God are realised perfectly in our celebration of the Eucharist, through which the Lord Jesus shares himself in his risen life. This is the loving mystery which we, as disciples of the Lord Jesus, take out in service to the world.
In order that we might do as the Lord has commanded, Catholics have acted with great care and responsibility in the way churches have reopened, thus enabling the essential worship of God to be celebrated in a safe and organised way.
As the President and Vice-President make clear in their statement, the Government has a profound responsibility to show why it has taken this particular decision to prohibit the public celebration of the Liturgy; to do otherwise, would risk losing the good-will and unity needed at this difficult time.
The draft legislation is due to be brought before Parliament on Monday 2 November. In this short timeframe I would urge all priests and deacons to encourage the faithful to raise this matter with their constituency MPs, asking that questions be raised in the House regarding the publication of the data which has driven this regrettable decision to cease public common worship.
With every blessing
Yours sincerely in Christ
+ John
Most Rev John Wilson
Archbishop of Southwark
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