“If there is a shortage of Priests, the Local Ordinary can allow priests to celebrate twice a day for a just cause, or if pastoral necessity requires it, even three times on Sundays and Holy Days of obligation,” Bishop Osei-Bonsu said in reference to the Catholic Church regulations.
He added, “In the light of the COVID-19 pandemic with its limitation of 100 people per Mass, the bishop may grant permission for three Masses to be celebrated on Sunday or on Holy Days of obligation.”
Other options, he said, could include celebrating Vigil Mass on Saturday evening.
“A Sunday Vigil Mass is held on Saturday, but is the same as a Sunday Mass. For one Priest, then, the maximum number of Masses that he can celebrate with the Vigil Mass will be four; one on Saturday evening and three on Sunday,” the Ghanaian Bishop explained.
“But how many parishes have the luxury of three priests? What about if a parish has 2,000 people and not 1,000?” the Bishop posed, and explained, “It may not be possible to cater for all the members of a parish in terms of Mass attendance with the limitation of 100 people per Mass.”
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To abide by the government regulations concerning public Mass, the Bishop urged the parish leadership to be creative.
“We should realize that these are not normal times and so we have to look for other means to cater for the spiritual needs of our people,” he said and added, “We may, for example, want to consider online Masses for those who cannot attend Mass.”
Noting the challenge of Internet accessibility in some households, Bishop Osei-Bonsu urged those who cannot attend Mass both physically and online to say prayers at home.
“If we are not able to attend Mass physically or online, we can still say our prayers at home. We should be able to put up with some inconveniences in these unusual times for a while. We should also remember that in the early Church, Christians did not always have the luxury of a daily Mass,” he said.
Meanwhile, reports indicate that an appeal made by the Ghana Catholic Bishops’ Conference (GCBC) in March to support the vulnerable members of society in the fight against COVID-19 pandemic has continued to receive positive responses.
Receiving a donation by the Society of St. Vincent De Paul on Saturday, June 6, Bishop Alfred Agyenta of Ghana’s Navrongo-Bolgatanga Diocese said support towards the Bishops’ appeal was coming from locals as well as from outside the country.
“The Church had received a positive response within the Dioceses and outside the country, to reach out to the poor; what we are witnessing is how the Church within itself can mobilize,” said Bishop Agyenta while receiving a donation of clothing and food that was worth GHC 20,000.00 (US$4,000.00).
The Society of St. Vincent De Paul in Navrongo-Bolgatanga Diocese located within the Upper East Region is a voluntary organization of lay people whose main objective is to support the poor and vulnerable through charity work.
The gesture by the Society was in response to an appeal by Bishop Agyenta to support the poor, the needy and vulnerable people in his jurisdiction.