Caring for one another
Advice of the Irish Bishops in response to the COVID-19 Coronavirus and Government Directives
The following instructions take into consideration the new norms issued by the Irish government. It is likely that these restrictions will continue for some time after that. Instructions regarding the celebration of Holy Week will be issued in due course. The motivation for these new restrictive measures is a sense of care for the common good and especially for those most vulnerable. Each Christian community should be acutely aware of the responsibility to care for those who are most at risk, even where it may not be appropriate to visit the elderly, a simple telephone call to enquire about their needs could mean so much to them.
• All non-essential pastoral gatherings and meetings are cancelled.
• All Confirmations are postponed until further notice.
• Every Catholic is entitled to a dignified Christian burial. Attendance at Funeral services and Masses
should be limited to close relatives and must not exceed 100 attendees within the Church building.
• Similarly, Church weddings and baptisms may be celebrated on condition that the attendance in Church
does not exceed 100 people.
• In these difficult and uncertain times, people find strength, consolation and hope in prayer.
Churches should remain open for prayer each day.
• In the current emergency situation, all are dispensed from the obligation to physically attend Sunday
Mass. Parishes should inform parishioners of the local possibilities to participate in Mass via local
radio and online.
This is an occasion for all of us – especially in families -to pray more intensely for each other and especially for those who have succumbed to the illness. We should pray also for those in the frontlines – especially doctors, nurses and medical staff and other carers that the Lord will protect them as they place their own wellbeing at risk in the service of all.