Home World Catholic Bishop Calls for Last Rites to be Recognized as ‘Emergency Service’

Catholic Bishop Calls for Last Rites to be Recognized as ‘Emergency Service’

Catholic Bishop Calls for Last Rites to be Recognized as ‘Emergency Service’

Bishop Mark Davies of Shrewsbury, western England, notes that “Every Catholic Christian hopes to receive the Sacraments and be accompanied by the prayer of the Church in the final crisis of our lives.”

 

Newsroom (19/10/2021 8:57 PM Gaudium Press) Bishop Mark Davies of Shrewsbury, western England, appealed on Oct. 19 after police reportedly turned away a priest who sought to administer the last rites to the Catholic Member of Parliament, Sir David Amess, at the scene of the attack in Leigh-on-Sea, Essex.

Bishop Davies said, “Every Catholic Christian hopes to receive the Sacraments and be accompanied by the prayer of the Church in the final crisis of our lives, this is something well understood in hospitals and care homes, yet the events following the murderous assault on Sir David Amess suggest this is not always comprehended in emergency situations.”

“I hope a better understanding of the eternal significance of the hour of death for Christians and the Church’s ministry as an ‘emergency service’ may result from this terrible tragedy. May Sir David rest in peace.”

Father Jeff Woolnough, the pastor of St. Peter’s Catholic Church, Eastwood, went to Belfairs Methodist Church on Oct. 15 after hearing that  Sir David Amess had been stabbed during a meeting with constituents. 

According to reports, a police officer outside the Church relayed his request to enter the building, but the priest was not permitted to enter. He prayed the rosary outside the police cordon instead.

Journalist Melanie McDonagh criticized the police’s decision not to admit Father Woolnough to the crime scene. “The most troubling element of the [Essex Police] statement is that the police wanted to ‘allow the emergency services to tend to those in need.’ A priest is an emergency service,” she wrote in the British weekly The Spectator on Oct. 16.

“In the case of Sir David, the priest was someone who could help see him into the next world, not just keep him in this one. You don’t have to share a belief in the efficacy of confession to go along with this; you just need a very elementary knowledge of and respect for the faith to refrain from standing between a confessor and a dying man.”

Writing in the Telegraph on Oct. 18, journalist Tim Stanley noted that according to the College of Policing, a professional body for the police in England and Wales, there is no national guidance on priests administering the last rites.

“The lack of a national policy on the last rites implies that whether or not a priest gets access to a dying person might depend upon circumstances (understandable, because one doesn’t want to impede the police from doing their job) — or else, which is far less forgivable, upon the religious literacy of the individual officer on duty,” he commented, calling the absence of guidelines “totally unacceptable.”

Speaking in the House of Commons, the lower house of the U.K. Parliament, on Oct. 19, the Catholic MP Mike Kane suggested that lawmakers pass an “Amess amendment” guaranteeing priests access to those requiring last rites.

He said: “[Amess] participated fully in the liturgy of the Church. He participated fully in the sacraments of the Church.”

“While I have the attention of those on the Front Benches [government ministers], Catholics believe that extreme unction helps guide the soul to God after death, so maybe we could come up with an Amess amendment so that no matter where it is, in a care home or at a crime scene, Members, or anybody, can receive that sacrament.”

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