Ottawa Catholics are no longer able to give eulogies for lost loved ones during funeral masses, after the Archbishop for the region issued a decree ending the practice this month.
Archbishop Terrence Prendergast issued the decree, effective as of Feb. 2, because he said eulogies take away from what the funeral mass should be about โ praying for the deceased and their family, not praising them.
Archbishop Terrance Prendergast said priests in Ottawa have long allowed eulogies, but said the custom has gotten out of hand.
The decree states that eulogies or words of remembrance are not an official part of the Catholic funeral rites, and rightfully belong at a wake service or at a grave site.
โTechnically the books that guide us donโt allow them, but they had crept in,โ Prendergast told Hallie Cotnam on Ottawa Morning.
Eulogies are โwords of praise without reference to Godโ said Prendergast, while a mass โis an act of faith.โ
Prendergast said the church was facing increasing pressure from families to have more eulogies and even multiple eulogies within the same service and said the mass itself was getting lost.
But given the long-standing practice of allowing eulogies, Prendergast and his bishops came up with a compromise: allowing a three to four minute โWords of Remembranceโ speech before the service begins.