Thursday, February 17, 2011

Tuam archdiocese makes history by appointing first woman chancellor

History was made at the beginning of February when Archbishop Michael Neary of Tuam appointed Mercy nun, Sr Mary Lyons, RSM, as Diocesan Chancellor.  

She is the first woman to hold such a position both in the Irish Church and the Church in Britain.

As Chancellor, Sr Lyons' role will involve overseeing the canonical structures in the Archdiocese of Tuam.  

It also consists, among other things, in issuing official documents, granting dispensations, providing necessary indults and faculties, overseeing the application of the law, and seeing to the preservation of documents in the diocesan archives.

Originally from Louisburgh, Co Mayo, Mary Lyons attended Mount Saint Michael Secondary School in Claremorris before joining the Sisters of Mercy in Tuam.  

After graduating from the NUI Galway with a BA in Latin and English and an HDip, she taught Latin and English in Scoil Bhríde in Tuam.

In 1994, Sr Lyons was awarded JCL and MCL degrees in canon law by Saint Paul’s University and the University of Ottawa, Canada.

Teaching and working as a judge in the regional marriage tribunal in Galway followed until in June 2000, Sr Lyons took early retirement to pursue doctoral studies in canon law at Saint Paul’s University.  

She was awarded a PhD in October 2002 for her doctorate on the governance and structures of the Mercy Congregation from its beginnings in the 19th century to recent years.

In December 2002, Sr Lyons was appointed a judge/instructor in the regional marriage tribunal in Galway by the late Bishop James McLoughlin.  

In addition to this work at the marriage tribunal, Sr Lyons also served on diocesan commissions and as a canonical consultant to religious congregations.

In December 2010, she retired from the marriage tribunal and was then appointed Chancellor of the Archdiocese of Tuam.

Over her career, Sr Lyons has sat on a number of different diocesan committees and has been a canonical adviser to the Archdiocese of Tuam and other dioceses, as well as to a number of religious congregations both nationally and internationally on a range of canonical issues.  

She has done a lot of review work for various canonical magazines and written numerous book reviews.

Her doctoral thesis, which was published as Governance Structures of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy: Becoming One, is an historical and canonical study of how the governance structures of the Mercy congregation evolved in response to ecclesiastical legislation of the 19th and 20th centuries, and especially in response to the Second Vatican Council’s mandate for adaptation and renewal.