Powers and influence of the laity The 1983 Code of Canon Law does not permit the laity to have any kind of executive or juridical powers in Ecclesiastical affairs. This curtails the extent of influence the laity has over how the Church is governed on a day-to-day basis. However, lay experts and advisors were appointed to participate during the deliberations of the Second Vatican Council. After the Council members of the Laity were routinely appointed to sit on Commissions & Committees established at every level – Curial,
Bishops Conference, Diocesan,
Deanery, and
Parish. Each parish is advised to have a parish council and a finance council of laypersons which are advisory to the pastor.
National Council for Lay Associations (England and Wales) The National Council for Lay Associations (NCLA) was the idea of the late
Monsignor Derek Worlock, who later became
Archbishop of Liverpool,
England. It became one of the Consultative Bodies of the Bishops' Conference in England and Wales and was formed from all the large Catholic lay organizations. The NCLA was initially called the National Lay Apostolic Group and was formed after the First World Congress for the Apostolate of the Laity held in Rome in October 1951. In 2003 the NCLA celebrated its 50th birthday with a Golden Jubilee Mass in
Salford Cathedral. The NCLA today is a consultative body to the Catholic Bishops Conference of England and Wales. The following members form the association.
NCLA Member Associations include Catholic Men's Society (CMS), Catholic Association Teachers, Schools and Colleges St Vincent de Paul (SVP) Union of Catholic Mothers (UCM) Catholic Women's League (CWC) Knights of St Columba (KSC) National Board of Catholic Women (NBCW) Ascent Movement National Justice and Peace Newman Association CAFOD Legion of Mary Catholic People's Weeks Catholic Medical Association Secular Franciscans The NCLA is an active member of ELF (European Lay Forum)
The National Council of the Laity (Venezuela) The National Council of the Laity (Consejo Nacional de Laicos) in Venezuela routinely issued statements and press releases often criticising the policies of former
President Hugo Chávez.
Uganda National Catholic Council of Lay Apostolate (UNCCLA) This is a body that brings together the Laity in the
Catholic Church in Uganda who are estimated at 34.1 million in the country making it around 39.3% of the total population in 2014. Under patronage of
St. Charles Lwanga, Uganda National Catholic Council of Lay Apostolate (UNCCLA) is a body that brings together in a representative manner Lay Apostolate Associations and Movements, and Councils to foster a better organised and dynamic apostolate in
Uganda while serving as a link, avenue and channel for information and communication between Lay Apostolate Associations and Movements, and Councils and between these and other official organs within the Church in Uganda and the Universal Church.
The Council of the Catholic Lay Apostolate Organizations of Korea The Council of the Catholic Lay Apostolate Organizations of Korea, formerly The Catholic Lay Apostolate Council of Korea, was renamed during the 2010 Autumn General Assembly of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of Korea. This was ratified at the 44th Ordinary General Meeting of the Council which was held at the Catholic Center in Myeongdong, Seoul, on 19 February 2011. ==Lay Congresses==