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edward_george1
Guest
I would, but I’m lying on the couch doing nothing and can’t be bothered to do so. Sorry.
-Fr ACEGC
-Fr ACEGC
I think each bishop looks at the situation in his diocese, confers with the curia, confers with his brother priests, and then makes decisions that he thinks are best for the spiritual welfare of his flock and for his priests.WHat do you think the explanation is for moving everything to Sundays, dispensing with Holy Days, etc?
“Many”? I know of two.why dispensing with obligations had become the norm in many dioceses
“Many”? There is one: Ascension.and many things are moved to Sundays in certain US dioceses but not others
The bishops conference looks at things broadly. The US is vastly different. They chose the holy days and to celebrate Ascension on Sundays. They likely had to compromise amongst themselves when setting the norms for the conference as a whole.what would be a reasonable guess?
I’m with you. If people want to ascribe bad motives to their priests and bishops, I just don’t want to be part of the conversation.There’s nothing to be sold on. That’s not how obedience works.
If you live in a Diocese where there’s an obligation, go to Mass.
If you don’t, you may still go to Mass. You don’t have to.
It really isn’t worth as much time and energy as has now been devoted to this thread.
Also Body and Blood of Christ Thursday is moved three days to Sunday.
Apologize or not, you should probably give people the benefit of the doubt, especially those with as hard a job as bishops.I have a low view of most of the bishops in this country - and feel like it would not be right to apologize for it.
You might have your views, and your views might be validated by experience, but this kind of thinking isn’t truly helpful. It doesn’t matter “who works harder.” It’s not a contest. Pray for priests and bishops. I’m not saying to be uncritical, I’m rather saying that your lenses on these things might be less than helpful to your own growth in charity.. While I have my own views of who works harder, the average layman in the pew, or the average priest, the contributions of both are important and good.
I admire your diocese. This one really bothers me. The reason is because the Ascension happened exactly forty days after the Resurrection which is celebrated as Easter Sunday. I know that and every Catholic should. So celebrating it at a time other than forty days after Easter seems like forgetting about a birthday or something.I live in Philadelphia, one of the few places in the US where you still have to come to church on Ascension Thursday (because Thursday isn’t Sunday). Apparently, we are superhumans.
I did not say parents bear any responsibility to teach their children something they do not know. What I did say was that parents bear the responsibility to be the primary educators of their children.We don’t know that. As I said they may themselves not have known. You can’t teach something you don’t know. The parents certainly do have an obligation to learn the Faith themselves so they can teach it.
I don’t know of any diocese in Canada that abrogates the obligation to go to Mass on January 1st, but I do know that the fact that it’s a Holy Day of Obligation is never mentioned in my parish. The choir doesn’t even bother to show up for Mass. Nor do I recall it ever being mentioned in any other parish in which I’ve lived over the course of my 43 year marriage.If it’ s just a case of people partying and not coming to Mass, I do not understand why in some dioceses people are expected to just man up and get themselves to Mass (a vigil Mass if need be) and in other dioceses people are allowed to be lazy. It makes no sense. If people in Philadelphia can get to Holy Day Mass, then what makes people in Southern California so special that they’re exempt? Both areas have a ton of Catholic churches and significant traffic congestion.