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Originally Posted by Boy Wonder View Post
It galls me to no end that Catholic faithful can be so niggardly about going to Mass. So what if this solemnity falls on a Monday? GO TO MASS ON AUGUST 15 AND WORSHIP WITH LOVE, GRATITUDE, AND AWE.
My comment is not directed at anyone on this thread but the ire is for the attitude of many Catholics which has forced the bishops to make this policy. We can find time to go to Mass on a holy day.
A holy day of obligation is also obligatory to take a day of rest. It’s not entirely the attitude of Catholics attending mass that brought this on, but many other factors regarding work obligations and inability to take vacation days.
Thank you for pointing this out, agapewolf. The liturgical calendar is beautiful, formed throughout the centuries and setting a rhythm to our lives. It should not be messed with lightly. Our bishops have a difficult job, trying to figure out how to best adapt the practice of the faith to the needs of modern Americans in a secular culture.
In the Byzantine Church, we don’t move feasts and our bishops have not removed the obligation to attend Divine Liturgy if the feast happens to fall on a Monday. I agree with them and I’m glad that they have not aquiesed to the culture in this way. However…In a Catholic country, Holy Days would also be national holidays, so it would be easy to go to Mass and worship with love, gratitude, awe and joy. But I live in a secular country. On August 15, life will go for most people as it does every day. It’s a big day in my family. In addition to celebrating the feast of the Dormition, my teacher-husband and two of my children must return to school. First day back after summer! For the two kids, it is their first day of attending school ever - they’ve been homeschooled their whole lives. My younger children will still be home all day. With the first day of school comes all sorts of little things to sort out - extra stresses for the day. Divine Liturgy is at 5:30, so that means fighting traffic to get to church, and spend an hour Somehow, I’ll have to figure out how and when we’re going to eat dinner, get to church, and get to bed on time.
The reality is that getting to Divine Liturgy on that day will be a hardship. It will add stress to my day, and it will be difficult to find the time in the day to do necessary things, such as feeding children and ensuring they get adequate sleep. But it is not impossible. We will find a way, and will do so gladly. The day of rest is simply not going to happen. We will celebrate the feast by going to Divine Liturgy. If I remember, we’ll bring flowers to be blessed. But it will not truly be a day to celebrate. By necessity, it will be a day to get to church, in spite of all the other things we have to do.
So let’s pray for our bishops, that they have the wisdom to lead us in this time and in this place, in a way that we can grow in the faith and appreciation for the liturgical cycle that has so shaped our ancestors in the faith, without losing sight of the traditions of the Church.