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IrenkaJMJ
Guest
Does a Catholic wedding on Saturday with a full Mass fulfill one’s Sunday obligation?
As far as I can tell from the Church documents I have read. It would if it’s after the time specified by the bishop for the Sunday Anticipated Mass (usually 4Pm). I have als been told by a Liturgy expert that in the US it has been specified as not before 4 Pm but that a local Bishop can specify a later time.Does a Catholic wedding on Saturday with a full Mass fulfill one’s Sunday obligation?
#28 Where permission has been granted by the Apostolic See to fulfil the Sunday Obligation on the preceding Saturday evening, pastors should explain the meaning of this permission carefully…when celebrated on Saturday this Mass may be celebrated only in the evening, at times determined by the local ordinary.Can anyone supply the reference that requires to satisfy the obligation the readings must be those of the Sunday? I hear the claim made frequently but have never seen an official statement to that effect.
I believe and this is my opinion that looking at the liturgical Calendar and the rules governing it. It makes provision for the Sunday Mass to be replaced with certain Solemnities and other Sundays are fixed and cannot be replaced. Anyway the point that the Mass must take place after a certain time on Saturday to satisfy the obligation is still there, the way I see it. Maybe a wedding Mass that takes place after 4:00 Saturday evening would satisfy the obligation? But I don’t believe so.Br Rich SFO - That seems to oblige the pastor to offer a vigil mass but I see nothing that states another mass will not satisfy the obligation.
Re .(88) Consequently, the liturgy of what is sometimes called the “Vigil Mass” is in effect the “festive” Mass of Sunday, at which the celebrant is required to preach the homily and recite the Prayer of the Faithful. This would seem to forbid the celebration of anything but the Sunday mass at these times. Again, a rule for the pastor, not the attendee.
Note that when a Solemnity displaces the Sunday one gets the Vigil readings, not the daytime readings, at the Saturday mass, but it satisfies the Sunday obligation.
I nitpick at this not to be argumentative, but because I want to be sure that we are properly instructing our catechumens.
Any eucharistic liturgy that is offered according to a Catholic rite – and this includes Eastern Catholic liturgies – that takes place on Saturday afternoon or evening counts toward Sunday. The readings of the Mass do not matter. An afternoon wedding Mass would count. A Saturday vigil Mass would count. The Church, to date, has not been as specific as we might like about the timing of vigil Masses. Unless or until Rome is more specific, a general rule of thumb is that anything in the afternoon and/or evening of the previous Saturday will fulfill the Sunday obligation.
Michelle has offered her opinion and interpretation of Canon Law. Which I do not agree with. However until a canon lawyer or Bishop posts an answer the question, it has not been “definitively addressed”.This question has been definitively addressed in the thread Does Saturday Mass count toward Sunday obligation? in the next to the last post by Catholic Answers’ Apologist Michelle Arnold. In part:
The obligation to participate in the Mass may be satisfied at any time during the twenty-four hours of the feast day itself, or on the evening before it. “Evening” should be understood as anytime from 4:00 PM onward. The legislator uses the word “evening” (vesper), not “afternoon” (post meridiem); in keeping with the proper meaning of the word (cf. c. 17), an afternoon Mass before 4:00 is not an evening Mass and does not satisfy the obligation. The precept may be satisfied at any Catholic Mass, i.e., not only when the texts are those of the Sunday or holy day. For example, attendance at a wedding Mass after 4:00 on a Saturday fulfills the Sunday obligation. The Mass must be celebrated in a Catholic rite, i.e., in the liturgical rite of any Catholic church sui juris, but not in a church which is not in full communion with the Catholic Church, although using a Catholic liturgical rite. The former Ecumenical Directory of 1967 granted a privilege permitting Catholics to fulfill their Sunday and holy day obligation at the divine liturgy of a separated Eastern church. This privilege was suppressed in the 1993 Directory for the Application of the Principles and Norms on Ecumenism.
CLSAHere is what the New CLSA Commentary (2000) says for canon 1248 §1:
Actually there is two different questions.Does anyone have a good read on the 4pm requirement? Can the local bishop override it.
I ask because I think we are about to encounter an effort to have Christmas vigil masses at 2 or 3 pm to permit more masses on Christmas Eve.
Yes, the actual time a Vigil Mass might start on is most commonly set by concensus within a Province. An Ordinary may set a different time based on the Pastorial needs of his diocese.Does anyone have a good read on the 4pm requirement? Can the local bishop override it.