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Edmundus1581
Guest
This exact question came up for me when I was a new and fervent Catholic, at age 21 (and many years ago). I was attending Mass every weekday.There can be a “life” balance problem here. Attending daily Mass can take away from other things, such as study, so that when Sunday comes around we have to catch up on the activities or rest which have fallen behind. As Sunday Mass is longer, and maybe at a less convenient time, it is the one most tempting to skip. I did this one Sunday and missed Mass. At my next confession I asked the priest whether the weekday Masses in some way reduced the obligation to attend on Sunday and he explained firmly, but kindly, “No”. He explained that Sunday Mass is the act of the community, and is always more important than weekday Mass. So, our lives must to be organised to attend Mass every Sunday, rather than attending at other times and maybe missing a Sunday.So… I understand the Church’s teaching. Missing Mass on Sunday is a Mortal sin.
Even if I participated in Mass every other day of the week (excluding the Saturday vigil). Just doesn’t seem right.
That lesson was nearly forty years ago, and having it heard it once I have never question it, and have only come to see more-and-more it’s importance.
And, for anyone who may question my “life balance” scenario, I know Protestants who do exactly this. They are so heavily involved in church activities (albeit not weekday “Mass”) that they regularly miss the Sunday service with the explanation that they are already doing enough. The difference with Catholicism could not be more stark.
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