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Holly3278
Guest
Hi everyone. I didn’t realize today was a holy day of obligation and I missed mass. I did go to confession and even received the Eucharist but I did not stay for mass. Did I commit a mortal sin? 

That depends on where you live. In the vast majority of dioceses in the United States the celebration of the Ascension has been moved from the traditional date of 40 days after Easter to the following Sunday. In a few dioceses it remains on Thursday. The ecclesiastical provinces of Boston, Hartford, New York, Newark, Philadelphia, and Omaha retain the Thursday date.Hi everyone. I didn’t realize today was a holy day of obligation and I missed mass. I did go to confession and even received the Eucharist but I did not stay for mass. Did I commit a mortal sin?![]()
Ah ok. I live in the Diocese of Evansville so I suppose I am safe.That depends on where you live. In the vast majority of dioceses in the United States the celebration of the Ascension has been moved from the traditional date of 40 days after Easter to the following Sunday. In a few dioceses it remains on Thursday. The ecclesiastical provinces of Boston, Hartford, New York, Newark, Philadelphia, and Omaha retain the Thursday date.
Even if you live in one of those provinces, you can’t “accidentally” commit a mortal sin. In order to commit a mortal sin there are three requirements: grave matter, full knowledge, and full consent. So if you didn’t realize it was a holy day then you didn’t commit a mortal sin.
Your church bulletin is usually a good source of information on when holy days fall and what times Masses will be available on those days.