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I attend Saturday night vigil mass every week. I do not attend Sunday morning mass. Does Saturday night fulfill my duty as a Catholic to attend Sunday morning services?
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The obligation is to attend a Mass (any Mass) anytime on a Sunday or evening before (or Holy Day/evening before).my duty as a Catholic to attend Sunday morning services
Even when back to back Solemnities occur, assisting at Mass the evening before fulfills one’s obligation for the following day.Yes.
For Solemnities and Feasts (like Sunday Mass), the liturgy begins with the vigil (or evening prayer) on the night before. There are only a few exceptions to this rule but that is only when solemnities fall on two days in a row.
It does but you need to attend one Mass per obligation.Even when back to back Solemnities occur, assisting at Mass the evening before fulfills one’s obligation for the following day.
Not always. That only works for Sundays in Ordinary time without a dispensation from the local bishop. The other Sundays fall within a higher rank of Solemnity and as such, follow slightly different rules when it comes to liturgical fulfillment of obligation.By the way, the readings and the liturgical options do not matter when fulfilling your obligation. If you attended a wedding, a funeral, or an Eastern Catholic Divine Liturgy on Saturday after about 4pm, as long as they are “Mass in a Catholic Rite”, any of those would suffice for your Sunday obligation, no matter how they were celebrated.
This comes up a lot, and this is a misconception. The law simply says “Mass in a Catholic rite” fulfills the obligation. Any Mass with any readings between Saturday evening and midnight on Sunday fulfills the obligation. Full stop.When the feast falls on a Monday, masses celebrated on the evening before still using the Sunday liturgy (like the evening Spanish liturgies in some Churches) do not fulfill the Obligation for the Holy Day.
Please provide evidence of this.We will have to disagree. The bishops are the final judiciary and legislators of canon law and every bishop of a diocese in which I have lived in have specifically stated that all evening masses on a Sunday, celebrating the Sunday liturgy, cannot fulfill the obligation.
The bishops are the final judiciary and legislators of canon law…
Thus, if canon law does not specifically reserve power of enforcement to another bishop or office, then the Bishop has final say in the matter. This can only be overturned later by the ‘supreme authority’ through pontifical decree.Can. 381 §1. A diocesan bishop in the diocese entrusted to him has all ordinary, proper, and immediate power which is required for the exercise of his pastoral function except for cases which the law or a decree of the Supreme Pontiff reserves to the supreme authority or to another ecclesiastical authority.
Can. 391 §1. It is for the diocesan bishop to govern the particular church entrusted to him with legislative, executive, and judicial power according to the norm of law.
§2. The bishop exercises legislative power himself. He exercises executive power either personally or through vicars general or episcopal vicars according to the norm of law. He exercises judicial power either personally or through the judicial vicar and judges according to the norm of law.
It does count.I attend Saturday night vigil mass every week. I do not attend Sunday morning mass. Does Saturday night fulfill my duty as a Catholic to attend Sunday morning services?
Um, no, I was asking for evidence that various bishops have decreed that a Sunday evening Mass would not fulfill the obligation for a Monday holy day.CRM_Brother:![]()
The bishops are the final judiciary and legislators of canon law…Thus, if canon law does not specifically reserve power of enforcement to another bishop or office, then the Bishop has final say in the matter. This can only be overturned later by the ‘supreme authority’ through pontifical decree.Can. 381 §1. A diocesan bishop in the diocese entrusted to him has all ordinary, proper, and immediate power which is required for the exercise of his pastoral function except for cases which the law or a decree of the Supreme Pontiff reserves to the supreme authority or to another ecclesiastical authority.
Can. 391 §1. It is for the diocesan bishop to govern the particular church entrusted to him with legislative, executive, and judicial power according to the norm of law.§2. The bishop exercises legislative power himself. He exercises executive power either personally or through vicars general or episcopal vicars according to the norm of law. He exercises judicial power either personally or through the judicial vicar and judges according to the norm of law.
You are missing the point.If that were a real thing, then pastors would hand out dispensations to attend Saturday Mass. They don’t, so it’s not.
We are supposed to go to Mass in a Catholic Rite that fulfills our Sunday obligation, full stop.
Year after year, when Christmas falls on a Monday or Saturday, we have an obgligation to attend mass on BOTH Sunday & the holy day.Um, no, I was asking for evidence that various bishops have decreed that a Sunday evening Mass would not fulfill the obligation for a Monday holy day.
I don’t think that was the question though. A poster made the claim that, for Holy Days, the Mass the evening before would only count toward the obligation if it used the readings for the Holy Day.ear after year, when Christmas falls on a Monday or Saturday, we have an obgligation to attend mass on BOTH Sunday & the holy day.
However, for some HolyDays (at least in the United States) the bishops will dispense the obligation from a HolyDay when it falls on a Saturday or Monday.
Regardless, the only way a mass on Sunday evening counts for a Holy Day obligation for a Monday Holy Day is if it is the 2nd time you attended Mass since 1st Vespers.
In other words, for a Sunday evening Mass to count as the Obligation for a Monday Holy Day of Obligation, one must have attended Sunday Mass on Saturday night or Sunday morning/afternoon.
In other words, you cannot double dip. If you have two Obligations, you must attend Mass twice.