FuzzyBunny116:
Is it truely a mortal sin to miss a Mass? It seems like such a trivial thing to damn someone to Hell for all eternity for. I know decent Catholics who don’t attend Mass, but I find it hard to believe they’ll go to Hell for that. Also seems to give we Catholics a bit of a disadvantage…
Real Christianity (just like real love) is costly FB.
Here’s the response by Fr. Vincent Serpa in answer to these kinds of questions:
My question:"Okay…
I missed Mass last week w/o a good reason. Am I mistaken in thinking I am in grave sin & should not receive the Eucharist until I make it to Confession?
I’ve been to Mass twice since then but made only spiritual communions both times to “play it safe”
Am I right?"
His response to me:"Dear C,
Get to confession! Yes, deliberately refusing to attend Sunday Mass is a mortal sin–as if anything could be more important. I don’t mean to talk down to you. But nothing on the face of the earth can compare with Mass. And on Sunday, we owe such attention to the Lord.
Fr. Vincent Serpa, O.P."
A second question…like yours:
"Question for Catholics: Will you really go to hell for deliberatly missing Mass?
I was just listening to James Akin and he said something that I wonder if it represents the Catholic concensus.
He said that if a person deliberately misses mass, this person would go to Hell since he committed a mortal sin.
This confuses me. Does this mean that a person could love and follow Christ his or her entire life with devotion and sencerity, but for some “invalid” reason deliberatly miss mass and end up in hell.
Please help me here. I thought that Catholics believed in salvation by grace. I don’t know if this is true–but a poll about “surprised by hell” on this web also seems to suggest that this is what Catholics believe
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=23173
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If this is true, how can this be grace (“a gift” or “unmerited favor”)? How is this not legalism?"
Fr.Serpa’s answer:
"Dear Church,
Catholics do believe in salvation by grace. There is no way that we could ever make it on our own. But we are free to refuse grace and thereby sin—and even mortally. We all have free will and we are all very weak. Some of the greatest saints were great sinners and even with the gift of faith they fell. St. Peter is a good example.
So it is possible for anyone to fall into sin. That is why St. Peter warns: “Stay sober and alert. Your opponent the devil is prowling like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour. Resist him, solid in your faith.” (1Peter 5:8-9a)
Sunday Mass fulfills the Commandment to keep holy, the Lord’s Day–not a minor thing, indeed! To break that Commandment IS a mortal sin.
Fr. Vincent Serpa, O.P."
So there ya go FB. I hope this helps make better sense to you. In the end…as with all sin…it’s all about rebellion. I find that if something is really important to me, then I get off my “can” and do it. So if I say that I love the Lord and his church and yet don’t care enough to get up and go to Mass, then you have the perfect right to question the depth of my committment. One of the things that would make n-C churches so easy for me is the fact that I wouldn’t have to go to church to be “a good Christian”…which I think is hooey.
Hebrews 10:23** Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering (for he is faithful that hath promised), 24 And let us consider one another, to provoke unto charity and to good works: 25 Not forsaking our assembly, as some are accustomed; but comforting one another, and so much the more as you see the day approaching.**
Click on the title for a great FREE CD on
The Mass Explained .
Pax tecum,