Agreed. For the purposes of liturgical norms, “midnight to midnight” does not hold – vigil Masses are, in fact, Masses of the celebration which they ‘anticipate’.
That is the point. The Saturday evening Mass is the Mass of Sunday. It’s not the Mass of Saturday.
Ok, then: when you celebrate Mass on Saturday morning and then a vigil Mass on Saturday evening, do you binate? When you celebrate a vigil Mass on Saturday evening and two Masses on Sunday, do you binate or trinate?
It’s not relevant because we’re talking about different laws which have entirely different purposes and which protect different values.
The purpose of the law limiting how many Masses a priest may say on a given day is to protect the priest from being overworked. The purpose of the law limiting Communion to twice a day is to protect against the false-value of too-frequent reception of Holy Communion. They may seem similar, but they’re not.
Agreed. And, “for the good of souls,” Catholics are only two receive communion a maximum of twice in a day.
Agreed? Yes. But the difference is in how to define that “day.”
True; but that doesn’t mean that the two, considered together, trump canon law. Marriage is permitted to single men; holy orders are normatively given to single men; this does not imply that marriage
and holy orders are normatively given to single men…
I’m not suggesting that it “trumps” canon law—I am saying that this is how the law should be interpreted. Huge difference.
You’re changing the playing field, aren’t you? The question isn’t
which Mass is most oriented to the good of the souls, it’s whether reception more than twice is. If you wish to make the argument that it would be better to defer receiving Communion at one of the Saturday morning or afternoon Masses, in order to receive Communion at the vigil Mass, then you could make that argument (and, in fact, I’d agree with you). However, we’re not arguing “don’t receive Communion at the vigil Mass,” but rather, simply “don’t receive Communion more than twice in a day.” Big difference.
The debate is about what constitutes “more than twice a day.” It’s not about whether “more than twice a day” is right or wrong (the Church says no more than twice, and that’s not in dispute).
Well, that’s begging the question now, isn’t it?

Yet, it’s not that “everything about that Mass pertains to Sunday”! The obligation to assist at Mass – that is, a consideration that is part of liturgical law – is met by assisting at any Mass from sundown Saturday through Sunday. But, the
readings at the Mass do not have to be the readings for the Sunday celebration: if one should attend an evening Nuptial Mass on Saturday, then the obligation to assist at Mass has been met. Yet, the readings for the Nuptial Mass aren’t (necessarily!) the readings for that Sunday’s celebration. So, it’s
not the case that “everything about that Mass” on Saturday evening “pertains to Sunday”, although the obligation to assist, does!
No, it’s not begging the question. Instead, it’s explaining the situation.
The Church has laws about what may or may not happen on Sunday with regard to weddings. The way that the Church applies these laws go more toward proving my point than proving the contrary.
You see, this is how it works:
When a wedding is scheduled for Saturday at 10 AM, the liturgical laws for weddings on a Saturday apply.
When a wedding occurs on a Saturday at 5 PM, the liturgical laws for a wedding on Sunday are what apply.
That means that if I celebrate the wedding Mass at 10 AM on Saturday, I can use the full nuptial Mass, including all the readings and presidential prayers.
If I celebrate a wedding Mass at 5 PM on a Saturday, then the norms for that Sunday apply. The Saturday norms are irrelevant. I can only take limited parts of the wedding Mass and incorporate them into the Mass on Saturday evening. This is the same thing that happens when the nuptial Mass happens on Sunday afternoon.
It’s what I’ve been saying all along: whatever applies to the whole applies to every part of the whole.
I completely agree. And, for the good of souls, we’re not to receive Communion more than twice a day. Simple, when you get right down to it!
Right. And if you want to receive on Sunday, then the fact that you received on Saturday has no bearing.
Anyway: it is BEYOND late in my time-zone. Good night.