J
johnnyt3000
Guest
The Saturday evening mass fullfils the Sunday obligation. What time would count as “evening”? If the Saturday mass started at 2:00pm or 3:00pm, does it fullfil the Sunday obligation?
My school’s Baccalaruete mass starts at 3pm. Tomorrow is the graduation ceremony in which students have to be at the place by noon.The Church says that it must be an evening Mass. Since approximately World War II, the Church’s working definition of evening has been 4:00 PM at the earliest. This has been expressed many times over the decades in Church laws. If it starts before 4 PM then it’s not an evening Mass.
It varies more since the 1983 canon law.The Saturday evening mass fullfils the Sunday obligation. What time would count as “evening”? If the Saturday mass started at 2:00pm or 3:00pm, does it fullfil the Sunday obligation?
And yet, that doesn’t change what the 1983 code actually says. It does not say that a Mass anytime on Saturday (whatever the local bishop chooses) fulfills the obligation—which is what the author is saying. The canon specifies that it must be a Mass in the evening.
4 p.m. as the time at which a Mass qualifies as an “evening Mass” is based on the document that originally allowed the celebration of “evening Mass”.And yet, that doesn’t change what the 1983 code actually says. It does not say that a Mass anytime on Saturday (whatever the local bishop chooses) fulfills the obligation—which is what the author is saying. The canon specifies that it must be a Mass in the evening.
If it’s not an evening Mass, then it doesn’t meet the obligation as it is defined in canon law.
The time of 4pm is what one normally encounters in the US. The bishop may have made a declaration for the diocese. There are different canon law opinions on it, 12 noon, 2pm, 4pm: What is ‘the evening of the previous day’? Despite the view of some commentators that this should be interpreted as beginning only at 1400 hours (2 pm) on that day, it is the firm view of this commentary that the evening of the previous day begins at midday (12 noon) on that day itself. In some dioceses there is a local regulation to the effect that the so-called vigil or anticipated Mass may not be celebrated before, say, 5 pm or 6 pm: this is normally for pastoral reasons, e.g. to facilitate weddings or funerals in the parish and other churches. Those regulations do not in any way concern the time prescribed for fulfilling the obligation to assist at Mass: thus, e.g., if . . . a person were to attend a nuptial Mass in the early afternoon on a Saturday, that person would thereby have fulfilled the obligation.And yet, that doesn’t change what the 1983 code actually says. It does not say that a Mass anytime on Saturday (whatever the local bishop chooses) fulfills the obligation—which is what the author is saying. The canon specifies that it must be a Mass in the evening.
If it’s not an evening Mass, then it doesn’t meet the obligation as it is defined in canon law.
The Canon Law: Letter & Spirit (1995, Sheehy, Morrisey, Canon Law Society of Great Britain and Ireland, Canadian Canon Law Society)
Commentaries are not canon law.The time of 4pm is what one normally encounters in the US. The bishop may have made a declaration for the diocese. There are different canon law opinions on it, 12 noon, 2pm, 4pm: What is ‘the evening of the previous day’? Despite the view of some commentators that this should be interpreted as beginning only at 1400 hours (2 pm) on that day, it is the firm view of this commentary that the evening of the previous day begins at midday (12 noon) on that day itself. In some dioceses there is a local regulation to the effect that the so-called vigil or anticipated Mass may not be celebrated before, say, 5 pm or 6 pm: this is normally for pastoral reasons, e.g. to facilitate weddings or funerals in the parish and other churches. Those regulations do not in any way concern the time prescribed for fulfilling the obligation to assist at Mass: thus, e.g., if . . . a person were to attend a nuptial Mass in the early afternoon on a Saturday, that person would thereby have fulfilled the obligation.
The Canon Law: Letter & Spirit : A Practical Guide to the Code of Canon Law, Edited by Gerard Sheehy et al., 1995, p. 702. (Opinion of Fr. Raymond Browne)
The New commentary on the Code of Canon Law by John P. Beal, James A. Coriden, and Thomas J. Green
and
are both respected commentaries on Canon Law, and they do not agree!Code:The Canon Law: Letter & Spirit (1995, Sheehy, Morrisey, Canon Law Society of Great Britain and Ireland, Canadian Canon Law Society)
Following are translations on the Vatican website. Notice that the German translation uses “Vorabend” (Eve), rather than “der Nachmittag” (afternoon) or “der Abend” (evening), which seems to be the figurative use which is broader.
Evening is not a fixed hour, based upon the latitude and season of the year it can be quite early hour wise. In some places like Barrow Alaska, the Sun is down all day.Commentaries are not canon law.
Vernacular translations of the canons are not canon law.
All the commentary in the world doesn’t change the fact that the canon itself says it must be an evening Mass (vespere).
If it’s not an evening Mass, then it doesn’t meet the criteria of what the canon actually says.
Commentaries cannot change what the code says.
Now, if the code actually said “after noon” (in Latin, post meridiem) then I would agree with anyone who said, in the vernacular, “any Mass after noon…”
Until the code changes, and some pope crosses out -]vespere/-] and writes-in post-meridiem, the obligation is only satisfied with an evening Mass.
But evening is not an exact translation of “vespere.”Evening is not a fixed hour
Fr Serpa told you that a 3pm baccalaureate Mass was an Ascension Vigil Mass?Fr. Vincent Serpa informed me that if was a Vigil Mass (it was, we celebrated the feast of the Ascension) then it fullfiled my obligation. No need to get up early tomorrow.
The norm changed after that. The first reference below, from 1969, gives the general schema, that observance of a Sunday and a solemnity begins on the preceding liturgical day, but the determination of that time is made by the local ordinary, according to Eucharisticum Mysterium (see second reference below, from 1967). The limit of 4 pm established years earlier at which time there was, for those evenings, a three hour fast from food established as a Eucharistic fast rather than a fast from midnight, so 4PM actually served as a safeguard to those finishing lunch by 1 pm.**4 p.m. as the time at which a Mass qualifies as an “evening Mass” is based on the document that originally allowed the celebration of “evening Mass”.
From Pope Pius XII’s 1953 Apostolic Constitution "Christus Dominus"With Reference to Evening Masses
(Constitution, Rule VI)
By the force of the Constitution the Ordinaries of places[27] have the faculty of permitting the saying of evening Masses in their own territory, should circumstances render this necessary. This holds true despite the command of canon 821, # 1. The common good sometimes demands the saying of Mass after midday: For example, for the workers in some industries who work their shifts even on feast days, for those categories of workers who must be on the job during the morning hours of feast days, like dock workers, and likewise for those who have come in great numbers and from considerable distances for some religious or social celebration, etc.
- Such Masses, however, may not be said before four o’clock in the afternoon(…)
FWIW, my handmissal shows that the Ascension Vigil Mass has different propers than the Ascension propers, but that shouldn’t effect its being able to fulfill one’s obligation as has been discussed.Fr. Vincent Serpa informed me that if was a Vigil Mass (it was, we celebrated the feast of the Ascension) then it fullfiled my obligation. No need to get up early tomorrow.
I don’t see how that changes anything.The norm changed after that. The first reference below, from 1969, gives the general schema, that observance of a Sunday and a solemnity begins on the preceding liturgical day, but the determination of that time is made by the local ordinary, according to Eucharisticum Mysterium (see second reference below, from 1967). The limit of 4 pm established years earlier at which time there was, for those evenings, a three hour fast from food established as a Eucharistic fast rather than a fast from midnight, so 4PM actually served as a safeguard to those finishing lunch by 1 pm.
catholicliturgy.com/index.cfm/FuseAction/DocumentContents/Index/2/SubIndex/11/DocumentIndex/338