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victrolatim
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The local Carmelite convent has Mass at 7:30 AM on Saturdays. Would this be an anticipation Mass or would it be a different liturgy? They do not have a public Mass on Sunday.
The earliest time I have seen in the USA for an anticipated Mass of Sunday, on Saturday, is 2:30PM. The canon law allows to fulfill the Sunday Mass obligation for a solemnity, in the evening of the prior day.The local Carmelite convent has Mass at 7:30 AM on Saturdays. Would this be an anticipation Mass or would it be a different liturgy? They do not have a public Mass on Sunday.
The Canon Law: Letter & Spirit, Canon Law Society of Great Britain and Ireland, by Gerard Sheehy and Francis G. Morrisey, et. al., 1995, 702:Isn’t noon the cut off time?
I believe the Vespere (evening or late afternoon) Mass can be used for both first-Saturday devotion and fulfillment of the Lord’s Day obligation. But you’re right, regular Saturday Masses are becoming more and more scarce.Sounds like a regular Saturday Mass, rather than an anticipatory one.
You’re lucky— I’d love to do a first-Saturday devotion, but I can’t find a true Saturday Mass in my area within a two-hour radius.![]()
No, 7:30am Saturday is not a vigil Mass for Sunday.The local Carmelite convent has Mass at 7:30 AM on Saturdays. Would this be an anticipation Mass or would it be a different liturgy? They do not have a public Mass on Sunday.
No. Not noon. “Evening.”Isn’t noon the cut off time?
It should be the Mass of Saturday morning (whatever day that happens to be in the calendar on any particular Saturday). The absence of a Mass which is open to the public on Sunday morning doesn’t change what may be done on Saturday morning.The local Carmelite convent has Mass at 7:30 AM on Saturdays. Would this be an anticipation Mass or would it be a different liturgy? They do not have a public Mass on Sunday.