Weekday Masses with No Homily

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I went to a weekday Mass at 8:00am that the parish normally has their weekday Masses at this time. After the Gospel reading the Priest went right into the Petitions without having a Homily. I went to sit down after the reading for the Homily but everyone else kept standing so it was obvious that this is a normal occurance since everyone knew to stay standing for the petitions. Is this allowed? No homily?
 
I went to a weekday Mass at 8:00am that the parish normally has their weekday Masses at this time. After the Gospel reading the Priest went right into the Petitions without having a Homily. I went to sit down after the reading for the Homily but everyone else kept standing so it was obvious that this is a normal occurance since everyone knew to stay standing for the petitions. Is this allowed? No homily?
In the week, yes.
 
Pax vobiscum!

At the church near my school that I sometimes attend weekly Mass at, the retired monsignor that says it a couple times a week doesn’t do a homily (however, if it is a Holy Day he does). The pastor, if he says Mass (the monsignor says it a couple days a week), does give a short homily. This church has a daily Mass at noon and it is downtown, so a lot of people come to Mass on their lunch breaks. I think that may be the reason the homilies are either very short or not done, so that people can have time to get some lunch and get back to work.

In Christ,
Rand
 
At my parish on weekdays we have very short (sometimes just a couple of sentences!) homilies.
 
Sometimes our priest skips the homily at a weekday Mass. But even when he skips it, he sits down and we sit down for a short period of reflection on the readings. Then he stands and we stand for the peitions.

Having said that, I believe that the priest is not supposed to make it an on-going practice to regularly skip the homily at a weekday Mass.
 
I went to a weekday Mass at 8:00am that the parish normally has their weekday Masses at this time. After the Gospel reading the Priest went right into the Petitions without having a Homily. I went to sit down after the reading for the Homily but everyone else kept standing so it was obvious that this is a normal occurance since everyone knew to stay standing for the petitions. Is this allowed? No homily?
During the week it is allowed and is the normal practice in many places.
 
During the week it is allowed and is the normal practice in many places.
Ceremonies of the Roman Rite references to the 1983 Code of Canon Law #767.
Canon 767:
§1. Among the forms of preaching, the homily, which is part of the liturgy itself and is reserved to a priest or deacon, is preeminent; in the homily the mysteries of faith and the norms of Christian life are to be explained from the sacred text during the course of the liturgical year.

** §2. A homily must be given at all Masses on Sundays and holy days of obligation which are celebrated with a congregation, and it cannot be omitted except for a grave cause.**

§3. It is strongly recommended that if there is a sufficient congregation, a homily is to be given even at Masses celebrated during the week, especially during the time of Advent and Lent or on the occasion of some feast day or a sorrowful event.
 
During the week it is allowed and is the normal practice in many places.
Palmas85 is right during the week on a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday (providing it is not for Sunday) it is okay for the priest to skip the Homily. Providing, it is not an HOLY DAY or a Saturday Mass that actually counts for Sunday Obligation.
Ceremonies of the Roman Rite references to the 1983 Code of Canon Law #767.
Thank-you for providing the Canon Quote!

Canon 767 said:
§1. Among the forms of preaching, the homily, which is part of the liturgy itself and is reserved to a priest or deacon, is preeminent; in the homily the mysteries of faith and the norms of Christian life are to be explained from the sacred text during the course of the liturgical year.

§2. A homily must be given at all Masses on Sundays and holy days of obligation which are celebrated with a congregation, and it cannot be omitted except for a grave cause.

§3. It is strongly recommended that if there is a sufficient congregation, a homily is to be given even at Masses celebrated during the week, especially during the time of Advent and Lent or on the occasion of some feast day or a sorrowful event.

I took what you put in bold and put it in red. As you can see it said that ALL Sunday Masses and ALL Holy Day of Obligation Masses MUST have a Homily.

Now, lets look at part 3 of the Canon:
§3. It is strongly recommended that if there is a sufficient congregation, a homily is to be given even at Masses celebrated during the week, especially during the time of Advent and Lent or on the occasion of some feast day or a sorrowful event
As you can see for WEEKDAY Masses, assuming it’s not a Holy Day, it is STRONLY RECOMMENDED that there is a Homily but it’s NOT REQUIRED. So the priests that are NOT giving Homily during the week are not breaking canon law, unless they are falling to give a homily on a Holy Day.

Rand A’Thor priests are within the norm and requirements of Canon law:
At the church near my school that I sometimes attend weekly Mass at, the retired monsignor that says it a couple times a week doesn’t do a homily (however, if it is a Holy Day he does). The pastor, if he says Mass (the monsignor says it a couple days a week), does give a short homily.
So OP, the priest is NOT breaking any rules by NOT having a homily during the WEEKDAY Mass. It’s NOT required for them to give a homily at a WEEKDAY Mass. However, it is STRONGLY RECOMMENDED especially during Advent.
 
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