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expectthebest
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I’ve always been told that the obligation is fulfilled once communion begins and you can leave if needed at that time. Is this true?
The Mass is structured in such a way that it seems to be expected that you arrive before the priest enters in procession, and stay until after he has left in procession. Many people arrive early enough to pray five decades of the Rosary before the opening hymn begins, and stay to pray prayers of thanksgiving afterwards. I think this would be the ideal - I don’t often achieve it, and sometimes I arrive during the opening hymn, due to various situations, and if I’m running late for work at a weekday Mass I don’t stay after the closing hymn.I’ve always been told that the obligation is fulfilled once communion begins and you can leave if needed at that time. Is this true?
Does that mean after everyone who is going to recieves or one the priest begins to distribute?If it is necessary that you leave Mass early, then you would have fulfilled your obligation if you leave after the Communion.
This is your opinion, not Church teaching.If it is necessary that you leave Mass early, then you would have fulfilled your obligation if you leave after the Communion.
There is no such point in mass that delineates “fulfilled” of “did not fulfill” the obligation. The obligation is to assist at the entire mass.Does that mean after everyone who is going to recieves or one the priest begins to distribute?
Good one.When it is no longer your ‘obligation’, but your ‘joy’. Until then, you still have much work to do.
No!I’ve always been told that the obligation is fulfilled once communion begins and you can leave if needed at that time. Is this true?
The Communion in this case is considered to be the priest’s Communion as that is a principal part of the Mass. If you must leave Mass early, you would have to remain until after the priest’s Communion in order to fulfill your obligation. After that, you may leave without committing a venial sin for leaving Mass early since you aren’t capable of remaining for the whole Mass. Just as a reminder, if one were to leave Mass early without good reason, it would be a venial sin even though you’ve fulfilled the obligation.Does that mean after everyone who is going to recieves or one the priest begins to distribute?
Is there a source for this?The Communion in this case is considered to be the priest’s Communion as that is a principal part of the Mass. If you must leave Mass early, you would have to remain until after the priest’s Communion in order to fulfill your obligation. After that, you may leave without committing a venial sin for leaving Mass early since you aren’t capable of remaining for the whole Mass. Just as a reminder, if one were to leave Mass early without good reason, it would be a venial sin even though you’ve fulfilled the obligation.
It’s from Fr. Francis Spirago, a Professor of Theology. He wrote it in a catechism that has an imprimatur from the Archbishop of New York.Is there a source for this?
There are many theological discussions on the topic, there are people who will tell you any number of “cut off” points. None of them are Church teaching. A local catechism is good for instruction, but whether written by a priest, a bishop, or a lay person it is not Church teaching. This is, at best, his opinion. Well formed in theological reasoning, but an opinion nonetheless. People want guidelines, so some are inclined to reason it out and give it X, Y, or Z point in the mass, but in fact the mass is an integral whole.It’s from Fr. Francis Spirago, a Professor of Theology. He wrote it in a catechism that has an imprimatur from the Archbishop of New York.
This citation is not appropriate to this question.It’s from Fr. Francis Spirago, a Professor of Theology. He wrote it in a catechism that has an imprimatur from the Archbishop of New York.