Why are Ash Wednesday, Holy Thursday, and Good Friday not Holy Days of Obligation?

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I just was wondering how these days which are really so important in the Faith aren’t days which the faithful are meant to attend mass? Ironically I feel like I see more people at these masses than on some prescribed Holy Days. Just was curious as to why this is?
 
Read something a little bit ago that Holy Days honor people, not events, and as the three days mentioned commemorate events, that’s why they aren’t holy days of obligation. (I could be wrong, but that’s what I read.)
 
Technically Holy Thursday. Good Friday, together with the Easter Vigil, are a single liturgy. And of course there is no Mass on Good Friday. There is only a single Holy Thursday / Good Friday service, typically held at night; there is no opportunity for multiple services as is typical with Holy Days. I assume that the human factors and family care obligations in the evening are a consideration. These weren’t obligatory even back in the '50’s.
 
There cannot be an obligation where there is no Mass (Good Friday).

ICXC NIKA
 
Another question would be, why are there ANY days of obligation.

God wants our love not our guilt.
 
I didn’t realize they weren’t Holy Days of Obligation.
Ash Wednesday and Good Friday do carry an obligation…just not the obligation to assist at Holy Mass (and of course such is impossible on Good Friday as there is no Mass celebrated on that day). We are obliged to fast / abstain.
 
Another question would be, why are there ANY days of obligation.

God wants our love not our guilt.
Most Christians, myself included, are spiritual children. We are not mature enough to do what is best for us without some structure…a little nudging. That being said, the number of days of obligation has been greatly reduced over time - and more so in some countries than others. Canada has only two (besides Sundays) - Christmas and Mary, Mother of God (Jan 1).
 
Another question would be, why are there ANY days of obligation.

God wants our love not our guilt.
The authority to enact laws obligatory on all the faithful belongs to the Church by the very nature of her constitution. Entrusted with the original deposit of Christian revelation, she is the appointed public organ and interpreter of that revelation for all time. For the effective discharge of her high office, she must be empowered to give to her laws the gravest sanction. These laws when they bind universally, have for their object:

the definition or explanation of some doctrine, either by way of positive pronouncement or by the condemnation of opposing error;
the prescription of the time and manner in which a Divine law, more or less general and indeterminate, is to be observed, e.g. the precept obliging the faithful to receive the Holy Eucharist during the paschal season and to confess their sins annually;
the defining of the sense of the moral law in its application to difficult cases of conscience, e.g. many of the decisions of the Roman Congregations;
some matter of mere discipline serving to safeguard the observance of the higher law, e.g. the Commandments to contribute to the support of one’s pastors (Vacant, Dict. de theol. cath., s.v.).

Melody, J. (1908). Commandments of the Church. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. newadvent.org/cathen/04154a.htm
 
The authority to enact laws obligatory on all the faithful belongs to the Church by the very nature of her constitution. Entrusted with the original deposit of Christian revelation, she is the appointed public organ and interpreter of that revelation for all time. For the effective discharge of her high office, she must be empowered to give to her laws the gravest sanction. These laws when they bind universally, have for their object:

the definition or explanation of some doctrine, either by way of positive pronouncement or by the condemnation of opposing error;
the prescription of the time and manner in which a Divine law, more or less general and indeterminate, is to be observed, e.g. the precept obliging the faithful to receive the Holy Eucharist during the paschal season and to confess their sins annually;
the defining of the sense of the moral law in its application to difficult cases of conscience, e.g. many of the decisions of the Roman Congregations;
some matter of mere discipline serving to safeguard the observance of the higher law, e.g. the Commandments to contribute to the support of one’s pastors (Vacant, Dict. de theol. cath., s.v.).

Melody, J. (1908). Commandments of the Church. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. newadvent.org/cathen/04154a.htm
I dont question the authority but the rationale.
 
Technically Holy Thursday. Good Friday, together with the Easter Vigil, are a single liturgy. And of course there is no Mass on Good Friday. There is only a single Holy Thursday / Good Friday service, typically held at night; there is no opportunity for multiple services as is typical with Holy Days. I assume that the human factors and family care obligations in the evening are a consideration. These weren’t obligatory even back in the '50’s.
Actually, traditionally, the Holy Thursday mass was held in the morning, and Good Friday was a noon service.

The one thing people forget also, is that traditionally, especially in Catholic countries, the holy days of obligation were civil holidays as well. Banks, stores, other places of employment are closed even to this day on several of holy days. Just like Sunday is.
 
The rational is given after that phrase “These laws when they bind universally, have for their object:”.
So the one that applies to Holy Days of obligation would be, “… to safeguard the observance of the higher law…”. I could see that for The Lord’s Day but not so sure about others.
 
Most Christians, myself included, are spiritual children. We are not mature enough to do what is best for us without some structure…a little nudging. That being said, the number of days of obligation has been greatly reduced over time - and more so in some countries than others. Canada has only two (besides Sundays) - Christmas and Mary, Mother of God (Jan 1).
“…a little nudging”. Like pain of eternal Hell. That’s a pretty big nudge.

One would think the Church would then be consistent country to country with dispensation for priest shortages. Is that the situation in Canada?
 
“…a little nudging”. Like pain of eternal Hell. That’s a pretty big nudge.

One would think the Church would then be consistent country to country with dispensation for priest shortages. Is that the situation in Canada?
But the obligation is not always present since it is excused for a serious reason (for example, illness, the care of infants) or similarly dispensed by their own pastor. The reason it is grave sin is because it is a commandment of God to keep certain days holy.
 
Most Christians, myself included, are spiritual children. We are not mature enough to do what is best for us without some structure…a little nudging. That being said, the number of days of obligation has been greatly reduced over time - and more so in some countries than others. Canada has only two (besides Sundays) - Christmas and Mary, Mother of God (Jan 1).
And in Hawaii, for the Latin Church: Sundays, the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, and Christmas.
 
So the one that applies to Holy Days of obligation would be, “… to safeguard the observance of the higher law…”. I could see that for The Lord’s Day but not so sure about others.
We do not keep the Sabbath (Saturday) literally but we worship God as determined by the Church, in keeping the commandment. The Church has the power to loose and bind sins.
 
But the obligation is not always present since it is excused for a serious reason (for example, illness, the care of infants) or similarly dispensed by their own pastor. The reason it is grave sin is because it is a commandment of God to keep certain days holy.
Not to argue but to further discuss: The days God commanded in the Torah are not the ones we keep and in the New Testament Paul tells us not to be concerned with them.

Colossians 2:16-17
So let no one judge you in food or in drink, or regarding a festival or a new moon or sabbaths, which are a shadow of things to come, but the substance is of Christ.
 
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