T
Timidity
Guest
The title pretty much sums up the question!
I don’t think that Ash Wednesday is a Holy Day of Obligation.I never miss a holy day of obligation!![]()
Not in the U.S., at least. I’m not sure if any national conferences have made it so.I don’t think that Ash Wednesday is a Holy Day of Obligation.
This is true at our university parish. On weekends we have 4 Masses, averaging ~450/Mass. On Ash Wednesday, everybody comes out of the woodwork, though. We have 4 Masses that day and they all get packed! I believe we have more people attend Mass on Ash Wednesday than Easter. Which makes me wonder, are we a Church of guilt or a Church of joy?Not in the U.S., at least. I’m not sure if any national conferences have made it so.
But a lot of people here seem to think it is, for some reason. I’ve noticed that Ash Wednesday Masses tend to be more crowded than most Sunday Masses (but that could be because the local parishes here offer 5 Sunday masses per parish, and only 1 or 2 Ash Wednesday Masses).
Maybe, being a University parish, that many students are home with their family for the holiday, and therefore at their home parish?This is true at our university parish. … I believe we have more people attend Mass on Ash Wednesday than Easter. Which makes me wonder, are we a Church of guilt or a Church of joy?
I’ve heard the second-highest Mass attendance by normally non-church-goers is Palm Sunday. Seems like if they are giving someting away, Palms or Ashes, people want to be there.…Ash Wedensday has the highest Mass attendence by non-church-goers.
Nahh, I don’t think so. Being a public university, we don’t get time off around Easter (our Spring Break is a whole month earlier). Holy and Easter weeks are the 4th and 3rd last weeks of school, respectively. People are either partying or flipping out about final projects and tests coming up.Maybe, being a University parish, that many students are home with their family for the holiday, and therefore at their home parish?