Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I Always schedule DD’s birthday party on Sunday morning so that the overly regimented weirdos who think no other mass “counts” don’t go.
Well if your DD goes to Catholic school then the only person you’re hurting is her, by scheduling her party at a time when her friends are likely unable to attend.
I’m actually very much Catholic. I just don’t believe it freakin matters when you go mass. Such a dumb thing to obsess over.
Actually, it’s usually a full house. I assume that attendees simply go to mass another time, even if that means that they’re now going to purgatory or hell because they went to mass at the “wrong time.” Very nice of them.
What does any of this have to do with your party time? You keep changing the story.
Yes, this PP is not the party PP genuinely posting to ask about party times. This PP is not genuine. Just one of the regular DCUM anti-Catholic trolls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I Always schedule DD’s birthday party on Sunday morning so that the overly regimented weirdos who think no other mass “counts” don’t go.
Well if your DD goes to Catholic school then the only person you’re hurting is her, by scheduling her party at a time when her friends are likely unable to attend.
Actually, it’s usually a full house. I assume that attendees simply go to mass another time, even if that means that they’re now going to purgatory or hell because they went to mass at the “wrong time.” Very nice of them.
What does any of this have to do with your party time? You keep changing the story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I Always schedule DD’s birthday party on Sunday morning so that the overly regimented weirdos who think no other mass “counts” don’t go.
Well if your DD goes to Catholic school then the only person you’re hurting is her, by scheduling her party at a time when her friends are likely unable to attend.
Actually, it’s usually a full house. I assume that attendees simply go to mass another time, even if that means that they’re now going to purgatory or hell because they went to mass at the “wrong time.” Very nice of them.
What does any of this have to do with your party time? You keep changing the story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I Always schedule DD’s birthday party on Sunday morning so that the overly regimented weirdos who think no other mass “counts” don’t go.
Well if your DD goes to Catholic school then the only person you’re hurting is her, by scheduling her party at a time when her friends are likely unable to attend.
Actually, it’s usually a full house. I assume that attendees simply go to mass another time, even if that means that they’re now going to purgatory or hell because they went to mass at the “wrong time.” Very nice of them.
Anonymous wrote:Im the birthday party PP. I’m asking because there are many mass services on Sunday and we aren’t parish members so I’m not sure if most go to morning service or not. I would do Saturday afternoon instead but I’m not sure of sports schedules. Is 4-6pm usually ok for late fall? The girls I know are in soccer, a couple in flag football, basketball league and swim. And dance, but I know they meet during the week.