Anonymous wrote:^PP, do you have children of your own who are currently enrolled as students in a K-8 parochial school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^yes, everyone knows people who attend daily Mass. But they are not school children attending Mass multiple times a week with their class instead of doing classwork. Once a week with the entire school is sufficient for most families who choose to send their children to Catholic school.
That is fine, but PP claimed to know NOBODY who does so.
So, yes, in Catholic schools, Mass is usually once a week; occasionally it is twice if a Holy Day of Obligation or a Feast Day occurs in the same week.
If you then add in the fact that all Catholics are obligated to attend Sunday Mass, you could sometimes end up with three times. How lucky to have three times to visit our Lord in His true Presence who loves us so much and longs to see us often as possible!
Actually, the God that my Catholic family worships prefers us to LEARN about his divine creation and raise our kids and teach them about math, science, and the world around us. Not go to mass every day.
Perhaps your God would prefer that your kids attend public school instead then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^yes, everyone knows people who attend daily Mass. But they are not school children attending Mass multiple times a week with their class instead of doing classwork. Once a week with the entire school is sufficient for most families who choose to send their children to Catholic school.
That is fine, but PP claimed to know NOBODY who does so.
So, yes, in Catholic schools, Mass is usually once a week; occasionally it is twice if a Holy Day of Obligation or a Feast Day occurs in the same week.
If you then add in the fact that all Catholics are obligated to attend Sunday Mass, you could sometimes end up with three times. How lucky to have three times to visit our Lord in His true Presence who loves us so much and longs to see us often as possible!
Actually, the God that my Catholic family worships prefers us to LEARN about his divine creation and raise our kids and teach them about math, science, and the world around us. Not go to mass every day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^yes, everyone knows people who attend daily Mass. But they are not school children attending Mass multiple times a week with their class instead of doing classwork. Once a week with the entire school is sufficient for most families who choose to send their children to Catholic school.
That is fine, but PP claimed to know NOBODY who does so.
So, yes, in Catholic schools, Mass is usually once a week; occasionally it is twice if a Holy Day of Obligation or a Feast Day occurs in the same week.
If you then add in the fact that all Catholics are obligated to attend Sunday Mass, you could sometimes end up with three times. How lucky to have three times to visit our Lord in His true Presence who loves us so much and longs to see us often as possible!
Anonymous wrote:^^yes, everyone knows people who attend daily Mass. But they are not school children attending Mass multiple times a week with their class instead of doing classwork. Once a week with the entire school is sufficient for most families who choose to send their children to Catholic school.
Anonymous wrote:Mass 2x a week seems to happen with some frequency at my school. Get this — on Thursday, May 29, they have mass, and then they have mass THE NEXT DAY as well. Then they’re expected to go to mass yet again on Sunday!
I don’t know ANYONE who goes to mass 3x a week, and I come from a very conservative Catholic area/family.
Anonymous wrote:Before you pull them, I'd encourage you to check the public school calendar where you live.
I don't know if all the additional non-Christian holidays will remain in the calendar under the new federal regime, but between those and the many half days and teacher workdays and more traditional days off, there is always lots of complaining from FCPS and APS families about the amount of days off. Our kids always jokingly said "No school November" was a thing.