Red Masses celebrated for legal community in Sarasota and Fort Myers

Invoking the Holy Spirit, Bishop Frank J. Dewane recently asked that insight and graces be bestowed upon legal professionals and that above all they be people of mercy.

Bishop Dewane made these remarks during two Red Masses for legal professionals, first Oct. 21, 2025, at St. Martha Parish in Sarasota, and then Oct. 22, at St. Francis Xavier Parish in Fort Myers. The name for the Mass comes from the red vestments worn by the celebrants, and for the calling of grace and guidance from the Holy Spirit to come upon all who seek and serve justice.

“Allow the law to serve the common good,” Bishop Dewane said. “Behind every legal question stands a human person – made in the image and likeness of God – a human predicament crying out for a just outcome.”

The law is entrusted to men and women for the sake of the common good working to protect the vulnerable and restrain the powerful, Bishop Dewane continued.

“You know better than most that the world today needs good stewards,” the Bishop said. “Public discourse often trades truth for opinion. Moral relativism clouds our innate sense of right and wrong. Too often people treat the law as a weapon or a tool of power rather than as an instrument of justice. The unity of truth and goodness, once assumed, is now fractured.

“With the state of the world today, you confront these challenges with every client and every case. In such a climate you labor daily to be worthy custodians of the law. The Church encourages you to remember that all law finds its ultimate source in the law written by God upon the human heart,” Bishop Dewane concluded.

The Red Mass in the Diocese of Venice began in 2008 when legal professionals in Sarasota wanted to emulate similar, more well-known Masses which take place each year for the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., and by the Florida Bishops for the Florida Legislature in Tallahassee.

A centuries old tradition of the Catholic Church, the first Red Mass was celebrated by Pope Innocent IV in the Cathedral of Paris in 1243 for the Ecclesiastical Judicial Court asking for the “Invocation of the Holy Spirit” as a source of wisdom, understanding, counsel, fortitude, and strength for the coming term of the court. This tradition was adopted in England during the reign of Edward II. The entire bench and bar attended the Red Mass together at the opening of each term of court and it became tradition that the priests wear red vestments.