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My co-worker and I were discussing the practice of abstaining from meat on Ash Wednesday and Fridays during Lent. She was raised in a non observant Catholic home so she never worried about abstaining. DH and I were raised in by-the-rules Catholic homes and we didn't eat meat on Fridays. DH and my parents are no longer Catholic (dh is Methodist, parents are evangelical Christian) but still abstain during Lent while I stopped abstaining when I was in HS. We were wondering what other Christian/Protestant people do.
Any extra info is welcome but of course not required.
[Poll]
Re: A poll about Lent
Tyler Anthony arrived on 9.21.09
The Chronicles of Justin and Tyler
While everyone thinks it is, Ash Wednesday is NOT a Holy Day of Obligation. Good Friday is.
*PCOS bio* *Cold Hands, Warm Heart*
Actually neither Ash Wednesday nor Good Friday are Holy Days of Obligation so mass isn't mandatory on either day.
http://www.usccb.org/liturgy/q&a/general/obligation.shtml
(Still can't figure out how to make these things clicky. Sorry.)
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You should have another option for your poll:
"I was raised Catholic. I try to abstain from meat & usually forget & I'm not sure what religion I fall into now"
That would be me..still deciding.
I definitely fall into the category of "Raised Catholic, try to abstain from meat on Fridays and Ash Wednesday, usually forget and then have the Catholic guilt"
This also applies to giving up something for Lent as well. I am awful at giving up something during Lent so I just resovle to do something better. This year it's taking the dog for nightly walks. It's day two and I'm already a failure and tonight we have a lot going on so tomorrow will be the start for me.
Ha! That's a good point! I've been wanting to check out Terry's
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It worked last year. We got a table at 8 with out waiting! Watch it not work now that I am telling everyone my trick.
Ha-ha! Brilliant!
A
Ha-ha! Brilliant!
As for giving something up for Lent, some are moving towards doing something to better yourself during the Lenten season (charity work, changing a bad habit, etc.) vs giving something up Honestly I think that's a great idea no matter your religious leaning/non-leaning. The Catholic-full-of-guilt part of me still feels a little bad that I'm not suffering by giving something up!