What are the rules for fasting and abstinence during Lent?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/26/2020 - 20:31

According to the U.S Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), the guidelines for fasting and abstinence during Lent (February 26 – April 12, 2020) are as follows:

Ash Wednesday and Good Friday are obligatory days of fasting and abstinence for Catholics. In addition, Fridays during Lent are obligatory days of abstinence.

Nine things to know and share about Ash Wednesday

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/26/2020 - 20:22

Here are nine things to know and share...

1. What is Ash Wednesday?

Ash Wednesday is the day that Lent begins (see: 9 things you need to know about Lent).

The name comes from the fact that a particular rite is always celebrated on this Wednesday in which the faithful have ashes put on their foreheads.

According to the Roman Missal:

In the course of today’s Mass, ashes are blessed and distributed.

These are made from the olive branches or branches of other trees that were blessed the previous year [on Palm/Passion Sunday].

Explaining Pope’s soft touch on survival of Middle Eastern Christianity

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/26/2020 - 20:06

Say “Christianity” and “Middle East” to people who’ve been paying attention to events in the region, the and next word that would automatically come to mind for most probably would be “extinction.”

By now, the statistics on the collapse of the Christian population in the Middle East are wearily familiar. The situation is worse in the war-torn nations of Iraq and Syria, for obvious reasons, than in historic Christian strongholds such as Egypt and Lebanon, but there too the pressures are strong and the trendlines alarming.

In the Footsteps of Lord Jesus Christ

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 02/25/2020 - 15:45

There’s a line in a Christian worship song I love that says, “From the head to the heart, you take me on a journey.”

It’s referencing an oft-cited dilemma in the Church, a “separation of the head and heart” -- meaning the things you believe with your mind aren’t fully felt or realized in your soul. In my life, it feels like a precarious balance of thinking the right thing, doing the right thing, and then hoping I'm also feeling the right thing so that my beliefs can be "real".

After the Bari ‘synod’, what’s the Church’s vision for the Mediterranean?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 02/25/2020 - 14:57

In the face of hatred, fear, and division, Pope Francis called Sunday, February 23, on the Christian communities of the Mediterranean to recognise the inherent unity of the region’s multiculturalism.

In a message that acclaimed the beauty of diversity in the face of voices seeking to build walls — both literal and figurative — Francis February 23 concluded a five-day long conference in Bari, Italy, that sought to find new roads to peace and stability in the Mediterranean region.

Lent is a time of self-honesty, conversion, and re-creation

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 02/24/2020 - 16:34

The coming Wednesday, Christian believers throughout the world will allow themselves to be sprinkled or marked with ashes. It’s an ancient tradition, and yet for the sidewalk observer, it’s a peculiar custom.

Why the ashes? What’s the story here?
Ash Wednesday begins the forty-day penitential season of Lent. The ashes are received and worn as a public declaration that we are sinners, works on progress, and suppliants before the mercy and grace of God.

"Bari meeting aims to be a laboratory for paths of peace"

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 02/20/2020 - 13:28

His Holiness Pope Francis will join the bishops on Sunday 23 February and will preside over the concluding Mass, less than two years after his last visit to the Apulian capital for an ecumenical meeting of reflection and prayer for peace with leaders of the Churches and communities of the Middle East in July 2018.

Pope's Bari trip gives a chance to help save Middle East Christianity

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 02/19/2020 - 13:55

During the Roman Empire, the entire Mediterranean region was known as Mare Nostrum, “Our Sea.” It was an imperial assertion of dominance, of course, but it also reflected the idea that the peoples of the Mediterranean are linked by geography and destiny, sharing a common fate.

In a nutshell, that’s the same intuition that will carry Pope Francis to the Italian coastal city of Bari on Sunday, to wrap up a Feb. 19-23 assembly of more than 50 Catholic bishops from 19 Mediterranean nations, hosted by the über-powerful Italian bishops’ conference.