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Did the Pope at one time establish eating meat on Fridays as a mortal sin? If so, would a person who violated this command face the possiblity of hell during that period of church history?
Thanks.
Thanks.
It was not “the Pope” alone who established this requirement of abstinence from meat. The Bishops have the authority to legislate fasting, abstinence, and other penances and disciplines within the Church.Did the Pope at one time establish eating meat on Fridays as a mortal sin?
The three elements of mortal sin are grave matter, full knowledge, and free choice.If so, would a person who violated this command face the possiblity of hell during that period of church history?
… the ‘offense’ we are talking about here is not the eating of meat on a Friday, but that of being DISOBEDIENT.Did the Pope at one time establish eating meat on Fridays as a mortal sin? If so, would a person who violated this command face the possiblity of hell during that period of church history?
Thanks.
Come on now, lets deal with the issue here. The fact is there was once a requirement that one must not eat meat on Fridays. And those who were “disobedient” to this requirement was commiting a mortal sin. Right?… the ‘offense’ we are talking about here is not the eating of meat on a Friday, but that of being DISOBEDIENT.
If one knew that one was not supposed to eat meat, and did so, not out of hunger (there was nothing else to eat), ignorance (didn’t realize it was a Friday - maybe in a hole somewhere or didn’t tear pages on the calendar) or some other reason that would not be related to defiance, that person was being defiant to the church.
Simple as that.
I happen to have issues with the number of Catholics that I’m around that REFUSE to abstain from meat on Fridays unless it’s during the lenten season - the ones I’m talking about aren’t doing anything else to replace the abstention. I would also bet that a great number of people that don’t go meatless the rest of the year likewise do not go meatless during Lent.
tsk tsk tsk
The same way that it’s fair that I get fined or whatever for not wearing a seatbelt in the car, when even in my own childhood there were no laws requiring seatbelts to be worn by anyoneCome on now, lets deal with the issue here. The fact is there was once a requirement that one must not eat meat on Fridays. And those who were “disobedient” to this requirement was commiting a mortal sin. Right?
Now today this isn’t required except during the Lenten season. For the rest of the year, a person doesn’t have to worry about being “disobedient” over this requirement, even if they wanted to.
So how is it fair to those back then that might of died and gone to hell over eating meat on any given Friday?
That’s the way that I understand it. Yes.Come on now, lets deal with the issue here. The fact is there was once a requirement that one must not eat meat on Fridays. And those who were “disobedient” to this requirement was commiting a mortal sin. Right?
Now today this isn’t required except during the Lenten season. For the rest of the year, a person doesn’t have to worry about being “disobedient” over this requirement, even if they wanted to.
At the time they did it, if they were being disobedient (defiant) they were separating themselves, by their own choice, from the chuch, but being defiant.So how is it fair to those back then that might of died and gone to hell over eating meat on any given Friday?
Why would it be unfair? If a stop sign is in place for many years at one location and then removed one day because the authorities deem it unnecessary at the present time would those who ran it while it was up not have been law breakers?So how is it fair to those back then that might of died and gone to hell over eating meat on any given Friday?
Them the breaks-no way. :nope:The same way that it’s fair that I get fined or whatever for not wearing a seatbelt in the car, when even in my own childhood there were no laws requiring seatbelts to be worn by anyone
And the same way that before Peter’s vision at Cornelius’ house he would have been in sin for not adhering to Jewish dietary law while afterwards he was free to break it.
Laws, secular and spiritual, change at times, sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse. Sometimes they’re stricter (our requirement of celibacy for priests), sometimes more lenient. Them’s the breaks.
Rules change. It used to be death to call for the abolition of the monarchy. Now it’s a hardy perennial in British sixth form debates.This rule with eating meat on Friday with the penalty of second death if not confessed, has changed.
I’m not being facetious, so please explain again if you think I’m mistaken.
and if you don’t believe the bishops, herfe is Jimmy Akin’s take:This said, we emphasize that our people are
henceforth free from the obligation traditionally binding
under pain of sin in what pertains to Friday abstinence,
except as noted above for Lent. We stress this so that “no”
scrupulosity will enter into examinations of conscience,
confessions, or personal decisions on this point.
The big legal change comes in norm #3, where the bishops state that “we hereby terminate the traditional law of abstinence as binding under pain of sin, as the sole prescribed means of observing Friday.” So the obligation to abstain from meat is terminated. The question becomes: What obligation, if any, have the bishops put in its place?
The clause “as the sole prescribed means of observing Friday” is consistent with the idea that they did establish another obligation or a mandate to do penance in some form on Friday, but it also is consistent with the idea that they did not establish a new obligation.
You are focusing on the wrong thing. The sin is not/was not in eating meat on a Friday. The sin was in deliberately violating one of the Precepts of the Church. It is the same sin that you commit if you deliberately miss Mass on a Holy Day of Obligation, also deliniated in the Precepts of the Church. The days might be different in different countries but the obligation to obey the Precept is the same. The rules for abstinance may be different in different decades or in different countries but the obligation to obey the Precept is the same.Them the breaks-no way. :nope:
Lily M and Fix, were not talking about no slap on the wrist. We’re talking about death, the second death!! It was mortal sin for some who ate meat on a Friday some time ago and nothing for todays people who eat meat on a non-Lenten Friday.
Come, on, we all know God is no Grandfather whose justice gets softer to his grandchildren as the years go by, but he is a Father to every person. His love, mercy, kindness, and justice does not change.
This rule with eating meat on Friday with the penalty of second death if not confessed, has changed.
I’m not being facetious, so please explain again if you think I’m mistaken.
Thanks
Is it a mortal sin?EWTN airs a commercial that says that it is STILL a sin to eat meat on Fridays if it is not replaced by some charitable act.
One could be condemned to Hell because they ate meat on a Friday.Did the Pope at one time establish eating meat on Fridays as a mortal sin? If so, would a person who violated this command face the possiblity of hell during that period of church history?
Yes.EWTN airs a commercial that says that it is STILL a sin to eat meat on Fridays if it is not replaced by some charitable act.
Is this correct?
Specifically, because they did so in knowing and willful defiance of the Church’s rules, which it has authority from God to establish.One could be condemned to Hell because they ate meat on a Friday.
Again, no one was sent to Hell for the act of eating a hot dog in and of itself. I would strongly suspect that the vast majority of all Friday “slip-ups” by Catholics during that period were venial sins, because it’s hard to imagine that the psychological requirements for a mortal sin were generally met.The RCC has sinced changed the rules and now Catholics can eat red meat with impunity on most Fridays of the year. It makes one wonder whether God will let out of Hell those who were sent there by doing something Catholics today can do with the Church’s blessing.
That’s actually a major reason behind the abolition of the rule. At one time, fish was the food of the poor, while other meats were luxury items – so abstaining from meat was nearly always a penitential act. The whole idea behind giving Catholics in certain countries the option to substitute another act of penance is that eating fish instead of meat no longer automatically means giving up someone that one would rather have had.I also wonder how someone is considered fasting as they eat a lobster tail platter but is worthy of Hell if they fast by merely eating a measly hotdog.
Is a single now-abolished rule the heart of the Gospel? No, else it would not have been able to be abolished. Was it intended to help people live more Christlike lives, and retired when it no longer served that purpose? Yes.It makes no sense to me. Is this the Gospel?
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Nobody is required to abstain from eating meat on Fridays apart from the Lenten season. What is required is an act of penance of which abstaining from meat is a choice.Yes.
I’m sorry, I can’t quote the source, but the ruling (as I understand it) is that one may replace the Friday abstinence from meat with some OTHER penance on Fridays during the non-Lenten times of the year.
That means, that something ELSE MUST be done. If not, you should not eat meat.
Which I think is very confusing to most people. I personally think it would be so much clearer to the average American if the Magisterium (and the Bishops of the USA) would say that the Friday abstinence is in place for the entire year.
That’s just my call… ymmv
Yes… I know. That’s why I think it would be clearer if the ruling were changed (to the way it was before) that EVERY Friday be a day of abstenance from meat.Nobody is required to abstain from eating meat on Fridays apart from the Lenten season. What is required is an act of penance of which abstaining from meat is a choice.
At least not in the US. The change in the teaching left the specifics of the Friday (outside of Lent) pennance to the local congregations of Bishops. The traditional penance of abstaining from meat was one of the options. It is entirely possible that some Bishops’ Conference retained that.Nobody is required to abstain from eating meat on Fridays apart from the Lenten season. What is required is an act of penance of which abstaining from meat is a choice.