L
Ljuba
Guest
Yes,… if you did so intentionally, made no other act of penance as is allowed these days and had no mental incapacity that prevented you from the obliged action.
Paul VI in his Apostolic Constitution Paenitemini, and the Code of Canon Law both say that penance (including following the fasting laws) is a matter of divine law.So if I fail to abstain from meat this Friday and forget to do another penance I will be serious of mortal sin and I would not be able to receive the Eucharist at Saturday Morning Mass?

I do abstain, I only didn’t realise that It is bound under punishment of serious sin.totustuus, you are a teenager (although past the age where you would be bound to abstain); you are also an altar boy.
Serving Mass on Friday would certainly, I believe, fulfill the obligation to engage in a work of piety and prayer.
But, if you consider yourself a devout Catholic why don’t you begin now to abstain from eating meat on Friday.
Think of how happy you would make the Dear Lord and the Grace you will obtain.![]()
They aren’t merely guidelines, they are ordinances layed down by the Church as a minimum, the Jewish laws about which Jesus was speaking were the ones that included Stoning your disobediant son etc.Oh, yes it’s true that Protestantism has crept into the Church by falsly saying saying that we humans are so evil, terrible, dirty, sinful, rotten that God won’t forgive us. Why do people have to put God into a box? Why do people have to be Neo-Pharisees? You know the ones (epecially in Jesus’ time) ordinary human beings who thought they were the only ones who could make the laws and interpet them as well. The ones who placed yokes on people, but who didn’t lift the heavy burdens from them. Or violated the Law themselves. The ones who were not compassionate, forgiving, merciful, understanding, unbending about the Law, didn’t like Jesus healing the sick on the Sabbath, complaining about His disciples fasting on the Sabbath, who have hearts of stone, The ones who put Jesus to death for being different,for changing the Law to be more fulfilling, taking the yoke off of people. Jesus taught that Law would be fulfilled in Him.
Remember Paul? The Pharisee would followed the Law so strongly, passioately, blindly that he had Christians put to death.
Also the Jews had 613 laws they followed. Jesus told not to be so bound by the law. He condemned, criticized, those who did.
We in the Catholic Church have so many. For example: GIRM, Code of Canon Law, Catechism of the Catholic Church, and well as others. Do you think we have way more than 613 laws? What would Jesus truly say about this? If, he challenged the Jews for the 613 laws, what might he say about our church? Yes, the law is important with it there can be no freedom. Yes, we do need some guidelines and guidance. Jesus did not condemn the Law out right, just be compassionate, understanding, merciful, forgiving,flexible, pastoral.
One size doesn’t fit all, all the time. There are always exceptions. Does God and Jesus want for us to have our arm twisted to follow? Isn’t that one of our gifts from God, free will?
Now if you had truly read it (Sorry, it was so small and maybe difficult to see) Please reread it again. Especially, No. 28
Patrick
What do you mean, leave? You mean leave this thread?Hijacking? I can leave.
I’d like to have heard your priest’s understanding of your confessed sin. Hopefully, he just misunderstood, you misunderstood or both. I know of priests who tell the sinner that they most certainly have not sinned by missing Masses and going to Holy Communion without confessing and penance first. The priest was wrong. But boy the friend who tried to confess his sacrilege sure was happy. No more Sunday Mass for him by golly!
No. I don’t have any suggestions. Most people I know would still do without the meat. You can bet the Vegans that attend functions don’t suddenly order a steak. They’d eat pretzel sticks if they had to but they wouldn’t break their abstinence. Why do you want to?
Don’t be so hard on yourself. These people aren’t.What do you mean, leave? You mean leave this thread?
I don’t know why the priest said what he did.
Sometimes one goes to a party or a wedding on a Friday and it is difficult to abstain from meat. I know years ago you would ask your pastor for a dispensation. The last time I did that, the pastor laughed in my face. I have heard priests on EWTN say to vegetarians that they should eat something they don’t like. I suppose I could do that.
And thank God for it!The bishops always announce a dispensation especially since it always comes during Lent.