What happens if you break fast on Good Friday?

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I’m a Sheriff’s Deputy. Hence pulling cars out of ditches, handling accidents, etc.
Well, at the risk of stepping on an apologist’s toes, my PERSONAL OPINION (which coupled with 25c will get you a quarter) is that you should have a good meal or three – you’ve got a dangerous job to do, and if you’re on duty on Good Friday, I think the Lord will forgive if you don’t fast due to the nature of your work (seems to me I recall an exemption from the Good Friday fast for reasons of age (as mentioned before), health, or strenuous duty – the fast is supposed to be penitential, not injurious).

Talk it over with your confessor – perhaps there’s an alternate penance? I think in cases of police, military, etc, there’s the safety factor to consider.

Anyone want to weigh in whether I’m right, or “out to lunch”?😃
 
I myself am 16 years old. Does the fast apply to me?
I am 17, myself, by canon law we are not bound until we are 18 then carry the practice on until we are 59. We are released from the obligation when we turn 60 years of age. [BIBLEDRB][SIGN][/SIGN][/BIBLEDRB]👍
 
Well, at the risk of stepping on an apologist’s toes, my PERSONAL OPINION (which coupled with 25c will get you a quarter) is that you should have a good meal or three – you’ve got a dangerous job to do, and if you’re on duty on Good Friday, I think the Lord will forgive if you don’t fast due to the nature of your work (seems to me I recall an exemption from the Good Friday fast for reasons of age (as mentioned before), health, or strenuous duty – the fast is supposed to be penitential, not injurious).

Talk it over with your confessor – perhaps there’s an alternate penance? I think in cases of police, military, etc, there’s the safety factor to consider.

Anyone want to weigh in whether I’m right, or “out to lunch”?😃
I think you’re right and I’ve read the same thing.
 
In the Eastern Church, fasting is considered a discipline, as opposed to a dogma or doctrine. Whether one does so or not, as far as my limited understanding takes me, is not a matter of sin or sinlessness. If one is under obedience to a spiritual father and he tells you to fast, you fast. Fasting and abstinence serve a spiritual purpose. But, if one does not fast/abstain, depending upon one’s particular circumstances and state in life, and depending upon one’s intention, I kind of doubt that it is a one-way ticket to eternal damnation. But…what do I know??

This might be a good place to insert St. John Chrysostom’s Easter Homily:

*"Easter Homily

by St. John Chrysostom

Let all pious men and all lovers of God rejoice in the splendor of this feast; let the wise servants blissfully enter into the joy of their Lord; let those who have borne the burden of Lent now receive their pay, and those who have toiled since the first hour, let them now receive their due reward; let any who came after the third hour be grateful to join in the feast, and those who may have come after the sixth, let them not be afraid of being too late; for the Lord is gracious and He receives the last even as the first. He gives rest to him who comes on the eleventh hour as well as to him who has toiled since the first: yes, He has pity on the last and He serves the first; He rewards the one and praises the effort.

Come you all: enter into the joy of your Lord. You the first and you the last, receive alike your reward; you rich and you poor, dance together; you sober and you weaklings, celebrate the day; you who have kept the fast and you who have not, rejoice today. The table is richly loaded: enjoy its royal banquet. The calf is a fatted one: let no one go away hungry. All of you enjoy the banquet of faith; all of you receive the riches of his goodness. Let no one grieve over his poverty, for the universal kingdom has been revealed; let no one weep over his sins, for pardon has shone from the grave; let no one fear death, for the death of our Saviour has set us free: He has destroyed it by enduring it, He has despoiled Hades by going down into its kingdom, He has angered it by allowing it to taste of his flesh.

When Isaias foresaw all this, he cried out: “O Hades, you have been angered by encountering Him in the nether world.” Hades is angered because frustrated, it is angered because it has been mocked, it is angered because it has been destroyed, it is angered because it has been reduced to naught, it is angered because it is now captive. It seized a body, and, lo! it encountered heaven; it seized the visible, and was overcome by the invisible.

O death, where is your sting? O Hades, where is your victory? Christ is risen and you are abolished. Christ is risen and the demons are cast down. Christ is risen and the angels rejoice. Christ is risen and life is freed. Christ is risen and the tomb is emptied of the dead: for Christ, being risen from the dead, has become the Leader and Reviver of those who had fallen asleep. To Him be glory and power for ever and ever. Amen".*
ewtn.com/faith/teachings/resub1.htm

A wonderful and blessed Pascha to all of you!

In Christ,
MinM
 
It must be Easter! A six year old thread has been resurrected.
 
There are only two days out of the entire year when the church requires fasting and abstinence – Ash Wednesday and Good Friday. That doesn’t strike me as asking too much.
It is actually absurdly little… the Orthodox Church, like the early Church, asks the faithful to fast every Wednesday and Friday throughout the year as well as all of the weekdays of Lent…and their fasting requirements are much stricter than ours. Two days out of the whole year where you can still have a nice big proper meal including fish (the Orthodox cannot eat fish either while fasting)? When we consider what Our Lord did for us, this seems an the smallest drop in the bucket…a most trivial token.
 
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