G
GoGoDiego
Guest
Ends on Midnight of Holy Saturday. But it is recommended to be continued until after the Easter Vigil.
No. It ends midnight Good Friday!Ends on Midnight of Holy Saturday. But it is recommended to be continued until after the Easter Vigil.
I infer that you mean 00:00:00 Saturday morning, ie the moment just before 00:00:01 Saturday morning.Ends on Midnight of Holy Saturday. But it is recommended to be continued until after the Easter Vigil.
I infer you mean 24:00:00 Friday night, ie the moment just after 23:59:59 Friday night.No. It ends midnight Good Friday!
Yes.From context, I suspect the two of you are advocating the same time, but the date of any given “midnight” is poorly specified.
I infer that you mean 00:00:00 Saturday morning, ie the moment just before 00:00:01 Saturday morning.
**I infer you mean 24:00:00 Friday night, ie the moment just after 23:59:59 Friday night.
**
Correct?
tee
The second following 23:59:59 will be 00:00:00 of the next day.From context, I suspect the two of you are advocating the same time, but the date of any given “midnight” is poorly specified.
I infer that you mean 00:00:00 Saturday morning, ie the moment just before 00:00:01 Saturday morning.
I infer you mean 24:00:00 Friday night, ie the moment just after 23:59:59 Friday night.
Correct?
tee
ISO 8601 allows for both, to disambiguate the usage, especially helpful when referring to midnight of a specific day (as, I infer, above).The second following 23:59:59 will be 00:00:00 of the next day.
Yes 24:00 is the same moment as 00:00 which is both the end and the*** start*** of a day.ISO 8601 allows for both, to disambiguate the usage, especially helpful when referring to midnight of a specific day (as, I infer, above).
And don’t get me started on whether midnight is 12:00AM or 12:00PM.
tee
Calendar Nerd![]()
well, my stomach is grumbling right now and I had a full fledged dinner just 3.5 hours ago. don’t judge until you’ve walked a day with appetite!To be honest, I really don’t think the Church’s fasting requirements are very tough at all, so why do some Catholics think it’s such a big deal? You can still have 3 meals, one large and two smaller ones. Plus, you can still eat fish meat.
A real fast is NO FOOD. None, nada! Just some liquids. Would that be too much for the faithful to do for all Our Lord did for us, especially on Good Friday? Until your stomach starts grumbling, you haven’t really fasted.