When I was a kid, a Catholic kid, I helped out with the two festivals that Sts. Peter and Paul Catholic Church (my parish) held annually on the grounds of the church's elementary school. When I was small, this help usually amounted to hustling soft drinks at the bingo games that ran non-stop during the festival. When I grew older, I manned one or another of the game booths. Aside from the Bingo tent, the largest operation at these affairs was the big tent under which men of the parish drank beer and cooked mettwurst and hot dogs to feed the hungry masses. Even today, recollections of the enticing aroma of mettwursts sizzling on a charcoal grill make me hungry. These bi-annual festivals began on a Friday evening and ran through the day on Saturday and Sunday. In that St. Pete's was situated in the heart of an overwhelmingly Catholic neighborhood, I suspect that the great majority of those who attended the festivities were Catholics. This is significant. In my Catholic days, long before Vatican II ushered in a "kinder and more gentle" brand of Roman Catholicism, it was forbidden for the Catholic faithful to taste of meat on Fridays, with certain exceptions. In those days, as now, the Second Commandment of the Church obliged us to observe the laws of abstinence and fasting laid down by the Church. The law of abstinence in those days was as stated in one of my old catechisms:
Just how serious was the Catholic Church about her commandments?
In other words, eat meat on Friday and die, you are going straight to Hell. That is serious. Of course, there were a few details to be considered, such as:
The words in DeHarbe's catechism appear to equate the Commandments of the Church with the Commandments of God, in that willful violation of either is a mortal sin. Given the definition of a mortal sin as a grievous offense against God, one is forced to the conclusion that the Catholic Church considered herself as a peer of God Himself. Wasn't this how Lucifer got into trouble? Where are we so far? It is a precept, or commandment, of the Catholic Church that the faithful must obey the laws of fast and abstinence; willful failure to do so constitutes a grievous sin against God--or so claims the Catholic Church. We also know of the bi-annual church festivals of Sts. Peter and Paul Catholic Church at which the mettwurst/hot dog tent was a principle attraction. In that just about everyone in the parish knew of the obligation to abstain from meat on Fridays – Father Greg mentioned it often enough in his homilies – one must wonder that the sandwich tent was as busy on Friday evenings as it was on the other two days of the festivals. I was aware of no special indulgences granted by the archdiocese for festival Fridays, so I imagine the requirement to abstain from meat on Fridays was always in effect. In that the men of the parish cooked and sold the meat sandwiches and, to my observation, ate plenty of them, with the blessing of the parish, I submit that Father Greg, his assistant pastor, and anyone else involved in the making and sale of meat sandwiches on Fridays was guilty of the sin due to connivance., consent, provocation, partaking and by defense of the ill done.
Probably this sharing in the guilt of others was seen as no big thing. After all, a quick trip to the confessional could deal with any damaging effect of sin on one's hopes for eternal life. But what of those who might have died after eating a bratwurst on a bun before they were able to get to Saturday evening confession to have their sins erased? Well, according to RCC theology, could be sizzling in Hell just as those mettwursts once sizzled on the grill. "Wait a minute," might be the shout of a modern day Catholic. The law of abstinence has changed. It is no longer required that Catholics abstain from meat on Fridays, except for Good Friday." That is true. No longer do Catholics sit down to Friday meals with a Damocles sword of dietary restriction hanging over their heads. But what of all those who, over the centuries, decided to gnaw on a soup bone or haunch of lamb tho' it were Friday? Were they all pardoned or paroled from Hell – assuming that was their only unconfessed grievous sin? Not according to one Catholic theologian/apologist. They're still being barbecued. Kenneth Ryan, a Catholic priest, in addressing the Friday/meat question, takes advantage of the opportunity to deal with a similar but opposite issue, that of indulgences.
In that the old way of doing things has been rendered obsolete by today's more politically correct understanding of the commandment, and since Mother Church never errs, some way must be found to "adjust" today's understanding with yesterday's reality. What better way than an appeal to one of the Catholic apologist's favorite tactics: "You don't understand." When I was Catholic, I was frequently reminded of my obligation to eschew meat and meat products on Fridays. Not once, do I recall, was it ever explained to me that the degree of my sin, should I violate the commandment, would be determined by an examination so detailed that it would "require a review of almost all human knowledge, revealed or unrevealed."
Don't you find it interesting that, before a Catholic theologian might determine whether an adult has sinned by eating meat on Friday, he must consider whether there were mitigating circumstances, such as social pressures at a formal dinner, the individual's nationality, etc.? It would appear that, in the RCC understanding of mortal sin, or at least the mortal sin of eating meat on Fridays in the days before Vatican II, there are more loopholes than in the U.S. tax code. Another review: An RCC precept requires Catholic faithful to obey the laws of fasting and abstinence. Catholic men of the St. Pete's parish sold and ate meat on certain Fridays with the parish's blessing. It appears impossible to know with certainty whether any of those who willfully sold and ate meat on those Fridays were guilty of mortal sin, except for kids who may have eaten a hotdog knowing it was Friday. The law of fasting and abstinence no longer prohibits eating meat on Fridays, except for Good Friday. Perhaps it would help to put things into perspective were we to look at one of God's commandments.
That seems every bit as clear as "The law of abstinence…obliges us to abstain on all Fridays of the year." (DeHarbe, Op. cit., p. 218). Now, if a man kills another man in order to steal his car, do you wonder whether Christ, the Perfect Judge, would set angelic investigators to determine whether the killer had been properly instructed in the Law concerning murder? Do you think that Christ would be concerned with the murderer's culture or national origin? Or if social pressure had resulted in the murder? Personally, I think not. More significantly, do you think that God Almighty, Giver of the Law, would have decided to cancel the commandment after it had been in force for hundreds of years? After who knows how many souls had been condemned for violated it? Assuming that, in all the years that the law of abstinence prohibited the consumption of meat on Fridays at least one person died with that serious sin unconfessed and, after due theological investigation, was condemned to spend eternity in Hell, is he still there now that the law has changed? According to priest Ryan, he is, for his sin involved more than just eating meat.
Now, that is really very esoteric. In order to accept what Ryan is saying, one must believe all the RCC teachings that she is the church that Christ established, that her ruler is Christ's vicar on earth, that her laws have the force of God's laws for they come, as it were, from His prophet, the Magisterium. Believing all that, then deliberately eating a hotdog on Friday in defiance of the law of abstinence would be tantamount to deliberately violating a commandment of God. But could it have been a commandment of God to not eat meat on Fridays?
From the above words of Jesus, it seems clear that the meat itself is not the source of stain of sin. In that we are not talking here of meat sacrificed to idols, Paul's words in Romans 14 would seem not to be applicable. What is left? Only the Roman Catholic Church could have established the law of abstinence from meat on Firdays. Or, perhaps, eating meat on Fridays never really was considered a mortal sin. That the last is not so may be seen from these words of a noted Catholic journalist and church historian:
My! How things have changed since Vatican II. As I interpret the words of the citation from the Catholic Encyclopedia -- "a serious obligation whose transgression, objectively considered, ordinarily involves a mortal sin," – the determination of whether eating a bit of meat on Friday was a sin was pretty much cut and dried. Nothing at all like the complex theological value judgment call described by priest Ryan. And so now it is time for conclusions.
Is the Roman Catholic Church, that hierarchical organization that exists outside her membership, truly equal in authority to the Most High? Does her Extraordinary Magisterium indeed speak and legislate with the same authority as God so that any contravention of her rules constitutes a sin against God Himself? Or does she presume, as did Lucifer, position and authority beyond and above her station? Has she shared in the fate of Lucifer?
Why not do the research yourself? Open your Bible and find out whether God indeed ever prohibited eating of meat on Fridays, or if it was nothing but an excess of piety. |
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