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 Ash Wednesday - A History Written by Doug Archer, Catholic Register
Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of Lent, the period of
penance, prayer and sacrifice that precedes the celebration of the resurrection
of Christ.
Since the earliest days of the church there is evidence of some form of Lenten
preparation for Easter; but the duration and nature of this preparation took
countless centuries to evolve and is still changing even today.
As early as the second century, St. Irenaeus, an influential bishop and
missionary, wrote to Pope Victor I complaining of controversy around the dating
of Easter and the observance of a period of fasting leading up to this feast
day. Some regional churches fasted for one day, others for several days and
still others for 40 hours (most likely based on the traditional belief that
Christ lay for 40 hours in the tomb).
It was another two centuries before the Council of Nicea tackled St. Irenaeus’
issues head-on. Assembled by the Roman Emperor Constantine in 325, bishops at
Nicea developed a complex formula that placed the date for Easter on the first
Sunday after the first full moon after the first day of spring. The canons
emerging from that council also referenced a 40-day Lenten season of
fasting.
The word Lent is derived
from the Anglo-Saxon words, lencten, meaning “spring,” and lenctentid, which
was the word for “March,” the month in which the major part of this season of
sacrifice falls.
Why the period of 40 days was chosen is not entirely understood, but scholars
believe it was influenced by biblical references to 40-day fasts by Moses
on Mount Sinai and by Christ in the desert before He began His public
ministry. Nonetheless, by the time of Pope Gregory the Great in the last decade
of the sixth century, Christians in Rome and the West were generally
observing six weeks of fasting prior to Easter.
But the math wasn’t quite right. Given that no fasting was to occur on Sundays
— as Sunday was viewed as a weekly memorial of the Resurrection and therefore a
day of celebration, not fasting — six weeks of fasting added up to 36 days, not
40. To correct this, Pope Gregory moved the start of Lent to a Wednesday.
Gregory is also credited with initiating the practice that gave the first day
of Lent its name, Day of Ashes or simply, Ash Wednesday. To begin the season of
fasting and repentance, Gregory marked the foreheads of his congregation with
ashes, a biblical symbol for penance. It was also a reminder to early
Christians of their mortality (“For you are dust, and to dust you shall return”
Genesis 3:19) and the need to prepare for the afterlife.
A millennium and a half after Pope Gregory, the duration of the Lenten
observance is still not immediately clear to many Catholics. Confusion stems
from the fact that liturgically, Lent lasts 44 days.
The traditional 40-day Lenten fast begins on Ash Wednesday, excludes Sundays
and carries through to the night before Easter. But the General Norms for the
Liturgical Year and Calendar, promulgated by Pope Paul VI in 1969, established
slightly different parametres for the season of Lent.
Returning to a long-held custom within the church, the Second Vatican Council
re-established the three days before Easter as a separate holy time apart from
Lent proper. Known as the Easter or Sacred Triduum, this three-day period
begins with the Mass of the Lord’s Supper on Holy Thursday and concludes at the
Easter Vigil on Holy Saturday, which is when the Easter season begins. So, from
a liturgical perspective, Lent starts on Ash Wednesday and ends just before the
Mass on Holy Thursday, the start of the Sacred Triduum. And it includes
Sundays, making it 44 days in duration.
The nature of the Lenten observance has changed significantly over the
millennia. While fasting seems always to have been part of the paschal
preparation, there was significant latitude around abstention in the early
centuries of the church. Some Christians fasted every day during Lent; others,
every other week only. The more austere fasters subsisted on one or two meals a
week; but many found that cutting back to one repast a day was a sufficient
sacrifice. And while many abstained from meat and wine, some ate nothing but
dry bread.
Pope Gregory weighed in on this issue as well. He established the Lenten rule
that Christians were to abstain from meat and all things that come from “flesh”
such as milk, fat and eggs. And fasting meant one meal a day, normally taken in
the mid-afternoon.
The prohibition around milk and eggs gave rise to the tradition of Shrove
Tuesday or Mardi Gras (French for Fat Tuesday), which is celebrated the day
before Ash Wednesday. On this day Christians would feast on the foods they were
required to abstain from during Lent — gorging before the fast as it were — and
pancakes became a popular meal for using up all the eggs and milk.
Over time, concessions were made to the rules around fasting. In the 12th and
13th centuries, church authorities such as St. Thomas Aquinas accepted that a
certain amount of “snacking,” in addition to one meal a day, should be allowed,
particularly for those employed in manual labour. Eating fish was eventually
allowed and even the consumption of meat and dairy products as long as a pious
act was performed to compensate for the indulgence.
Today the Catholic Code of Canon Law requires those 18 to 59 years of age to
fast on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday.
And fasting means partaking of only one full meal, with snacks or smaller meals
allowed at two other times through the day. It is also recommended that those
14 and over abstain from eating meat on Ash Wednesday and every Friday during
Lent.
Lent is not just about fasting, however. Prayer, almsgiving and works of
charity have always been encouraged by the church. And walking the Stations of
the Cross (also called the Way of the Cross or Via Crucis) is a Lenten devotion
that dates back to the fourth century.
Pilgrims to Jerusalem would retrace the steps that Christ walked on
His way to Calvary, stopping at specific points to pray. When the Crusades
in the Middle Ages prevented such sacred journeys to the Holy Land, the
Via Crucis was reproduced in different parts of Europe. Chapels and
markers (first referred to as Stations of the Cross around 1460) decorated with
scenes of the Passion were erected in monasteries and in numerous cities to
allow for miniature pilgrimages. Now images of the Stations of the Cross appear
in almost all Catholic churches and are an integral part of many Lenten worship
services.
The traditions and practices surrounding Lent are varied, but they have a
common focus: preparation for the celebration of Christ’s resurrection on
Easter Sunday. Some would argue that at the start of this new Lenten season,
that should be the focus of every Catholic.
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