It's Fat Tuesday, or Mardi Gras (that's what "Mardi Gras"
translates to, you know...Mardi is Tuesday, Gras is "fat"). A special day
just for me!
The only vestige of my Catholic faith that I continue to cling to is
Fat Tuesday. It's an excuse to have pancakes without guilt, because isn't that what
people do on Fat Tuesday? Eat panakes?
Wednesday will be Ash Wednesday when it used to be that lots of
people you saw every day walked around with big black spots in the middle of their
foreheads, having gone to church and had the priest remind you that you were dust and to
dust you would return....and then 6 weeks of Lent.
When did I stop paying attention to Lent? I don't remember.
When I was a kid there was lots of Lenten observance. We never ate meat on
Friday during Lent or on Ash Wednesday. On Fridays, the students in my grammar
school were marched over to the church next door for the "stations of the
cross," a ceremony where the priest visited and said prayers at each of 14 visual
representations hanging on the walls around the church, of parts of Jesus' travel from
being condemned to death to his burial in the tomb and including such events as Simon of
Cyrene helping to carry the cross, Veronica wiping his face, the actual crucifixion, and
ultimately placement in the tomb.
Each station came with prayers, standng, kneeling, genuflecting, etc.
And incense, of course. Was there ever a Catholic ceremony that did not come
with incense?
When I was old enough, we were supposed to fast on Fridays -- only
one big meal, and two small meals.
And, of course, there was what you were going to give up. It
was traditional that you give up something you liked to do penance during the six weeks of
Lent. I always gave up candy and looked forward to the Easter Bunny bringing me lots
on Easter morning, nicely mixing my religious vs. my fantasy beliefs!
My father always gave up liquor to prove that he wasn't an alcoholic.
He had a gin fizz first thing, after returning from Mass, on Easter Sunday morning.
He probably would have had the gin fizz before Mass but in those days you
couldn't eat or drink anything before Communion, so he would have had to give up going to
Communion.
Going to Mass on Easter sunday was a Catholic's "Easter
Duty" and if you didn't go on Easter Sunday, it was a mortal sin, I think. I
hate to think of the blackness of my soul since I can't remember the last time I was at
any Mass, let alone an Easter Mass.
I wondered if it counted the day we got to church too late to get a
seat, or to get standing room inside the vestibule of the church, so we had to stand
outside, where we could neither hear nor see anything. Did that count? We were
on church grounds, Mass was going on, and at some point we did get to go in and
take communion....
This Lenten season, Catholics (and others) around the world will be
thinking of the resignation of Benedict XVI. I have to admit that I greeted the news
with "it couldn't happen to a nicer person..." I was not a fan of Cardinal
Ratzinger and was very disappointed when he was elected Pope. And he sent the Church
reeling back to the 19th century and beyond, very firm on things like homosexuality, gay
marriage, abortion, stem cell research and all those hot button issues. Very liberal
on priestly pedophilia and hiding the perpetrators.
I am reading a book right now called "Holy Crosses and Nazi
Flags" by Garry O'Connor, which is a fascinating look at the life of the about-to-be
gone Pope. It nicely complements the documentary, Mea Culpa, I saw recently
about the sex scandal in the Catholic church.
2 comments:
I learned what Mardi Gras means from Charles van Doren, he of the Quiz Show Scandals of the 50's. But we non-Catholics have our own collections of Catholic jokes and snarks; nice people keep their mouths shut when discussing religion with observant Catholics.
One of my favorite jokes (repeated to me by Catholic): Husband tells wife they can't make love because it's Lent. And she say, "For God's sake, borrow it back."
I agree with you about this pope. Glad to see him gone. Since he appointed most of the cardinals who will elect the new one, he probably will be of much the same stripe. I generally just skip over stories about him.
I like your story, l'empress.
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