jcc0621
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2007
- Messages
- 12,317
I consider myself a "recovering Catholic".
OMG my DH says this all the time and his name is Jim too

I consider myself a "recovering Catholic".


You're not a bad Catholic at all! No meat during Lent is more historical than religious as a PP said.
Talk about a bad Catholic, I am getting my taxes done by my Jewish accountant this Sunday! I think that puts me ahead of you in line for bad Catholic of the week![]()
I don't want to change churches. I am proud to be Catholic and I couldn't imaging being anywhere else. It's just where I fit in. It just when it comes to no meat on Fridays I just don't want to do it. I don't really have a reason. I would much rather go out of my way to do nice things for people then not eat meat on friday.

)I hope I don't start a huge debate here and I'm almost scared to post this but I'm just wondering what other people think. Am I a bad Catholic if I eat meat on Fridays during lent? I go to mass every sunday, am involved in a lot of things at church but I just can't get into the "no meat on fridays". Just wondering what other Catholic's think.
Observing Lent is one thing and whether you do it by sacrifice or by virtue is personal. In our house we observe the no eating meat law because that is what makes my DH and DD more comfortable. I don't see it as a sacrifice as we make up new and different things to have during this time
so it is my and DH's decision to give up drinking for Lent. We really enjoy having a drink at the end of the week and on the weekends, however, next time that happens it will be at Easter Sunday brunch. My DD is going to be working on doing good deeds for her family and friends. She is going to do at least one thing everyday to make someone's day better and a couple of other things.

I'm going to preface this with the disclaimer that this is NOT Church doctrine, but my opinion. I choose to believe that Christ would understand and agree with my reasoning on the subject, given the rest of His teachings. That it contradicts doctrine is just something I live with, and I honestly don't care if the Church doesn't like it; I just don't agree with them on this point. (And yes, I know that the Catholic Church is not a democracy.)
Many years ago in CCD when I was preparing for Confirmation, my priest at the time discussed this with us and gave it as his personal opinion that what counts is that you sacrifice, not so much what the sacrifice is. (Of course, he was a Claretian.)
The liturgical point of the dietary restrictions for Lent is that Catholics are not supposed to be eating expensive "rich" foods at that time; your diet is supposed to be plain, such as a poor person would eat. (You know, WWJE?) It is not the same principle as the Jewish dietary laws, which are based on the idea that certain foods are unclean in God's eyes.
IMO, if you live near a lake or ocean where fish/shellfish is cheap and plentiful and you can put in the labor to catch it yourself, then it makes sense to eat it as Lenten food. If you live far away from the source and must pay a premium for it, then it is ridiculous as Lenten food. Box m&c makes sense, but Fettucini Alfredo made with 6 varieties of imported cheese does not. Hamburger in a tube makes sense, too, but not ribeye steak.
What my family does during Lent is to eat poorly. Yep, on purpose. We put ourselves on what amounts to a food-stamp diet; lots of starches, canned veggies and fruit instead of fresh, and no proteins that cost more than $2/lb. Lots of soups and stews. During Lent we only eat fish if we catch it, because here it is expensive stuff.
The point to me is to actually sacrifice, not use the restrictions as an excuse to splurge on lobster once a week for six weeks. If that means that I eat meatloaf when I don't care for it, then I think that I'm on the right track.

Since we're talking about the point "to me"...I'll share:
There's an old saying: The road to Hell is paved with good intentions.
My honest opinion is that anyone who thinks they can reinterpret restrictions has bigger problems than deciding whether to eat meat on Fridays. A look at the 7 Deadly Sins and the 7 Cardinal Virtues might be in line.
Oh, and you might look up a little ditty in the Bible that goes something like this: Thou hypocrite, cast out first the beam out of thine own eye; and then shalt thou see clearly to cast out the mote out of thy brother's eye.
I suggest folks worry about themselves rather than justify their own wrong doings by comparing themselves to others they think are the bigger sinners.
And to that I'd add, any priest who recommends a candidate for Confirmation knowing that said person does not in fact embrace basic church doctrine, covenants, rites, and rituals should be taken to task by his bishop (at the very least)!
"And I also say to you that you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build My church; and the gates of Hades shall not overpower it. 19 "I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven; and whatever you shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven."
And this is why we follow church doctrine no matter what we personally believe. We are going on the authority that Jesus gave Peter who were succeeded by todays popes.