Linggo, Disyembre 24, 2006
Christmas Eve: Fasting and Abstience

It has been a long-standing custom up until Vatican II to observe fasting & abstinence from meat on Christmas Eve.  It is a custom I still observe and encourage you to do so as well.  The feasts and celebration of the Lord's Nativity should wait until the Nativity begins.

This day is known as the Feast of Seven Fishes for many Italians who will customarily have a dinner of seven fishes in honor of the seven Sacraments and seven days of Creation.


The 1917 Code stated for all Latin Rite Catholics in Canon 1252:
§ 1. The law of abstinence alone is to be observed on all Fridays.
§ 2. The law of abstinence and fast together is to be observed on Ash Wednesday, the Fridays and Saturdays of Lent, the Ember days [all day], and on the Vigils of Pentecost, the Assumption, All Saints, and the Nativity.
§ 3. The law of fast alone is to be observed on the other days of Lent.
§ 4. On Sundays and days of obligation the law ceases except on a feast of obligation during Lent; and the vigils are not anticipated; likewise the law ceases on Holy Saturday at noon.
This Tradition of Fasting is still observed in the Byzantine Tradition.  I quote:
The Christmas Fast, in preparation for the feast of the Nativity on December 25, is one of the minor fasts of the Church. This fast of forty days was introduced in the 12th century. Counting back 40 days from the feast of the Nativity, the fast begins on the evening of November 14 - the feast of the holy apostle Phillip. As a result, it is traditionally called Phillip's Fast or the Phillipian Fast (in Slavonic, Filipovka).

This fast is not penitential, but is rather a fast of preparation, like the pre-Communion fast. By abstaining from certain foods, we are opening up a "space" in our lives through asceticism and obedience, into which God may enter.

One final day of strict fasting awaits us. Normally, this would be the Vigil (in Greek, Paramony) of the Nativity, December 24. But Saturday and Sunday are never days of strict fasting in the Byzantine Rite (with the single exception of Great and Holy Saturday). So when December 24 falls on one of these two days, the day of strict fast is anticipated on Friday. 
On this day, a special service called the Royal Hours is celebrated. This service consists of the daytime services of the First Hour, Third Hour, Sixth Hour, Ninth Hour, and Typika, celebrated with special psalms and readings for the Nativity. (This service is called royal because, at one time, the Emperor himself always attended the service.) Each part of the service has an Old Testament prophecy, an Epistle reading, and a reading from the Holy Gospel.

The Vigil of the Nativity

Finally, we have come to the very eve of the Nativity - the Paramony or Vigil of Christmas (December 24). If it is a weekday, it is a day of strict fasting, with the Royal Hours celebrated during the day, and Vespers and the Divine Liturgy of Saint Basil in the evening. 

If December 24 is a Saturday or Sunday, the Divine Liturgy may be celebrated in the morning, and we sing the troparion of the Vigil:
At that time, Mary registered in Bethlehem with the elder Joseph, who was of the house of David. She had conceived without seed and was with child; and her time to give birth had come. They found no room in the inn, but the cave became a pleasant palace for the Queen. Christ is born to raise up the likeness that had fallen.
The fast is not quite over; if there is a meal or Holy Supper in the evening of December 24, after Vespers, it is a meatless one. But we have arrived at the feast of the Nativity of our Lord, God and Savior Jesus Christ.
Source: Byzantine Catholic Archeparchy of Pittsburg

8 comment(s):

del_button Disyembre 24, 2006 nang 12:47 PM
Jeff Miller ayon kay ...

How can you keep a fast when the Fourth Sunday of Advent is also a feast day itself?

del_button Disyembre 24, 2006 nang 1:01 PM
Matthew ayon kay ...

Jeff,

Remember this fast is no longer required by Church law. It is optional. And I'm assuming that the Vigil of a Solemnity would override a feastday like the Fourth Sunday of Advent.

del_button Disyembre 24, 2006 nang 1:35 PM
Hindi-nagpakilala ayon kay ...

Ermmm...Even in the Traditional Calendar, fasting/abstinence is not observed on a Sunday, in honour of the Resurection of our Lord. I think the author of this blog seems to be a little confused over days of penance. I could still remember you advising people to do abstinence on the Feast of the Solemnity of Immaculate Conception (which happens to be a 1st Class Feast in Traditional Calendar); no abstinence is required if 1st Class feasts fall on a Friday. Please do not be over-scrupulous.

del_button Disyembre 24, 2006 nang 1:57 PM
Hindi-nagpakilala ayon kay ...

Merry Christmas MB!

del_button Disyembre 24, 2006 nang 2:40 PM
Saint Peter's helpers ayon kay ...

Merry Christmas to you and your family! God bless you!

del_button Disyembre 24, 2006 nang 5:42 PM
EC Gefroh ayon kay ...

Anonymous: MB is not confused. The Church has not done away with penances on Fridays and he posted about not abstaining on a Friday of a Solemnity, if I remember correctly.

Have a very blessed and Mele Kalikimaka MB.

del_button Disyembre 28, 2006 nang 8:27 PM
Hindi-nagpakilala ayon kay ...

Fisheaters is a site run by schismatics and quoting their site decreases the legitmacy of your site.

del_button Disyembre 28, 2006 nang 9:20 PM
Matthew ayon kay ...

Fish Eaters does favor the Tridentine Mass, but I have never heard they are run by schismatics.

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