EMBER DAYS
The Ember Days during Advent this year are
today, Wednesday, December 20; Friday, December 22; and Saturday,
December 23.
May
such beautiful days of fast and abstinence bring about “time for true and
fruitful penance, an always repentant heart and amendment of life, the grace
and consolation of the Holy Ghost, and final perseverance in good works” (as
the old papal blessing goes) in order to help us prepare properly for the
Christmas season.
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Ember Days (from Latin Quatuor Tempora, four times) are the days
at the beginning of the seasons ordered by the Church as days of prayer,
fast, abstinence, mortification, and almsgiving. Although these days were
definitely arranged and prescribed for the entire Church by Pope Gregory VII
(1073-1085), their real origin goes back to the early days of the Church at
Rome. The Ember Days are specific to the West; the East does not know them.
In addition to prayer and fasting, another reason
for the Ember Days is to thank God for the gifts of
nature, to teach men to make use of them in moderation, and to assist the
needy.
The immediate occasion (for their origin) was
the practice of the heathens
of Rome who worked
in agriculture. In the months June, September, and December, the Romans invoked
their false deities for protection upon their fruits of the earth: in June for
a bountiful harvest, in September for a rich vintage, and in December for the
seeding.
The Church, when converting heathen nations, has
always tried to sanctify any practices that could be utilized for a good
purpose. At first, the Church
in Rome had fasts in June, September,
and December, but the exact days were not fixed. The Church, on these days,
taught Christians to consecrate the seasons by means of fasting, abstinence,
prayer, mortification, and almsgiving in order to invoke the blessing of the
One and True God upon their crops by means of sun and rain in due season.
Additionally, following the example of Our
Lord, Who fasted for 40 days and 40 nights, the Church always prepared for
special feasts and festivals by fasting (Saturdays were days of fast and abstinence
in preparation for Mass on the Lord’s Day – Sunday). This helped Christians to
prepare spiritually and to increase their life of virtue by subduing the flesh
to the spirit: “Fasting has always been
the nourishment of virtues. By voluntary mortifications, the flesh dies to its
concupiscence and the spirit is renewed in virtue” (Pope St. Leo).
n Taken from Catholic
Enclopedia and A Pulpit Commentary on Catholic Teaching:
The Liturgy of the Ecclesiastical Year.
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