Yes you can. The Church does not restrict one not to eat meat on Holy Saturday.
Yes, you may eat meat on Holy Saturday, although the Church earnestly asks that you continue your Good Friday fast and abstinence until the Easter Vigil, if possible; although it is not required. Please see any Ordo for Holy Saturday.
Na, its fine.But once you eat it, you will never have it again.
Between and instead of a breakfast and lunch; around 10 to 11 in the morning. Sunday Easter Mother's Day Saturday
we eat Easter eggs at Easter to celebrate new life.
Mardi Gras, literally fat Tuesday, is the day before Lent starts, ash Wednesday. The tradition began, because if you are Catholic you are supposed to 'give up' meat, and so the family would eat all of their remaining meat before the 40 days of Lent (which ends on Easter) .
Roman Catholic AnswerYes.
Meat is allowed during Lent. Meat is not supposed to be eaten on Fridays by human beings aged 14 years of age or older. Jesus Christ, The Savior and Messiah of the world died on a Friday, Good Friday. This is why during Lent, you aren't supposed to eat meat.
yes NO::: a fast means you eat no food...this includes communion waffers, crackers or bread which ever the church uses for communion.
It is not illegal to eat horse meat. It is illegal to sell horse meat.
you do not eat easter eggs
Yes, you may touch meat. Abstinence is the penance required and is not specific except on Good Friday for many Christians. No eating of meat if that is what you "give up" for lent. Butchers must work through lent, hard to do if they were not able to touch meat. Many people give up other things other than meat. Meat is not a staple food for many cultures. It is the spirit of the penance that makes it valid.
Speaking from my personal experience growing up in England we would have chocolate eggs and bunnies. On Good Friday we would have hot cross buns and pancakes. on Easter day we would have a meal with meat eggs Paska(a type of bread) but from Wednesday up to Easter day we would be forbidden to eat meat. I am a Ukrainian catholic (same kind of thing as greek catholic)