Yes, Catholics may eat pies during Lent unless they are meat pies and those may not be eaten on Fridays during Lent.
The Stations of the Cross are primarily prayed on Fridays during Lent.
When you are buying the italian sausage, the supermarket or meat department may have recipes available. The food network website also has many recipes.
Roman Catholic AnswerYou may eat whatever you like during Lent, you must fast and abstain from meat on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday; and abstain from meat on all Fridays.
Yes. You can't eat meat on Friday, and Ash Wednesday (currently today).Roman Catholic AnswerThe law of abstinence, to which you are referring is: The law of abstinence forbids the use of meat, but not of eggs, the products of milk or condiments made of animal fatand is currently binding on all Fridays of the year, and Ash Wednesday. In the United States, people are allowed to give up something else on Fridays outside of Lent. So cheese, as a "product of milk" is legitimate. The complete current regulations are found at the link below.
Catholics may eat anything they want during Lent, however on all Fridays of the year, and especially during Lent, and on Ash Wednesday they must abstain from flesh meat of animals, which would include muskrat.
you are confusing advent with lent. during advent there are no dietary restrictions , but during lent the faithful may not eat any meat on FRIDAYS and AshWendsday except fish. You also can't eat meat on Fridays throughout the year unless you live in Canada or the United States, where some other penitential act can be substituted .It can be a prayer such as a Rosary or Stations of the Cross or it could be the giving up of something, like watching TV.
For Catholics, Ash Wednesday and all Fridays during Lent are days of abstinence. No meat of any warm-blooded animal may be eaten - beef, pork, chicken, etc.
On Fridays, Catholics over the age of 14 are not supposed to any kind of meat. Fish is okay however and many churches have "seafood dinners" on the Fridays during Lent.AnswerAbstaining. During Lent, one must abstain from meat on Ash Wednesday. The Church's rules require abstainingfrom meat on all Fridays of the year. Some countries have an indult where you may abstain from something else on Fridays outside of Lent although meat is still recommended, for a complete discussion of the current rules, read Pope Paul VI's regulations which are still in effect, at the link below.
There is no prohibition against eating eggs or anything else during Lent except that meat may not be eaten on Ash Wednesday and all Lenten Fridays. Eggs do not count as meat.
It depends where the Catholic lives. At the very least, all Fridays in Lent and Ash Wednesday. Normally, all Fridays period, but in some places (such as the US and Canada) other regulations are in force.
Roman Catholics may not eat meat during a day of fast (Ash Wednesday, the Fridays of Lent, etc.) Otherwise, Catholics have no dietary restrictions.