Oroville Mercury-Register

Ash Wednesday and Valentine's Day fell on the same day this year

- By Holly Meyer

Feb. 14 is a holiday heavyweigh­t this year due to a calendar collision of events.

Yes, it's Valentine's Day, the fixed annual celebratio­n of love and friendship, marked by cute couples, eager elementary school students — and critics who deride its commercial­ization. But it also happens to be Ash Wednesday, the solemn day of fasting and reflection that signals the start of Christiani­ty's most penitent season.

Ash Wednesday is not a fixed date. Its timing is tied to Easter Sunday, and for most Christians, Easter will fall on March 31 this year.

Easter also moves annually, swinging between March 22 and April 25 based on a calendar calculatio­n involving the moon.

The U.S. Conference of

Catholic Bishops lays it out: “Easter is celebrated on the first Sunday after the Paschal full moon, which is the first full moon occurring either on or after the spring equinox (March 21). ... To find the date for Ash Wednesday, we go back six weeks which leads to the First Sunday of Lent and four days before that is Ash Wednesday.”

This year, that happens to be Feb. 14.

What happens on Ash Wednesday?

Not all Christians observe Ash Wednesday. For those who do, they typically attend an Ash Wednesday church service, where a priest or other minister draws a cross — or at least what is intended to look like one — of ashes on their forehead. The distributi­on of ashes underscore­s human mortality,

among other themes.

It's an obligatory day of fasting and abstinence for Catholics. The abstinence restrictio­ns are continued on Fridays during Lent, which is the period of repentance and penance leading up to Holy Week observance­s

— most significan­tly their belief in the crucifixio­n of Jesus and his resurrecti­on from the dead.

Where do the ashes come from?

Typically, the ashes are from the palms used on Palm Sunday, which falls a week before Easter, according to the Evangelica­l Lutheran Church in America.

Ashes can be purchased, but some churches make their own by burning the palms from prior years. For example, several parishes and schools in the Chicago Catholic Archdioces­e plan to hold palm burning ceremonies this year.

Can Catholics celebrate Valentine's Day on Ash Wednesday?

In addition to the candy heart and chocolate-fueled secular celebratio­ns, Feb. 14 is also the Feast of St. Valentine. But Ash Wednesday with its fasting and abstinence requiremen­ts is far more significan­t and should be prioritize­d, said Catholic Bishop Richard Henning

of Providence, Rhode Island, in the diocese's official newspaper. His predecesso­r shared a similar message in 2018.

Who was St. Valentine?

The history of Valentine's Day and St. Valentine is a bit murky, but the holiday began as a liturgical feast day for a third-century Christian martyr, according to Lisa Bitel, a history and religion professor at the University of Southern California.

In the Conversati­on, her article titled, “The `real' St. Valentine was no patron of love,” explains there may have been more than one St. Valentine executed for their faith in the same time period, but none of them appear to have been romantics. The emphasis on love appears to have come later.

 ?? JAY JANNER — AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN VIA AP, FILE ?? Dorsey Prince, right, and Shannon Carter pray during an Ash Wednesday Mass at St. John Neumann Catholic Church in Austin, Texas, Feb. 22, 2023.
JAY JANNER — AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN VIA AP, FILE Dorsey Prince, right, and Shannon Carter pray during an Ash Wednesday Mass at St. John Neumann Catholic Church in Austin, Texas, Feb. 22, 2023.

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