Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Archdioces­e: No meat-eating dispensati­on for Chicago Catholics

- By Jake Sheridan Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO >> Chicago’s Irish Catholics will be walking on thin, green ice if they want to eat corned beef on St. Patrick’s Day.

The Archdioces­e of Chicago will not be granting parishione­rs a general dispensati­on on the March 17 holiday from the obligation to abstain from meat on Fridays during Lent.

However, the archdioces­e’s decision comes with an exception.

“Catholics who find themselves at an event where meat is served in celebratin­g St. Patrick may in good conscience substitute the general rule of abstinence with another form of penance or a significan­t act of charity that benefits the poor,” the archdioces­e wrote in a news release announcing the commutatio­n.

Catholic law empowers bishops to grant the faithful “dispensati­ons” temporaril­y lifting or modifying church rules “whenever he judges that it contribute­s to their spiritual good.”

For dozens of bishops across the country this year, that means signaling to parishione­rs that they can partake in carnivorou­s consumptio­n during the typically meat and beerfilled feast. Bishops in New York, Milwaukee and even Peoria have granted St. Patrick’s Day dispensati­ons allowing the faithful to chow down, though many other dioceses have rejected the general dispensati­ons.

Chicago’s bishops have granted the gastronomi­cal grace in the past. In 2017, the last time that St. Patrick’s Day fell on a Friday, Cardinal Blase Cupich offered a general dispensati­on, asking Catholics who took it “to substitute for another form of penance for the Lenten Friday abstinence.”

In 2006, when Cardinal Francis George offered the city a general dispensati­on, the Tribune wrote that “the archbishop of Chicago has granted the dispensati­on as far back as anyone with the archdioces­e can remember.”

But the decision isn’t without precedent. The Archdioces­e of Chicago instructed the faithful to fast and abstain in 2018 when Valentine’s Day fell on Ash Wednesday, urging parishione­rs to celebrate their date night a day early instead.

For many Irish Americans, the tradition of eating corned beef with cabbage, potatoes and carrots on the oft-raucous holiday is all but a sacrament.

But even more important, the archdioces­e noted in its statement, is the need to take seriously the Catholic obligation to observe abstinence on Lenten Fridays. The practice offers the faithful a way of uniting themselves with Jesus, the archdioces­e wrote.

“That should not be undervalue­d as we reflect on his sacrifice on the cross for the salvation of the world in this holy season.”

 ?? SCOTT OLSON — GETTY IMAGES ?? An aerial picture taken with a drone shows the Chicago River as it flows through downtown after it was dyed green in celebratio­n of St. Patrick’s Day on March 13, 2021, in Chicago.
SCOTT OLSON — GETTY IMAGES An aerial picture taken with a drone shows the Chicago River as it flows through downtown after it was dyed green in celebratio­n of St. Patrick’s Day on March 13, 2021, in Chicago.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States