Why do Catholics eat fish on Fridays in Lent?

While all of Lent is devoted to repentance, penance, and meditations on Jesus’s death, the Fridays in Lent especially are occasions for bringing to mind the sacrifice of Good Friday. Consequently, fasting is appropriate…but why fish?

It may seem odd to our modern sensibilities, which classify fish as animals, to eat fish on “meatless” days. To understand the reason behind this ancient Christian tradition requires recognizing that the practice long predates the English language, and that “carnis,” usually translated as “meat,” applied only to the flesh of land animals and birds.

Meat, in ancient times, was a luxury, while fish was food for the poor and common people. One might feast by killing the fatted calf, but one wouldn’t feast with fish. Consequently, fish became associated with the penitential meals on the somber days of Lent.

Ash Wednesday

Memento, homo, quia pulvis es, et in pulverem reverteris.(Remember, man, that thou art dust, and into dust thou shalt return.)

Ash Wednesday is an ancient Christian practice of marking the first day of Lent by marking one’s forehead with ashes. These ashes, made from the palms of last year’s Palm Sunday, serves a multi-fold purpose:

1 – it echoes the ancient Jewish tradition of putting ashes or dust on one’s head and wearing sackcloth to express grief or penitence
2 – it serves as a reminder to the wearer of his own sinfulness and need for a Savior
3 – it is an outward expression of one’s sorrow for one’s sins and desire to repent
4 – it reminds us of our own mortality and, by doing so, the passing and inconsequential nature of the things of this world and the permanence and value of the things of the next

Learn more about Ash Wednesday

Music: Emendemus in melius

Our Lady of Lourdes (Feb 11)

A series of Marian apparitions to a peasant girl (now saint) named Bernadette Soubirous on this day in 1858. The site of these apparitions has now seen 67 miraculous healings confirmed by the secular board of medical doctors tasked with finding any medical explanation for claims made.

It also led to the Pope defining the Immaculate Conception as dogma (but not creating it, indeed there is written documentation for the Christian belief in the Immaculate Conception going all the way back to St. Ambrose in AD 340 and possibly before, and, of course, loads of implications of it in scripture itself).

Learn more about the apparitions and history.

Learn more about the Immaculate Conception.

Watch the classic 1943 film, “The Song Of Bernadette.”