Wed Mar 4, 2009 5:39PM EST
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Catholics traditionally give up a vice or a special treat for the five weeks between Ash Wednesday and Easter, but for some adherents, figuring out what to give up has always been a challenge.
Giving up meat on Friday is a classic idea, and many of the faithful are prone to giving up sweets, coffee, or alcohol.
But the Church is muscling its way into the modern era, like it or not, and Rome has suggested a new way for Catholics to show their devotion to their religion and preparation for atonement during Easter: Give up text messaging, and other guilty pleasures of modern society.
"No SMS day" does more than just inconvenience the user and remind him of both the blessings of technology and the importance of personal, human interactions: One diocese notes that abstaining from texting was a helpful way for Catholics to draw attention to war in the Congo, where many mines producing minerals essential to the creation of cell phones are located and where violent and bloody conflict has raged for years.
And texting isn't the only modern vice the Church would like you to avoid for the next 40 days. In Turin it's suggested you shun television. In Trento, Italy, a calendar of tech-free living has been generated, suggesting different gadgets be given up for a week at a time -- no cars one week, no iPod the next.
That said, even the Church is pragmatic on the realities of living in the 2000s without modern trappings. Says one Roman priest: "If the use is capricious, then abstinence is welcome, but if technology is needed for work it makes no sense."
What do you think? Could you go 40 days without texting?
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Each year I give up boiled squash. I have been faithful to this vow since childhood when my dad force fed me boiled squash and I blew it all over his pants.
Priests on the prowl for little boys and the POPE is ask me for lent ? Get ride of the dirt ! It hasen,t happened yet !
I have never texted before and don't plan on doing it in the future (I don't even have a cell phone), so it wouldn't be a problem for me.
We are only eating fruit and veggies for the next forty days. However, the person that gets his Bible verse by texting can try opening up a real Bible and reading a verse.
At least get your facts straight if you are going to be writing about people's religion. No meat on Friday's is a requirement for all healthy able adults (and kids if your parents don't let you know that) and not just a "classic idea". And you don't have to give up anything either. You could spend more time in prayer or give your time to helping at a soup kitchen or service project, ect. It is however recommended you give something up and take on something extra. So next time at least get your facts straight.
Could we go 40 days??? Well it all depends how much we love our Savior I guess. Also, the Church doesn't dictate to us what we must give up or add by way of meditation, it merely suggests...For those practicing Catholics...enjoy growing closer to the Lord in the days ahead...peace
AMEN....birdman_5589
Texting in my family may be a luxury we didn't have in years past, but it certainly isn't a vice. Part of the family is deaf, and with the coming of cell phones and texting, we can now communicate with the ease that hearing people have had for decades. In the old days we had to drive to each other's home to deliver urgent news, or wait several days on postal mail. And what would you do if you were deaf, traveling at night, and had car trouble? Thank God, now we can actually summon help. If the Catholic Church thinks folks should give up texting, maybe they should consider giving up all their telephone use, cell phones, and land-line phones, for Lent.
Texting is a joke. How can anyone send a message with a tiny mobile phone keypad is beyond me. I tried sending a text and got frustrating trying to type a few words and gave up. I rather send a regular email with a full size keyboard. I can type much faster, more accurate and it is easier.
I am catholic and I managed last year
C'mon, avoiding texting it's just an idea, there are many other possibilities of offering some small thing for lent. I suppose the main idea is to avoid wasting time...
For me it is not so important to give up anything, i want to improve and increase my spiritual life, and I am grateful for the days of lent that give me inspirations -- for the sake of His sorrowful passion
This is nitpicky, and I was going to give up picking nits for Lent, but ... The season of Lent lasts from Ash Wednesday to the Easter Tridium (Holy Thursday, Good Friday, to Easter Sunday; Lent is six weeks (not five). Abstaining from meat on the Fridays of Lent is a discipline obligated on all Catholics. Abstaining from meat is not like giving up sweets, giving alms to charity or performing other acts of self denial or spiritual growth The small acts of self denial or of charity are not intended to be like superstitious trivial gestures - they are intended to help develop spirituality and understanding as we turn inward on an introspective journey, leading up to Easter, the holiest days of the year.
Yeah Charly...tell it like it is...and kudos to those defending Mother Church...
Well I think it possible, however, people would forget that I've stopped texting and they'd text me, and if I'm in a place where I can't call (and honestly just don't want to) then friends and family are going to think I'm ignoring them. Now facebook, I could give that up, no problem. Maybe its because I'm done with college.
i recieve/send around 1700 a month. To not text for lent would be impossible for me lol.
I go with #4. This is the dumb idea of the month...war in the congo is not being waged by minerals. disclosure: do not own tv, cell phone, or Other.
h'mmm. you don't post comments you don't like, huh?
eh... if you can handle being old school, go ahead. Society is going to kept on rolling. Hopefully you can visit office hours physically and manage your time and discipline.
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6 Posted by bubbamac1987 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:15PM EDT Report Abuse
Just FYI, giving up meat on Fridays during Lent is not "a classic idea," it's a requirement of all practicing, healthy, adult Catholics. What people choose to give up is above and beyond that.