This is me, Eccles

This is me, Eccles
This is me, Eccles

Thursday 9 May 2013

Moveable feasts

Although Catholics in England and Wales are apparently out of step with much of the rest of the Christian world, the Catholic Bishops' Conference has announced new arrangements for the major religious festivals.

Ascension

And when the time came for Jesus to depart, He said "Let's do it on Sunday instead."

First, as has already been noted by many people, almost everyone - from the Pope downwards - believes that today is Ascension Day. However, the Magic Circle has decided to defer it to Sunday. This is believed to be because there is a highly important football match taking place tonight (Leicester v. Watford), which several bishops are unwilling to miss.

There is also Eastenders: apparently, Roxy finds herself in a dangerous situation when she gets some unwanted attention (a situation in which Vincent Nichols often finds himself).

Roxy

Today is an unholy day of obligation, when all Catholics much watch Eastenders.

Looking ahead, the CBCEW has announced that Christmas Day has been moved to the nearest Sunday, December 22nd 2013. This will have the advantage that believers will be able to finish their Christmas shopping a few days before everyone else, and spend most of the next two weeks in an alcoholic stupor watching television, like the rest of the country.

Arrangements for Lent have similarly been altered. Ash Wednesday will of course become Ash Sunday (which is so much more convenient for everyone), and Good Friday will also become Good Sunday. There is an obvious technical problem here: thus, the Nicene Creed used in church has been modernised so that it now says that Jesus "rose again on the seventh day in accordance with the Scriptures." Which means in fact that the Bible will also have to be retranslated under the direction of the Magic Circle ("for forty days appearing to them" should have been "forty-three," anyway).

St Luke

St Luke is persuaded to change "forty" to "forty-three."

The changes have been greeted with enthusiasm in some circles. Said a spokesman for the Tablet: "Ha ha, another kick in the teeth for the Pope! He should know that only religious nutters go to church on any day of the week except Sundays. And thank goodness we all stopped saying our prayers on weekdays, when Vatican II banned such practices!"

Christopher Robin

Christopher Robin is saying his prayers on a Thursday. What a Traddie reactionary!

7 comments:

  1. " … from the Pope downwards … "
    And (there is every reason to suppose) upwards as well.

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  2. Transferring feast days to Sunday! Marvellous idea! Just-why haven't they moved Christmas?

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  3. Once again the CBCEW shows how out of step it is with the needs of 'modern Catholics'. The bishops missed the option of radical reform. The opportunity should have been taken to remove that great anachronism - the Sunday obligation. Sundays should of course have been transferred to Mondays. The orthodox would have no trouble with the new arrangement. Meanwhile 'modern Catholics' would be liberated (by liberation theology, as it were) and thus be able to devote their Sundays to the modern devotions of shopping, watching football and DIY, and still have time for study of the saints such as St Clifford of the Long Lie and St Basil Lost Us.

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  4. To be totally practical & for the convenience of everyone, all feast days could transferred to the 29th February,

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  5. UK bishops and their remnant presbyters can do what they please since there are no lay people left. They have all gone traditional; neo-catehcumenal; charischismatic, agnostic, atheist or UKIP.

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  6. you and antipope joan shud get togever!

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