Difference between revisions of "Ash-Wednesday"

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Ash-Wednesday <ref name="term_21413" />  
 
<p> (dies cinerum), the first day of Lent. It is so called from the custom observed in the ancient [[Church]] of penitents expressing their humiliation at this time by appearing in sackcloth and ashes. But it is iot certain that this was always done precisely on Ash-Wednesday, there being a perfect silence in the most ancient writers about it. 'The discipline used toward penitents in Lent, as described by Gratian, differed from their treatment at other times; for on AshWednesday they were presented to the bishop, clothed in sackcloth, and barefooted; then the seven penitential psalms were sung;: after which the bishop laid his hands on them, sprinkled them with holy water, and poured ashes upon their heads, declaring to them that as Adam was cast out of paradise, so they, for their sins, were cast out of the Church. Then the inferior ministers expelled them out of the doors of the church. In the end of Lent, on the Thursday. before Easter,, they were again presented for reconciliation by the deacons and presbyters at the gates of the church. But this method of treating penitents in Lent carries with it the marks of a more modern practice; for there was no use of the holy water in the ancient discipline, nor seven penitential psalms in their service, but only one, viz. the fifty-first.. Neither was [[Ash-Wednesday]] anciently the first day of Lent, till [[Gregory]] the Great first added it to Lent to make the number of fastingdays completely forty, which before were but thirty-six. Nor does it appear that anciently the time of imposing penance was confined to the beginning of Lent, but was granted at all times, whenever the bishop thought the penitent qualified for it. In Rome the spectacle on this occasion is most ridiculous. After giving themselves up to all kinds of gayety and licentiousness during the Carnival, till twelve o'clock on Tuesday night, the people go on Ash-Wednesday morning into the churches, when the officiating priests put ashes on their head, repeating the words, "Dust thou art, and unto dust thou shalt return." The day is kept in the English Church by proper collects and lessons, but without the ashes ceremony. See Bingham, Orig. Eccl. bk. 18, ch. ii, 2; Procter, Common Prayer, p. 278; Burnet, Hist. of Eng. Ref. ii, 94; lartene, De Ant. Eccl. Ritibus, lib. 4: cap. xvii. Treatises on this observance have been written by Gleich (Viteb. 1689), Mittwoch (Lips. 1693), Schmid (Helmst. 1702), Siber (Lips. 1709). (See [[Ashes]]). </p>
Ash-Wednesday <ref name="term_21413" />
==References ==
<p> (dies cinerum), the first day of Lent. It is so called from the custom observed in the ancient Church of penitents expressing their humiliation at this time by appearing in sackcloth and ashes. But it is iot certain that this was always done precisely on Ash-Wednesday, there being a perfect silence in the most ancient writers about it. 'The discipline used toward penitents in Lent, as described by Gratian, differed from their treatment at other times; for on AshWednesday they were presented to the bishop, clothed in sackcloth, and barefooted; then the seven penitential psalms were sung;: after which the bishop laid his hands on them, sprinkled them with holy water, and poured ashes upon their heads, declaring to them that as Adam was cast out of paradise, so they, for their sins, were cast out of the Church. Then the inferior ministers expelled them out of the doors of the church. In the end of Lent, on the Thursday. before Easter,, they were again presented for reconciliation by the deacons and presbyters at the gates of the church. But this method of treating penitents in [[Lent]] carries with it the marks of a more modern practice; for there was no use of the holy water in the ancient discipline, nor seven penitential psalms in their service, but only one, viz. the fifty-first.. Neither was [[Ash-Wednesday]] anciently the first day of Lent, till [[Gregory]] the Great first added it to Lent to make the number of fastingdays completely forty, which before were but thirty-six. Nor does it appear that anciently the time of imposing penance was confined to the beginning of Lent, but was granted at all times, whenever the bishop thought the penitent qualified for it. In Rome the spectacle on this occasion is most ridiculous. After giving themselves up to all kinds of gayety and licentiousness during the Carnival, till twelve o'clock on Tuesday night, the people go on Ash-Wednesday morning into the churches, when the officiating priests put ashes on their head, repeating the words, "Dust thou art, and unto dust thou shalt return." The day is kept in the English Church by proper collects and lessons, but without the ashes ceremony. See Bingham, Orig. Eccl. bk. 18, ch. ii, 2; Procter, Common Prayer, p. 278; Burnet, Hist. of Eng. Ref. ii, 94; lartene, De Ant. Eccl. Ritibus, lib. 4: cap. xvii. Treatises on this observance have been written by Gleich (Viteb. 1689), Mittwoch (Lips. 1693), Schmid (Helmst. 1702), Siber (Lips. 1709). (See [[Ashes]]). </p>
 
== References ==
<references>
<references>
<ref name="term_21413"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/ash-wednesday Ash-Wednesday from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
<ref name="term_21413"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/ash-wednesday Ash-Wednesday from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
</references>
</references>

Latest revision as of 07:57, 15 October 2021

Ash-Wednesday [1]

(dies cinerum), the first day of Lent. It is so called from the custom observed in the ancient Church of penitents expressing their humiliation at this time by appearing in sackcloth and ashes. But it is iot certain that this was always done precisely on Ash-Wednesday, there being a perfect silence in the most ancient writers about it. 'The discipline used toward penitents in Lent, as described by Gratian, differed from their treatment at other times; for on AshWednesday they were presented to the bishop, clothed in sackcloth, and barefooted; then the seven penitential psalms were sung;: after which the bishop laid his hands on them, sprinkled them with holy water, and poured ashes upon their heads, declaring to them that as Adam was cast out of paradise, so they, for their sins, were cast out of the Church. Then the inferior ministers expelled them out of the doors of the church. In the end of Lent, on the Thursday. before Easter,, they were again presented for reconciliation by the deacons and presbyters at the gates of the church. But this method of treating penitents in Lent carries with it the marks of a more modern practice; for there was no use of the holy water in the ancient discipline, nor seven penitential psalms in their service, but only one, viz. the fifty-first.. Neither was Ash-Wednesday anciently the first day of Lent, till Gregory the Great first added it to Lent to make the number of fastingdays completely forty, which before were but thirty-six. Nor does it appear that anciently the time of imposing penance was confined to the beginning of Lent, but was granted at all times, whenever the bishop thought the penitent qualified for it. In Rome the spectacle on this occasion is most ridiculous. After giving themselves up to all kinds of gayety and licentiousness during the Carnival, till twelve o'clock on Tuesday night, the people go on Ash-Wednesday morning into the churches, when the officiating priests put ashes on their head, repeating the words, "Dust thou art, and unto dust thou shalt return." The day is kept in the English Church by proper collects and lessons, but without the ashes ceremony. See Bingham, Orig. Eccl. bk. 18, ch. ii, 2; Procter, Common Prayer, p. 278; Burnet, Hist. of Eng. Ref. ii, 94; lartene, De Ant. Eccl. Ritibus, lib. 4: cap. xvii. Treatises on this observance have been written by Gleich (Viteb. 1689), Mittwoch (Lips. 1693), Schmid (Helmst. 1702), Siber (Lips. 1709). (See Ashes).

References