Shrove Tuesday

We are sitting on the edge of a Lenten journey.  I am completely one for practising rites and ceremonies!  (Perhaps you have gathered that if you revisit my writing here.)  I think that ‘making things happen’ is just what I am about!  I like to mark my life by events and if I can, along the way, I want to have influence on them. 
 
I like to think that by moving through this reflective journey, I may become closer in relationship with Jesus Christ….in deeper relationship with my family and a more conscious ‘awake’ person with my friends.  So much of what I do and think is influenced by Douglas Spaulding and what he learns in a single summer.  Dandelion Wine is packed with lessons about how to live life ‘fully’.
 
For the longest time, I would prepare a morning feast for my children at home before school, but as the years passed and they became students of mine for a number of years, they enjoyed the feast at our school.
 
Today we made scrambled eggs, pancakes and sausage for about 700 of our 1100 students.  I’ve been scrambling eggs on Shrove Tuesday for fourteen years now….it’s nice to work alongside six wonderful women, doing something for good. (I packed up some sausage and pancakes for my son today…it was one of the last things he asked me to do before he went to sleep last night. Historically, there are some quirky, almost unacceptable notions surrounding this day.  I see it as a door to step through on the way to my spiritual walk and contemplation…a day to share with others.

Shrove Tuesday
28 February 2006

Shrove Tuesday is the Tuesday before Ash Wednesday which is the first day of Lent. It’s a day of penitence, to clean the soul, and a day of celebration as the last chance to feast before Lent begins.

Shrove Tuesday is sometimes called Pancake Day after the fried batter recipe traditionally eaten on this day.

But there’s more to Shrove Tuesday than pigging out on pancakes or taking part in a public pancake race. The pancakes themselves are part of an ancient custom with deeply religious roots.

Penitence
Shrove Tuesday gets its name from the ritual of shriving that Christians used to undergo in the past. In shriving, a person confesses their sins and receives absolution for them.

When a person receives absolution for their sins, they are forgiven for them and released from the guilt and pain that they have caused them.

In the Catholic or Orthodox context, the absolution is pronounced by a priest.

This tradition is very old. Over 1000 years ago a monk wrote in the Anglo-Saxon Ecclesiastical Institutes:

In the week immediately before Lent everyone shall go to his confessor and confess his deeds and the confessor shall so shrive him.

Shrove Tuesday celebrations
Shrove Tuesday is a day of celebration as well as penitence, because it’s the last day before Lent.

Lent is a time of abstinence, of giving things up. So Shrove Tuesday is the last chance to indulge yourself, and to use up the foods that aren’t allowed in Lent.

Giving up foods: but not wasting them
In the old days there were many foods that observant Christians would not eat during Lent: foods such as meat and fish, fats, eggs, and milky foods.

So that no food was wasted, families would have a feast on the shriving Tuesday, and eat up all the foods that wouldn’t last the forty days of Lent without going off.

The need to eat up the fats gave rise to the French name Mardi Gras; meaning fat Tuesday. Pancakes became associated with Shrove Tuesday as they were a dish that could use up all the eggs, fats and milk in the house with just the addition of flour.

The origin of pancake racing
Pancake races are thought to have begun in 1445. A woman had lost track of the time on Shrove Tuesday, and was busy cooking pancakes in her kitchen.

Suddenly she heard the church bell ringing to call the faithful to church for confession. The woman raced out of her house and ran all the way to church; still holding her frying pan and wearing her apron.

Going for gold in the pancake Olympics
One of the most famous pancake races is held at Olney in Buckinghamshire over a 415 yard course. The rules are strict; contestants have to toss their pancake at both the start and the finish, as well as wearing an apron and a scarf. The race is followed by a church service.

Since 1950 Olney has competed with Liberal in Kansas, which holds an identical race, to see which town can produce the fastest competitor. After the 2000 race, Liberal was leading with 26 wins to Olney’s 24.

 

1 thought on “Shrove Tuesday

  1. Ash Wednesday
     
    Once in winter,
    I stood,
    White flakes brushing my face
    With white fingers,
    I waited with the others
    We shivered on the steps —
    Stuck out our tongues to catch snowflakes
    So cold they would burn.
    Soon the big doors would open
    On smoke and candles
    and a cold thumb would brush
    My forehead with a cross of ashes
    "Dust to Dust" he would mutter
    While snowflakes melted in my hair.
     
    Unknown  Author
    I am walking 400 miles over the next 40 days. I like to be close to nature for my spiritual walks. Would you like to join me?
     

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