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| Chapter X. How it was brought about that they fast on the Sabbath in the city. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter X.
How it was brought about that they fast on the Sabbath
in the city.
But some people in some
countries of the West, and especially in the city,752 not knowing the reason of this indulgence,
think that a dispensation from fasting ought certainly not to be
allowed on the Sabbath, because they say that on this day the Apostle
Peter fasted before his encounter with Simon.753
753 The Saturday
fast was observed at Rome in very early days, being noticed by
Tertullian, who seems to suggest that it originated in the prolongation
of the Friday fast (on Fasting, c. xiv). But it seems to have
been almost peculiar to Rome, and at Milan, in the time of S. Ambrose,
the Eastern custom prevailed. See the important letter of Augustine to
Casulanus (Ep. xxxvi.), where the whole subject of the
difference of usage on this matter is fully discussed. The reason here
given by Cassian for the origin of the local Roman custom (viz., that
S. Peter’s traditional encounter with Simon Magus took place on
Sunday, and was prepared for by the apostle with a Saturday fast) is
also there alluded to by Augustine as being the opinion of very many,
though he tells us candidly that most of the Romans thought it false.
“Est quidem et hæc opinio plurimorum, quamvis eam
perhibeant esse falsam plerique Romani, quod Apostolus Petrus cum
Simone Mago die dominico certaturo, propter ipsum magnæ
tentationis periculum, pridie cum ejusdem urbis ecclesia jejunaverit,
et consecuto tam prospero gloriosoque successu, eundem morem tenuerit,
eumque imitatæ sunt nonnullæ Occidentis ecclesiæ.”
Cf. also Augustine, Ep. ad Januarium, liv. |
But from this it is quite clear that he did this not in accordance with
a canonical rule, but rather through the needs of his impending
struggle. Since there, too, for the same purpose, Peter seems to have
imposed on his disciples not a general but a special fast, which he
certainly would not have done if he had known that it was wont to be
observed by canonical rule: just as he would surely have been ready to
appoint it even on Sunday, if the occasion of his struggle had fallen
upon it: but no canonical rule of fasting would have been made general
from this, because it was no general observance that led to it, but a
matter of necessity, which forced it to be observed on a single
occasion.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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