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Cardinal Tobin to Celebrate Two Ash Wednesday Masses at St. Patrick’s Pro-Cathedral

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Cardinal Tobin sprinkles ashes onto a parishioner’s head during the Ash Wednesday Mass at St. Patrick’s Pro-Cathedral in Newark on February 17, 2021. (Photo by the Archdiocese of Newark)

Cardinal Tobin will celebrate two Ash Wednesday Masses at St. Patrick’s Pro-Cathedral in Newark on Wednesday, March 2. The first Mass will be in English at 12 p.m., while the second Mass will be in Spanish at 7:30 p.m

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Newark NJ,  Cardinal Joseph W. Tobin, C.Ss.R., Archbishop of Newark, will celebrate Ash Wednesday with two Masses — one in English and one in Spanish — on Wednesday, March 2, at St. Patrick’s Pro-Cathedral in Newark.

Cardinal Tobin will preside over the first service in English at 12 p.m. followed by his second Mass in Spanish at 7:30 p.m. All are welcome to attend, though visitors to the Pro-Cathedral are strongly encouraged to wear masks due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

Ash Wednesday is one of the most significant holy days of the liturgical calendar because it marks the beginning of Lent, the six week-period of prayer, repentance, and sacrifice leading up to Easter. During an Ash Wednesday Mass, priests traditionally place ashes — which are the charred remains of palm fronds from the prior year’s Palm Sunday — onto a parishioner’s forehead in the sign of the cross to symbolize that God made everyone out of dust, and all shall return to dust at the end of their lives. Catholics then wear the ashes for the rest of the day as a sign of penance for their sins.

Due to the pandemic and out of an abundance of caution, ashes will not be distributed to parishioners in the usual manner this year. Instead, they will either be sprinkled on top of the head or applied to the forehead using a cotton swab.

Following Mass, Catholics are expected to spend Ash Wednesday fasting, repenting, and abstaining from meat. Then, over the next several weeks, the faithful will commemorate Christ’s 40 days of temptation by praying, repenting, abstaining from meat on Fridays, fasting on Good Friday, and making a Lenten sacrifice, which means giving up something they find particularly enjoyable for the entirety of Lent. This period ends on Holy Thursday, which falls on April 14 this year.

To learn more about Lent and view Holy Week schedules, visit the Archdiocese of Newark’s Office of Divine Worship webpage at www.rcan.org.

The Archdiocese of Newark, under the leadership of Cardinal Joseph W. Tobin, C.Ss.R., the sixth archbishop of Newark, serves approximately 1.3 million Catholics in 212 parishes and 73 schools throughout the counties of Bergen, Essex, Hudson, and Union. The Archdiocese serves the northern New Jersey community through faith, education, and social services. To learn more, visit www.rcan.org.

One thought on “Cardinal Tobin to Celebrate Two Ash Wednesday Masses at St. Patrick’s Pro-Cathedral

  1. Ash Wednesday is not a Holy Day of Obligation.

    On this Wednesday: fast, abstain from meat, certainly. If you can make it to the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass at which you can be marked with ashes, by all means, do so. If not, you can simply be marked with ashes outside of Mass, or not be so marked. No obligation applies. It is up to you. On subsequent Fridays during Lent, abstain from meat. When Good Friday comes, fast, abstain from meat. There is no obligation to assist at Mass on Good Friday, but if you can, by all means, do so. When Easter comes, it will be glorious.

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