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Ash Wednesday’s changing tradition

<i>Win McNamee/Getty Images</i><br/>A young woman prays during an Ash Wednesday Mass at the Cathedral of Saint Matthew the Apostle in February of 2010 in Washington
Getty Images
Win McNamee/Getty Images
A young woman prays during an Ash Wednesday Mass at the Cathedral of Saint Matthew the Apostle in February of 2010 in Washington

By Francisco Guzman and Pete Burn, CNN

Are you ready to give up caffeine for 40 days? What about your social media accounts? While giving up those things may seem hard for you, Christians long ago used to give up a whole lot more.

Ash Wednesday is today. It marks the first day of Lent in Western churches. The ashes symbolize penance and the dust from which God made people.

When priests mark Christian’s forehead the ashes they often say, “Repent and believe in the Gospel,” or “Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.”

Lent, which lasts 40 days not including Sundays, is a season of prayer, penance and fasting in preparation for the Easter season.

But the tradition has changed over the years. It’s less strict than it used to be.

How fasting has changed

Christians started to fast during Lent in the fifth to ninth centuries. They made it a tradition to remember and reflect on Jesus Christ’s fasting in the wilderness.

Back then, they stuck to a strict tradition. People were forbidden to eat meat and fish and had to eat one meal a day.

Many Christians still fast today, but it’s different. Instead, they give up watching TV, social media accounts, drinking soda, alcohol or other pleasurable activities until the fasting ends on Holy Saturday.

How the ashes are made

Christians celebrate Palm Sunday as Jesus’ arrival in Jerusalem prior to his crucifixion.

They hand out palm leaves to people who attend church and some palms are saved and burnt into ashes to be used for next year’s Ash Wednesday.

In the Eastern Church, Lent begins on the Monday of the seventh week before Easter and ends on the Friday before Palm Sunday.

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