Ann Arbor, Michigan, 24 November, 2024 / 4:00 pm (ACI Africa).
Like the Christian West, the various Eastern rites of the Church observe the weeks before Christmas with spiritual preparation and prayer. In Western Christianity this is called Advent — a word derived from Latin for “coming, arrival,” a translation of the Greek “parousia.” But among Eastern Christians — both Catholic and Orthodox — this season is known as the Nativity Fast.
So while Advent begins on Dec. 1 this year for Catholics, the Byzantine custom is observed from Nov. 15 to Dec. 24. It is also known as Philip’s Fast because it begins on the day following the feast of the apostle St. Philip on the Eastern liturgical calendar, Nov. 14.
The fast, which is one of four penitential seasons in the Eastern rites, calls on Christians to practice abstinence and almsgiving. This means abstaining from meat and fish, dairy, and other animal products on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and wine and oil on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. Fish is permitted on Saturdays and Sundays but no other animal products.
In the Byzantine Ruthenian Catholic Church, of which there are several dioceses in the United States and Canada, the fast may be observed voluntarily, partially, or entirely.
In a letter to the faithful, Bishop Robert Pipta of the Byzantine Ruthenian Catholic Diocese of Parma, Ohio, wrote: “Let us pray for one another, let us enjoy the spiritually rich days ahead during this fast, and let us pause appropriately during this penitential time to give thanks to God in the generous spirit of our Holy Father Nicholas the Wonderworker of Myra.”