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Just as there are times for feasting, there are also times set aside
for fasting.
During these periods, certain foods are prohibited. These are, in order of
frequency of prohibition, meat (including poultry), dairy products, fish, olive
oil and wine. Fruits, vegetables, grains and shellfish are permitted throughout
the year.
Of course, the Orthodox Church never reduces the practice of fasting to a
legalistic observance of dietary rules. Fasting, that is not accompanied by
intensified prayer and acts of charity, inevitably becomes a source of
pride.
The Church also recognizes that not everyone can fast to the same degree,
and assumes that individual Christians will observe the fast prescribed for
them by their Spiritual Fathers.
The following are fasting days and seasons:
- All Wednesdays and Fridays, except for those noted below;
- The day before the Feast of Theophany (January 5);
- Cheesefare Week (the last week before the Great Lent, during which
meat and fish are prohibited, but dairy products are permitted even on
Wednesday and Friday);
- Great Lent (from Clean Monday through the Friday before Lazarus
Saturday, olive oil and wine are permitted on weekends);
- Great and Holy Week (note that Great and Holy Saturday is a day of
strict fasting, during which the faithful abstain from olive oil and
wine);
- Holy Apostles' Fast (from the Monday after All Saints' Day through
June 28, inclusive);
- Fast for the Dormition of the Mother of God (August 1-14, excluding
August 6, on which fish, wine and olive oil are permitted);
- Beheading of St. John the Baptist (August 29);
- Exaltation of the Holy Cross (September 14); and
- Nativity Lent (November 15-December 24, although fish, wine and
olive oil are permitted, except on Wednesdays and Fridays, until December
17).
The following are fasting days on which fish, wine and olive oil are
permitted:
- The Feast of the Annunciation (March 25, unless it falls
outside the Great Lent, in which case all foods are permitted);
- Palm Sunday;
- The Feast of the Transfiguration (August 6); and
- The Feast of the Entry into the Temple of the Mother of God
(November 21).
On the following days, all foods are permitted:
- The first week of the Triodion, from the Sunday of the Publican
and the Pharisee through the Sunday of the Prodigal Son, including Wednesday
and Friday;
- Diakainisimos (or Bright) Week (the week following the Sunday of
Pascha);
- The week following Pentecost; and
- From the Feast of the Nativity of the Lord (December 25) through
January 4.
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