Can you eat corned beef today? Bishop speaks on eating meat for St. Pat’s Day!– OnMyWay Mobile App User News

Corned beef and cabbage has become synonymous with St. Patrick’s Day.

But you might have heard this is an American creation.
Happy St. Patrick’s Day and weekend! Here in Hoboken, many restaurants and Irish bars are offering corned beef and cabbage sandwiches for the holiday, but you can also find treats like Irish cream cold brews at coffee shops, and even the bagel shops are getting into the act.

D’s Soul Full Cafe at 918 Willow Ave. showed off a mighty tasty corned beef sandwich along with their usual egg sandwiches on social media on Friday morning.

Down the block, Finnegan’s at 734 Willow also promises to offer up a tasty corned beef special.

Meanwhile, Moran’s at Fifth and Garden says, “This Friday, our melt-in-your-mouth corned beef & cabbage dinner is back! We’ll be open at 3 p.m. for St. Paddy’s Day festivities, ft. the best pours of Guinness on this side of the Atlantic.”

Sadly, you can’t pop into Stinky Sullivan’s on Washington Street anymore, or Kelly’s up the block. But you can try the numerous old-time Irish bars on and near First Street for some Irish vibes. Check out the themed drinks at the Shannon Lounge.

Given the great number of Catholics of Irish descent in the Peoria Diocese, St. Patrick’s Day is naturally an “occasion for joy-filled celebrations,” the 2023 dispensation says. “Having considered our past practices and the current circumstances, inasmuch as it would serve the spiritual good of the faithful,” Bishop Louis Tylka has granted a dispensation from the obligation of abstinence from meat on March 17, 2023.

Those taking advantage of this “get out of fish on Friday” card are “exhorted to undertake a work of charity, an exercise of piety, or an act of comparable penance on some other occasion during the third week of Lent,” the diocese said.

Thomas Zinkula, bishop of the Davenport Diocese, issued a similar dispensation. Those who wish to make use of it also are “encouraged to abstain from meat on some other day as part of their penitential practices during Lent,” the bishop’s dispensation said.

It falls on a Friday during Lent, when the faithful abstain from eating meat, so there’s no celebrating with the traditional corned beef.

You’ll get no dispensation from the Chicago Archdiocese either, but there is a bit of a loophole.

Cardinal Blase Cupich said if Catholics find themselves at an event for the holiday where meat is served, they can substitute another form of penance or perform some act that helps the poor.

OVERVIEW

OnMyWay Is The #1 Distracted Driving Mobile App In The Nation!

OnMyWay, based in Charleston, SC, The Only Mobile App That Pays its Users Not to Text and Drive.

The #1 cause of death among young adults ages 16-27 is Car Accidents, with the majority related to Distracted Driving.

OnMyWay’s mission is to reverse this epidemic through positive rewards. Users get paid for every mile they do not text and drive and can refer their friends to get compensated for them as well.

The money earned can then be used for Cash Cards, Gift Cards, Travel Deals and Much, Much More….

The company also makes it a point to let users know that OnMyWay does NOT sell users data and only tracks them for purposes of providing a better experience while using the app.

The OnMyWay app is free to download and is currently available on both the App Store for iPhones and Google Play for Android @ OnMyWay; Drive Safe, Get Paid.

Download App Now – https://r.onmyway.com

Sponsors and advertisers can contact the company directly through their website @ www.onmyway.com