Lent 2025

Lent At Sacred Heart


"God never tires of forgiving us; we are the ones who tire of seeking his mercy."

- Pope Francis -

Ash Wednesday

March 5, 2025

The Beginning of Lent

"You are dust, and to dust you shall return."

Genesis 3:19

Ash Wednesday Services

8:00am Mass, 12:15pm  Service, 5:00pm Service, 7:00pm Mass

Upcoming Events for Lent

A Day of Recollection

8:30am-3:30pm • Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Catholic Daughters is hosting a one day retreat to help you focus on your relationship with God. Led by Fr. Ronan Murphy, a Marian priest from Ireland, the day will include a light breakfast, conferences, lunch, confessions, Mass, and the Divine Mercy Chaplet. $25 per person. Please send payment to:

Catholic Daughters

Sacred Heart Parish

103 Fourth Street

Riverton, NJ 08077

Questions: Call Terry 609-330-0231

Parish Lenten Mission

6:30pm • Wednesday, Thursday, Friday
March 12, 13, 14, 2025

Come together with our parish and be inspired this Lenten season with talks about the Eucharist: The Sacrament of Hope. There will also be Adoration and Reconciliation on Friday evening. The talks will be given by Fr. Martin O'Reilly, the Pastor of Mary, Mother of the Church Parish in Bordentown, NJ.



For more information, call or text Bridget 856-291-0480

Stations of the Cross

7:00pm • Fridays in Lent

Join us in praying the Via Dolorosa, or the Way of the Cross each Friday in Lent at 7:00pm.


**PLEASE NOTE** Friday, March 14, Stations of the Cross will not take place at 7pm due to the Parish Mission.

Lenten Guidelines on

Fasting & Abstinence

During the days and weeks of penance that lie ahead — from Ash Wednesday, March 5, 2025, until Holy Thursday morning, April 17, 2025 — the Catholic Church throughout the world commemorates the penitential season of Lent ending with the Sacred Triduum of Holy Week. The model Jesus gave us for “these 40 days” was his own experience in the desert and the temptations that followed him there where he encountered Satan face to face. And yet, Jesus, there in the desert – alone, fasting and in intense prayer – beat back the devil and triumphed over temptation, as strong and as unrelenting as it was throughout those 40 days.
We enter the desert of Lent like Jesus, led by the Holy Spirit, to face our devils, our temptations head on. 

But we are not alone. The Lord Jesus Christ is with us. And so, too, is the Church, the entire community of faith observing Lent. Here is what the Catholic Church in the United States requires of us as baptized Catholics.


1. The days of FAST (only one full meal) and ABSTINENCE (no meat) are Ash Wednesday and Good Friday. No dispensations are granted on these solemn days except for reason of sickness or those provided in canon law below. ALL OTHER FRIDAYS OF LENT are days of ABSTINENCE.


2. Those who are automatically dispensed from fast and abstinence regulations outside the age limits noted below include: the physically or mentally ill, especially individuals suffering from chronic illnesses such as diabetes. Also included in the dispensation are women who are pregnant or nursing. In all cases, common sense should prevail, and ill persons should not further jeopardize their health by fasting.


3. Those between the ages of 18 and 59 are obliged to FAST (only one full meal) as noted above. From the age of 14, people are also obliged to ABSTAIN: this obligation prohibits the eating of meat, but not eggs, milk products or condiments of any kind, even though made from animal fat.


4. The obligation to observe the laws of fast and abstinence is a serious one for Catholics. Failure to observe one penitential day in itself is not considered a serious sin. It is the intentional failure to observe any penitential days at all, or a substantial number of penitential days, that must be considered a serious matter.



5. The obligation, the privilege really, of receiving the Eucharist at least once a year – often called “Easter duty” – for those in the state of grace should still be fulfilled during the period from the First Sunday of Lent, March 8-9, 2025, to Trinity Sunday, June 14-15, 2025. However, the Church’s law does permit this precept to be fulfilled at another time during the year when there is a just cause.


May the grace of the Holy Spirit rejuvenate your faith this Lenten season.

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