
The Methodist Youth Fellowship (MYF) at Friendship United Methodist Church is an active group that focuses on a balance of worship, service, recreation, and fellowship for young people in middle school and high school.
The group meets every other Sunday from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. to conduct business, plan activities, and enjoy a time of fellowship.
The MYF participates
in a variety of service activities, including Christmas in April and a
babysitting night at the church during the Christmas holidays. The group also
conducts a variety of fundraisers to support their work and their activities.
The MYF's main fundraiser each year is the Shrove
Tuesday pancake dinner.
Recreational activites during recent years have included a white water rafting trip, ski trips, and participation in Christian youth retreats.
If you would like more information about the MYF program at Friendship United Methodist Church, please contact the church office at (410) 257-7133.
For centuries, the English have celebratd Shrove Tuesday, the day before Lent, with merriment and antics and, especially, great quantities of pancakes. In fact, the fried flat cakes became so important to the holiday that is has also been called Pancake Day, or Pancake Tuesday.
Long ago, strict Christian Lenten rules prohibited the eating of all dairy products, so keen housewives made pancakes to use up their supplies of eggs, milk, butter and other fats. They could be easily made and cooked in a skillet or on a griddle. Families ate stacks of them, and pancakes were popular with all classes.
The rich Shrovetide pancakes were eaten as a ritual or symbol of self-indulgence before the fast. Early English recipes called for wheaten flour, eggs, butter or lard, a liquid (water, milk, ale or wine) and flavorings such as white or brown sugar, spices (nutmeg, cinnamon, or ginger), orange flower water, scented sugars or liqueurs.
The pancakes were fried in butter or fat and served flat or rolled and sprinkled with powdered sugar, topped with preserves or doused with alcohol. A special pancake, called a quire or pancake of paper, was made very thin and usually stacked. It was likened to a quire of "wafers" or writing paper.
Even the church bells that rang early on Shrove Tuesday morning summoning everyone to confession and to be "shriven" became known as Pancake Bells. They also reminded all to use up the "forbidden foods" before Lent. An old London rhyme went "Pancakes and fritters, say the bells on St. Peter's."