SUBJECT: Fasting
QUESTION: Why should we fast?
ANSWER:
WHY
Should We Fast?
What purpose does fasting serve? This subject is as vital
in our Christian lives as prayer or Bible study! Yet, many
have neglected or completely omitted this phase of their
Christian lives.
HUNDREDS of newly baptized members of God's Church have not
grasped the primary benefits and meaning of fasting. Many
who have been in God's Church for years have not come to
full understanding of the purposes of fasting.
As one recently baptized member said: "Oh yes, I tried
fasting ONCE, and all it did for me was to make me hungry
and weak!" Is this our approach to fasting? Is this all we
get out of fasting? We NEED to understand the deep
significance of fasting.
To Get Closer to God
Some brethren have the idea that fasting is a kind of
penance -- that God is pleased when we punish ourselves by a
fast. This is ABSOLUTELY WRONG. We fast TO DRAW CLOSER TO
GOD -- to get away from the world and the flesh.
The deep spiritual lessons and examples that fasting can
teach us cannot be learned in any other way. Unless or
until we experience the profound spiritual benefit of
fasting, we will never know what a vital part it can play in
our lives.
HOW to Fast
Many of us have never really learned to fast progressively.
Many of us have never learned because we have never really
seen the need and purpose before. Many of us have never
understood fasting and why it should be a regular and
diligent practice in our lives. A good way to begin is to
make the positive decision to fast for ONE MEAL. We might
decide that breakfast would be the meal to begin with. The
procedure, then, would be to go to bed the previous night
with the POSITIVE REALIZATION that the following morning we
were going to have to put away the temptation and desire to
eat and drink according to our regular routine. We must
place ourselves in a POSITIVE mental attitude that we need
to draw closer to God. When morning comes, we should go
about our normal routine of dressing and grooming for the
day -- all the while realizing that it is NOT just the
normal routine, but rather a time when we are giving special
attention to afflicting our bodies before God. When the
time comes for the usual morning meal, we should devote that
time to prayer in place of satisfying our hunger and
thirst. During this prayer we should ask God to help us
draw closer to Him.
Christ's Example
Jesus Christ knows the kind of life to which we are called.
He knows we are going to have to face trial and temptation.
He knows we need to prepare and to condition ourselves. In
the 6th chapter of Matthew, Jesus Christ gave us the example
of how to pray. Certainly, all of us realize that prayer is
a vital part of Christian living, yet, Jesus Christ placed
the same emphasis on FASTING, in this chapter, as He did on
prayer.
Notice the 16th verse. Jesus Christ said: "Moreover WHEN
you FAST ..." Yes, Jesus Christ did not say if you fast,
but rather WHEN you fast. Jesus Christ intends that we fast
frequently and often.
He further explains HOW to fast. "... be not as the
hypocrites, of a SAD COUNTENANCE: for they disfigure their
faces, that they may appear unto men to fast. Verily I say
unto you they have their reward." These scribes and
Pharisees of Christ's day did not fast for the deep
spiritual purpose that was intended. They fasted to get the
pity and the approbation of men. They would let their hair
hang down in stringy masses on their heads. They would not
wash themselves nor groom themselves at all. They would
walk about the streets in a downcast dejected manner with
grimaces and pain written all over their faces. They did
this in order for OTHERS to see them and say, "Oh, look at
that poor fellow. He's been FASTING." These hypocrites
would hope that people would say to themselves, "Oh, isn't
he a righteous man because he's fasting."
Christ tells us that we are not to fast in this manner. He
tells us, "But thou, when thou fastest anoint thy head, and
wash thy face; that thou appear NOT unto men to fast, but
unto thy Father which is in secret: and thy Father which
sees in secret, shall reward thee OPENLY."
Christ's Greatest Trial
Jesus Christ was faced with a trial of enduring and
overcoming greater than any of us will ever face. Jesus
Christ had to meet Satan the Devil in cataclysmic combat.
If Jesus Christ had failed in this temptation that was to be
placed before Him, He would have disqualified Himself as the
Messiah and Saviour of all mankind. Let us notice how Jesus
Christ prepared Himself for this greatest of all trials.
In Matthew 4:1 we see that Jesus Christ was led up of the
Spirit into the wilderness to be TEMPTED of the Devil.
Jesus Christ went out SPECIFICALLY into the wilderness to be
tempted of Satan the Devil. He had to overcome that
temptation and trial and to prove that He was able to be the
Messiah and Saviour of mankind. This was a spiritual battle
far more significant and tremendous than any of us realize.
Satan the Devil laid before Jesus Christ the reality of this
temptation in a manner more poignant and real than any
temptation that has ever been placed before us. Jesus
Christ knew He was going to have to endure this temptation
and trial and He therefore PREPARED Himself for it.
What was the first thing Jesus Christ began to do? What was
the first thing that Jesus Christ turned to to fortify
Himself and to prepare Himself for this trial?
It was FASTING!
In verse 2 we read, "And when he had FASTED FORTY DAYS AND
FORTY NIGHTS, he was afterward an hungered." For forty days
and forty nights Jesus Christ fasted before God and
afflicted His body. Jesus Christ had endured and had
overcome the desire to eat and to drink for forty long days
and nights. Now, the tempter came to Jesus Christ to tempt
Him. The first thing that Satan tempted Jesus Christ with
was the temptation to consume physical food and also to
prove that He had Godly power. Satan said, "If you be the
Son of God, command these stones to be made bread."
The twisted mind of Satan thought that Jesus Christ would be
at His WEAKEST -- since He had gone without food and water
for such a long period of time.
But let's consider for a moment! Jesus Christ had been
fighting against this VERY TEMPTATION now for forty days and
forty nights. Being tempted to change stones into bread in
order that He might eat, was a temptation that Jesus Christ
had already fought against for many long days and nights.
It was nothing new to Him! Therefore, when Satan the Devil
came to Him with this very temptation, Jesus Christ was
prepared! Jesus Christ had been living by every Word of God
ALONE for forty days and forty nights. Jesus Christ was at
His STRONGEST to endure this type of temptation. Therefore,
when Satan the Devil came before Him, tempting Him to change
stones into bread, He was able to say, "Man shall not live
by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds out of the
mouth of God."
Many of us have thought that Satan the Devil attacked Jesus
Christ at His very weakest. On the contrary, Jesus Christ
was at His strongest. He had just been through a forty-day
and forty-night period of severe testing and trial that had
prepared Him spiritually and made Him spiritually able to
resist the temptations that were coming upon Him. Finally,
after enduring and overcoming the additional temptations
that Satan brought upon Him, Jesus Christ was able to say,
"Get thee hence, Satan: for it is written, thou shalt
worship the Eternal thy God and him only shalt thou serve
(verse 10).
Further Reasons for Fasting
Many times in our lives we are faced with making important
decisions -- decisions that not only affect our lives but
possibly the lives of others. Certainly we should seek wise
counsel and multitude of counselors in making any decision
(Proverbs 11:14). God is our greatest Counselor. We should
certainly seek Him diligently for the answer to any decision
we must reach. There can be no better way to ask God for
counsel and wisdom in any decision THAN FASTING. If we
begin to fast when there is an important decision to be made
and spend the normal time we would spend in eating in crying
out to God for wisdom in the matter, the answer will surely
come.
God shows us the need of fasting when a decision has to be
reached by the examples recorded in Acts 13:1-3; 14:23. In
the church at Antioch a decision had to be made who was to
be sent on an evangelistic journey into Asia Minor. Notice,
"As they ministered to the Lord, and fasted, the HOLY SPIRIT
SAID, Separate me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I
have called them. And when they had FASTED AND PRAYED, and
laid their hands on them, they sent them away" (Acts 13:2,
3). Again, in Acts 14:13, we clearly see that before elders
were ordained in the churches in Asia Minor, the evangelists
and ministers prayed to God with FASTING before coming to
their all-important decision.
How to Fast
Many questions may arise on how to conduct a fast and what
our attitude should be upon beginning a fast. Many have
elected to fast and carried through a fast without any
specific realization or purpose in fasting. Many of us have
felt that we need to fast but have not known what to fast
for or the purpose in fasting.
We should always have a DEFINITE PURPOSE in mind when we
fast.
As David gives us the example in 2 Samuel 14, we can fast
also and beseech God to intervene and help us in a specific
thing that may occur in our lives. Another purpose for
fasting may be for health purposes in cleansing our bodies
of impurities and toxins. For further clarification on this
phase of fasting you may link to for Mr. Herbert Armstrong's article,
"Fasting for Health"
from the
Good News magazine, October 1954, beginning on page 5.
In the ordinary routine of working it will not be possible
to fast much more than a day or two at a time. Usually 24
or 48 hours of fasting will be sufficient while we are
employed in our regular routine activities. During these
times -- since we are required to be occupied with the
normal daily activities -- we should utilize the normal
mealtime for sincere, heart-rending prayers to God --
devoted to the specific reason for fasting.
If we should feel the need for a longer and more prolonged
fast from time to time, we should utilize the opportunities
that vacations and certain "days off" afford us. There will
certainly be several times during the year when we may
employ several days in a row for fasting. Even when there
is not a special period of time off or vacation, by using
wisdom we will find time for extra fasting. For example, we
may begin a fast on Thursday, fasting during Thursday and
Friday then carrying it through Sabbath and Sunday when we
do not have to work at our jobs. During the period of a
long or prolonged fast, Mr. Herbert Armstrong has found that
the following routine is excellent -- regardless of the
specific purpose involved in fasting. During the waking
hours of the fast, Mr. Armstrong will spend one hour in
fervent prayer to God, utilize the next hour in Bible study
and then follow the third hour with meditation and
reflection upon the things studied and the lessons to be
learned. During the meditation period, Mr. Armstrong will
often take an invigorating walk -- preferably in an area
where he can be near to God's creation.
In a fast of several days, following this routine, one will
quickly find himself much closer to God and able to better
cope with the problems at hand.
Anyone who has learned to fast knows that one experiences a
depth of understanding and a profound closeness to God in
fasting that cannot be experienced in any other way.
Following a routine such as Mr. Armstrong follows in fasting
can be the means for many to conquer obstacles in their
Christian lives that cannot be mastered in any other way.
How Often Should We Fast?
The question often arises, how often should I fast? Nowhere
in the Bible do we have an exact statement of how often we
should fast. Yet, we have several examples which will help
us to understand how often we should practice fasting in our
lives. As we have previously seen, the Apostle Paul fasted
OFTEN (2 Corinthians 10:27). The Apostle Paul had no specific
command in the Old Testament teaching him how often he
should fast. However, Paul was acutely aware of the race he
was running and how diligently he needed to strive in order
to enter God's Kingdom. He considered it necessary to fast
often -- even in the face of the trials and afflictions he
constantly endured -- in order to maintain the spiritual
strength he needed to continue serving God and finally to
achieve the crown of righteousness.
The Gentile, CORNELIUS, lived such a life of service and
overcoming before God that God considered it important
enough to send an apostle -- Peter -- to preach to him the
Gospel of the Kingdom of God and to baptize him and his
family. It is significant that Cornelius had been praying
and FASTING before God when God finally elected to send the
Apostle Peter to him (Acts 10:30).
It was when the prophet Daniel elected to set his heart to
understand, and to CHASTEN himself before God with fasting,
that God sent the angel Gabriel to reveal to Daniel some of
the most vital prophecies of the Bible. See Daniel 10:2, 3,
12. The purpose of fasting is not to punish ourselves in a
form of penance, but to draw closer to God by getting away
from the world.
The prophet Elijah also sought God in prayer and fasting
forty days and forty nights on Mt. Horeb and received the
vital answer he sought.
Fasting has certainly played a vital part in the lives of
those God has used down through history. From these
examples, the principle we should apply in determining how
often to fast should be based upon the needs in our lives.
Our routine of fasting should certainly be frequent enough
and of long enough duration to keep ourselves close to God
and in the vital spiritual condition that will enable us to
overcome and endure to the end.
The need for fasting is again exemplified by the Apostle
Paul in I Corinthians 7. In showing the proper marriage
relationship between husband and wife, Paul clearly shows
that FASTING and prayer is of sufficient importance in our
lives to actually interrupt the normal marriage relationship
from time to time. Certainly many of us have NOT placed the
importance on fasting in the past that we should have.
Every one of us wants to live the vital, progressive and
growing life of a sincere Christian. God has placed at our
disposal this vital tool and key to overcoming -- fasting.
Fasting must become a very real part of our lives! Let us
not fall short of the tremendous goal and reward that God
has prepared for us because we have neglected to utilize
this vital tool that God has given us. |