When I was a freshman at Liberty University I used to fast once a week. From after dinner on Saturday night to before dinner on Sunday night I refused to eat food. I did this for my entire freshman year.
And I hated it.
Unfortunately I would “pig out” on Saturday night with a giant pre-fast, super-sized meal (merging fasting with gluttony is probably not the best idea.) After waking up with hunger pains I’d rush off to church the next morning and be daydreaming about food when I should have been worshipping God. And don’t even get me started about the temptations I would face on Sunday morning when it came to the elements on the communion table.
After church, when everyone else would go to the school cafeteria to eat lunch, I would go straight to my bunk bed in dorm 8 and sleep the afternoon away. When my 24 hours of self-imposed “spiritual discipline” time was up I would rush to the school cafeteria and pig out again. I would go to bed that night with a full stomach and empty heart.
Probably not God’s idea of an acceptable fast.
Since then fasting has been (with few exceptions) off the grid for me. Because when I fasted words like “grid” would sound too much like “griddle” which would make me think of waffles and start lusting for food again!
I’ve not preached on it much and have practiced it even less. Since my freshman year it has been the most elusive spiritual discipline in my world.
Over the years I think I have subconsciously tried to assign fasting to the Old Testament rituals that were (or should have been anyway) nailed to the cross. Nevermind the fact that fasting is mentioned several times in the New Testament. For instance, Jesus fasted in the wilderness, Paul fasted for three days immediately following his conversion and the early church leaders fasted before they set apart Paul and Barnabas for the work of church planting.
Just to name a few.
My excuse has been that I’m the kind of guy that needs to understand why something works to deeply engage in it. For instance, I understand that if I don’t worship God then he is not as elevated in my life as he should be. I understand that if I don’t disciple new believers that I’ll be making converts not disciples. I get the fact that if I don’t share my faith that people miss out on the joy that is in Jesus.
I need to understand why and then I figure out how to get ‘er done! That’s just the way I roll.
This has been especially true with fasting. To be honest, I don’t understand how depriving myself of food for a meal, a day or any extended period of time can somehow make my prayers more effective. But, according to countless Scriptures, it sure seems to.
Even Jesus said as much when, referring to a pesky demon who would not be exorcized by his disciples, explained, “…this kind does not come out except by prayer and fasting” Matthew 17:21.
Okay, so maybe I need to tamp down my western (“I’ve got to understand this first”) mindset and just trust God that, in the divine economy, the right kind of fasting, can somehow grease the skids for prayer to work more effectively.
Fasting helps us get in the no-soup-for-you line behind Moses, Daniel, David and countless others who chose to have their daily bread as God’s Word and their water as Jesus himself. In some way, which is well beyond my pay grade, fasting just works.
Although James 4:6-10 doesn’t deal with fasting directly perhaps it holds the principle that holds the key to it’s effectiveness,
“But he gives us more grace. That is why Scripture says: God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble.’ Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you. Come near to God and he will come near to you. Wash your hands, you sinners, and purify your hearts, you double-minded. Grieve, mourn and wail. Change your laughter to mourning and your joy to gloom. Humble yourselves before the Lord, and he will lift you up.”
Hmmm.
Maybe when we fast we humble ourselves before God to let him know we’re so serious about our prayer request that we are pushing away from something our bodies crave (food) for something our spirit needs (Him.) Perhaps when we stop eating and start praying our hunger pains somehow trigger our soul pains which are uttered out with more clarity than we would have on a full stomach.
I don’t know why fasting works. I just know from the overwhelming amount of Scriptural evidence that it does work. It works to purify the soul of those who fast (when done in God’s power for God’s glory) and it works to accelerate and effectuate the answer to our prayers.
With that in mind I’m going to ask you to consider fasting and praying for a spiritual awakening in this country, starting with the youth and spreading to the adults! Pray with me that God accelerates THE Cause, His Cause across America! Pray that the power of His Spirit is unleashed in an Acts-like revival across the globe!
Even if we don’t quite know why it works let’s work at it together!
“Perhaps when we stop eating and start praying our hunger pains somehow trigger our soul pains which are uttered out with more clarity than we would have on a full stomach.”
Whoa.
That statement spoke to me big time. I struggle with fasting as well (the western mindset of having to understand it). This has given me something to think about. Thanks for bringing me some enlightenment, as always.
Cheers,
Angie
Love it! I recently stared this practice of fasting and I have never experienced more clarity and guidance from the Lord during that time. Is like super-sized Holy Spirit time!!
I admit, I have to be really intentional about staying focused and not thinking about what I get to eat tomorrow though. Maybe practice makes perfect.
I think we struggle with the flesh and too often let it master us. Fasting is an exercise in mastering the flesh. Obvious benefits and blessings come from not letting the flesh master you, not to mention avoiding the sin it gets you into.
Jesus said it so well, brother: “Flesh gives birth to flesh, but THE Spirit Gives Birth To spirit.” I have found that fasting is yet another Avenue to Crucify my flesh and Glorify God As His Spirit Is Magnified In me. Praying and fasting today for our youth, especially gang members who have bought a HUGE lie.
I agree. Obviously the fact that Chick-fil-a is closed on Sundays is pretty much God telling us to take fasting more seriously.
On a serious note, I agree completely. I love reading your posts! Your insight is great
Jentezen Franklin has a book entitled Fasting. I read the book. It was a great book I would recommend to any believer. Honestly, I don’t remember anything from it except one quote.
“Fasting is so that the depths of our soul can cry out to the depths of God.”
Mike Bickle (www.ihop.org) talks about how fasting exposes the raw of ourselves to God. Then He meets us in the pique of our strugglings.
In my experience, you never feel like you’re getting breakthrough on a fast, and you only feel less spiritual when you finish it because God exposes so many struggles in you. Then, several days or weeks later, things suddenly line up, and the demons and habits that were harassing you are mysteriously gone.
© 2012. Dare 2 Share Ministries www.dare2share.org All Rights Reserved.
Something that I thought about as I read this. I think that fasting worked for those people in the Bible because when they fasted, they replaced their desires with something that glorified God by reading the Bible or praying about it. The church I attend on Sundays puts emphases on how when we fast we shouldn’t be fasting just to fast, but to put our main focus on God and trust that He will take care of us.
Thank you for your posts!
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Greg Reply:
May 28th, 2012 at 6:22 am
I love the concept of replacing food with something more. It’s not just “the absence of food” but “the replacement of food” with prayer, Bible reading, mediation, or according to Isaiah 58, feeding the poor type work!
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