QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON FASTING
QUESTION #78 -- I would like
to ask a few questions on the
subject of fasting: Should one
fast even when to do so is to
jeopardize the health? Does
fasting involve complete
abstinence from food and drink
(I have been told that the Jews
sometimes counted it fasting
when they yet used water and
simple food to keep up their
strength)? What is the teaching
of Isaiah 58 on fasting (does it
teach that blessings are to be
received on the condition of
fasting, or does it teach that
all forms are useless if the
heart is sinful)?
ANSWER #78 -- No, I think one
should not fast to the detriment
of his health. Take a mother of
children whose daily toll taxes
her strength and her nerves: in
my judgment such a one should
confine herself to partial
abstinence, and not undertake
extended fasts. While people who
have no children and no great
drain upon the nervous system
can assume a standard of fasting
much more rigorous. Fasting was
and is of both kinds: full and
partial, and either kind is
good, and one or the other is
adapted to everyone. I would not
take Isaiah 58 for a stronghold
on fasting; for as you suggest
in your alternatives, the
thought there is that fasting
and all outward forms and
practices are mockery in the
absence of true holiness of
heart and righteousness of
conduct.
* * *
QUESTION #79 -- Please explain
Matthew 6:17: "But thou, when
thou fastest, anoint thine head,
and wash thy face."
ANSWER #79 -- You should read
the following verse in
connection with this one. It
says, "That thou appear not unto
men to fast, but unto thy Father
which is in secret: and thy
Father, which seeth in secret,
shall reward thee openly." I
judge you are not troubled about
the literal side of this
commandment, for that part of it
was local and current, referring
only to the customary way of
indicating that you are prepared
for the usual duties of the day.
To us that would mean -- Well,
this is fast day with me. Yet I
got up this morning and shaved,
put on a clean collar, and have
made no appeal to anyone today
-- not even to the mentioning
that I am fasting. For I am not
fasting unto men but unto God.
That is what the text means to
me.
* * *
QUESTION #80 -- Please give some
suggestions regarding fasting.
How often should one fast, and
for how long?
ANSWER #80 -- A thoughtful
minister said, "Fasting is to
the soul what sleep is to the
body." And if there is any truth
at all in this comparison, then
it seems that every Christian
should fast at least once a week
or oftener. There is only one
limit I would place on the
practice of fasting, and that is
that one should not carry it far
enough to jeopardize his health.
I have found fasting a very
great means of grace and an
assistant to my efforts to pray.
* * *
QUESTION #81 -- Is any good
accomplished by fasting one or
more meals a week or should we
wait until the Lord puts a fast
on us?
ANSWER #81 -- There is advantage
in the regular and systematic
practice of fasting, just as
there is advantage in regular
and systematic Bible reading and
prayer. The fact that the
voluntary faster gets hungry in
no wise detracts from the
spiritual advantage of the
practice, and, like prayer, one
is much more likely to be
trusted with a fast from the
Lord if he is faithful in
observing fasting as a rule than
if he goes on without any
regularity in the matter. |