Fasting-An extract
from Richard Wagner's, Christianity
for Dummies.
The focus
of fasting should not be on the lack of food.
Fasting
from food can be done for a variety of purposes, either physical or spiritual.
So abstaining from food alone doesn’t constitute a Christian fast. Instead, a
Christian fast is accompanied by a special focus on prayer during the fast,
often substituting the time you’d spend eating with prayer.
Fasting
provides a real-life illustration of dependency.
Although
modern man thrives on the idea of being independent, beholden to no one,
fasting helps you put the facts in the proper perspective. It’s easy to believe
in your independence with a full stomach, but when you start to feel hunger
pains in your belly after missing a meal or two, you awaken to your body’s
dependency on food to survive. Fasting reveals a physical reliance on food that
points to the ultimate dependency — the fact that you’re dependent on God for
things far more important than food.
Fasting
fosters concentration on God and his will.
Oswald
Chambers once said that fasting means “concentration,” because when you’re
fasting, you have a heightened sense of attentiveness. Food or any physical
sensation can satisfy, fill you up, and dull your senses and spiritual ears. In
contrast, a hungry stomach makes you more aware and alert to what God is trying
to say to you.
Fasting
offers a way to impose self-control in your life.
It gives
you a “splash in the face” to awaken you to the need for the personal strength
of will that you need to grow spiritually. When you restrain yourself
physically, you’ll find it easier to apply this same self-discipline in your
spiritual life.
One last thing — everyone can
participate.
Not everyone may be able to fast from food (pregnant women and
diabetics for example), but everyone can give up something in order to focus on
God (e.g. unplugging the television for 24 hours could also be an effective way
of joining the fast)!
0 comments:
Post a Comment