"Fasting and prayer? Didn't those go out
of style decades ago?" The woman who said this to me was a godly
woman, a woman who had been in the church all her life, and a woman
intent on obeying the Lord. She knew her Bible. She was very serious
in her questions.
Yet for some reason, she had concluded -- at least subconsciously
-- that fasting and prayer were no longer intended for believers in
today's world.
The truth is, fasting and prayer are for today! In fact, now more than ever!
The combination of fasting and praying is not a fad or a
novelty approach to spiritual discipline. Fasting and praying are not
part of a human-engineered method or plan. They are not the means to
manipulate a situation or to create a circumstance. Fasting and
praying are Bible-based disciplines that are appropriate for all
believers of all ages throughout all centuries in all parts of the
world.
Through the years, I have learned that many people in the
church have never been taught about fasting and prayer, and many have
therefore never fasted and prayed. As a result, they don't know why
fasting and praying are important, what the Bible teaches about
fasting, or how to fast. To many, fasting sounds like drudgery -- or a
form of religious works. To others, fasting sounds extremely
difficult. People tend to stand in awe at reports of those who have
fasted for several weeks. When I hear about such fasts, I no doubt
think what they think: If I fasted that long, I'd die! I couldn't possibly do that!
Let me assure you at the outset of this book that I am not
advocating prolonged periods of fasting for every believer. A fast can
be as short as one meal. Neither do I advocate fasting and praying
for the mere sake of saying with self-righteousness, "I have fasted
and prayed about this." I do not advocate fasting so that the hungry
in a foreign nation might have the food you would have eaten that day
-- which is highly unlikely. I do not advocate fasting apart from
prayer.
KEY REASONS TO FAST AND PRAY
I do, however, encourage every believer to fast and pray for two very important reasons:
1. The Scriptures Teach Us to Fast and Pray
The Bible has a great deal to say about both fasting and
praying, including commands to fast and pray. The Bible also gives us
examples of people who fasted and prayed, using different types of
fasts for different reasons, all of which are very positive results.
Jesus fasted and prayed. Jesus' disciples fasted and prayed after the
Resurrection. Many of the Old Testament heroes and heroines of the
faith fasted and prayed. The followers of John the Baptist fasted and
prayed.Many people in the early church fasted and prayed. What the
Scriptures have taught us directly and by the examples of the saints
is surely something we are to do.
2. Fasting and Prayer Put You into the Best Possible Position for a Breakthrough
That breakthrough might be in the realm of the spirit. It may
be in the realm of your emotions or personal habits. It may be in the
realm of a very practical area of life, such as a relationship or
finances. What I have seen repeatedly through the years-not only in
the Scriptures but in countless personal stories that others have told
me -- is that periods of fasting and prayer produce great spiritual
results, many of which fall into the realm of a breakthrough. What
wasn't a reality . . . suddenly was. What hadn't worked . . . suddenly
did. The unwanted situation or object that was there . . . suddenly
wasn't there. The relationship that was unloving . . . suddenly was
loving. The job that hadn't materialized . . . suddenly did.
The very simple and direct conclusions I draw are these:
First, if the Bible teaches us to do something, I want to do it. I
want to obey the Lord in every way that He commands me to obey Him.
And second, if fasting and praying are means to a breakthrough that
God has for me, I want to undertake those disciplines so I might
experience that breakthrough!
Every person I know needs a breakthrough in some area of his
or her life. I am no exception. I need breakthroughs all the time --
it may be a breakthrough in understanding a situation, a breakthrough
answer to a problem, a breakthrough idea, a breakthrough insight, a
breakthrough in financial or material provision, a breakthrough in
health. If you have any need in your life, you need a breakthrough
from God to meet that need! Fasting and prayer break the yoke of
bondage and bring about a release of God's presence, power, and
provision.
I certainly have seen this borne out in the course of my ministry.
When I was forty-two years old, I went to an Assemblies of
God camp in Alexandria,Minnesota, to speak for a women's retreat. The
first two days of the retreat went very well, and then I had one day
in between the first retreat and the second -- so many women had
registered, the camp could not host all of the women at the same time.
I took that day in this lovely place in Minnesota to enjoy the lakes
and trees -- it was a gorgeous environment -- and to fast and pray
about God's will for my life. I felt as if I was doing a lot of good
things, but I also thought I might miss God's best for me. I longed to
hear from God and to receive a revelation from Him about my life.
In that day of fasting and prayer, God spoke to me words from Isaiah 11:9:
"I have called you to cover the earth with the Word." Through the
years, the Lord has confirmed that word to me a number of times, but
this was my initial call to take the message of God's Word to the
whole earth, and it came as the result of one day of prayer and
fasting.
The breakthrough that you may need in your life is a sense of
God's direction -- not only for today and tomorrow, but for the broad
scope of your life. If you long to know God's purpose for you on this
earth, I strongly encourage you to seek God in prayer and fasting.
THE PRINCIPLES OF BIBLICAL FASTING
There are two main overriding principles related to prayer and fasting in the Bible.
First, biblical fasting is going without food. The noun translated "fast" or "a fasting" is tsom in the Hebrew and nesteia
in the Greek language. It means the voluntary abstinence from food.
The literal Hebrew translation would be "not to eat." The literal
Greek means "no food."
I know people who say they go without television or movies,
and they call these "fasting" times. I'm not opposed to that
definition of fasting-fasting does imply that we are giving up one
thing in order to replace it with something else, and in the Bible
sense, specifically to replace it with prayer. But in the main, I
believe fasting has to do with our abstaining from food. Second,
biblical fasting is linked with serious seasons of prayer. The more
seriously we approach prayer and fasting, the more serious the results
we will experience.
I sometimes hear people say, "I'm giving up chocolate" and
they regard this as a type of fasting. I think this is a rather
frivolous approach. The first and foremost purpose of a biblical or
spiritual fast is to get a breakthrough on a particular matter that
one lifts up to the Lord in prayer. A spiritual fast involves our
hearts and the way in which we relate to and trust God. It relates to
discerning and receiving strength to follow through on what God might
reveal to us about circumstances in our lives or a direction we are to
take.
I am not against people fasting in order to lose weight. Many
people fast to lose weight or maintain their weight.What I am opposed
to is making the losing of weight your primary goal in a season of
spiritual fasting and prayer. To have weight loss as a goal makes your
fasting a diet plan, not a time of genuine fasting and prayer. If
losing weight is your purpose in fasting, you will be missing out on
the full reason for fasting, and you likely will be concerned only
with what you don't eat rather than with what you are led to pray.
Now there's certainly an issue of food that is associated
with many seasons of prayer and fasting, and let me quickly add this:
control of eating is a valid reason to fast. The purpose is not the
number of pounds you might lose during a fast, but rather, trusting
God to help you regain mastery over food during a fast. Jesus said,
"The spirit is . . . willing, but the flesh is weak" (Matt. 26:41).
Fasting is a means of bringing the flesh into submission to the Lord so
He can strengthen us in our mastery over our own selves. Fasting in
the flesh makes us stronger to stand against the temptations of the
flesh. Those temptations very often deal with food.
Abstaining from food is often God's way of showing that His
desire for us is that we regain mastery over all things associated
with our flesh in order to subdue our flesh and elevate our emphasis
on spiritual matters. God's promise is to help us as we overcome the
flesh and put all carnal temptations into subjection.
ABSTAINING FROM FOOD TO REGAIN MASTERY OF THE FLESH
We are wise to recognize that food was the enticement the
devil used to cause Eve and Adam to sin in the Garden of Eden. In
Genesis 2 the Lord God told Adam and Eve that they could eat freely of
every tree in the garden of Eden, "but of the tree of the knowledge
of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou
eatest thereof thou shalt surely die" (Gen. 2:17).
God did not tell Adam and Eve to refrain from touching a particular
animal or smelling a particular flower or swimming in a certain
stream. He told them to refrain from taking a particular fruit into
their bodies-one type of fruit out of all the many types He had made
available to them.
God had given Adam and Eve authority over all things that He
had created-every bird, fish, beast of the field, and over "every herb
bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every
tree, in which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall
be for meat" (Gen. 1:29).
God did not prohibit Adam and Eve from interacting with any part of
God's creation when He commanded them to be fruitful, multiply,
replenish the earth, and subdue it-except for this one tree and its
fruit. They were not to eat of a particular tree,what God described to
them as the "tree of the knowledge of good and evil."
Why did God set apart this one tree and its fruit? God was
giving Adam and Eve free will and the ability to make choices and
decisions. Free will isn't really free if a person has no choice.
Adam and Eve had a choice to make about this one tree. God
told them to abstain from eating from its fruit because He did not
want His beloved creation to have a knowledge of evil. He had already
given them a full knowledge of everything He called "good."He wanted
to spare them the heartache of knowing evil. That's true for us today
as Christians. God calls us to pursue only what is good. Paul wrote to
the Philippians: "Whatsoever things are true . . . honest . . . just .
. . pure . . . lovely . . . of good report; if there be any virtue,
and if there be any praise, think on these things" (Phil. 4:8). God desires only good for His children. He tells us in His Word, "Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good" (Rom. 12:21).
Even as God calls us away from evil and toward good,He gives
us a choice. So many of the problems we have in our world today are
the result of men and women making the wrong choices. They have
knowingly and unknowingly chosen what is evil.And the end result is
the same for us as it was for Adam and Eve: death and all forms of sin
that lead to death (see Rom. 6:23).
Let me point out to you two results from the disastrous
choice that Adam and Eve made about the fruit of the tree of the
knowledge of good and evil.
1. Diverted Attention
First, Eve listened to what the devil had to say to her about
the fruit itself. The devil diverted her attention from whatever it
was that Eve was doing. He called her attention to the tree and its
fruit. The Bible tells us the devil came to her in the guise of a
beautiful and subtle serpent and said to her, "Hath God said, Ye shall
not eat of every tree of the garden?" (Gen. 3:1).
There's no indication that Eve had given much thought to the tree
before the devil asked her this question. There's no record that she
longed for it or had any curiosity about it. She certainly didn't
crave it, because she had never tasted it!
In many ways, the devil uses this same tactic today. He calls
our attention to how beautiful and refreshing certain foods and
beverages appear. It's difficult to go through a day without seeing
enticing food and beverage commercials on billboards, on television,
and in magazines. Foods are presented in the most tempting ways in
stores, restaurants, and on menus. The devil says the same thing to us
he said to Eve:"Has God really said you can't have a bite of this?"
A woman once said to me, "If there's a piece of pie in my
house, it calls out to me. It says to me, even in the middle of night,
'Eat me. Come eat me.' I can't resist."
Now I'm certainly not linking the devil to a piece of pie,
but I am saying this: the devil will always call your attention
repeatedly to the thing that is harmful for you, but he will do it in a
way that makes you feel deprived if you don't indulge in eating,
drinking, or partaking of what is harmful. The implication of the
devil is always: "This is so good. Has God really said you can't have
any of this good thing?"
Never forget that the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of
good and evil was the knowledge of good and evil. There was an element
of good in that fruit, not just evil. The devil told Eve specifically
that the fruit of the tree was "good for food, and that it was
pleasant to the eyes" (Gen. 3:6).
All Eve had to do was look to see that the fruit was pleasant. She
made a bad assumption, however, that what was visually pleasant would
also be "good for food." In that, the devil was very wrong!
What about us? There's an element of good in foods and
substances that are ultimately bad for us, even if it's just the good
appearance, smell, or taste. Have you ever noticed how beautiful all
the colored and distinctly shaped bottles look in a bar? Those bottles
always seem lighted in just the right way to make them look very
special, very festive, very appealing. Many foods are pleasant to the
eyes. Many drinks are presented in ways that make them appear
pleasing. We buy into the lie that what is pleasing is also nutritious
and beneficial.
Fasting calls us to turn away from food. Fasting calls us to
redivert our attention back to the things of God and His commandments.
Fasting calls us to face and overcome the devil's call: "Has God
really said you can't have this?" Fasting calls us to abstain from all
things harmful for us, and in most cases, from all food for a period
of time. The devil's insistent question is likely to become very loud
in our minds as we begin a fast: "Has God really said you can't eat?
Not anything? Not the things you love the most? Has God really called
you to fast- to abstain totally from this thing that you have labeled
as 'good'?"
Our answer must be a firm "Yes! God has called me to fast. He
has called me to give my full attention to Him and to His
commandments. He has called me to obey Him fully in all things. And
God has called me to say no to you, devil!"
2. Temptations Toward False Benefits
Eve listened to what the devil had to say to her about the
benefits of eating what God had prohibited. The devil always points
out the would-be and usually short-term benefits of sin. Many
substances that are ultimately harmful for us taste good or feel good
or bring pleasure. In some cases, the partaking of the substance makes
us feel like adults, feel accepted by others, or feel more powerful
and in greater control. Some people say about certain foods and
substances that they "give me quick energy," "make me more alert," or
"help me relax."
The devil told Eve that the fruit from the tree of the
knowledge of good and evil would make her wise-she would be as a
"god," knowing good and evil.
In the short term, the devil was right. Eve suddenly had a
knowledge of evil. She really knew in her own experience as a human
being that evil existed. This was the first time in her life she had
ever known the contrast-up to that point, all things had been good.
What the devil failed to mention to Eve was the ultimate
consequence that God had associated with eating of this fruit: "You
shall surely die." The devil failed to mention any downside to her
disobedience. In fact, he dismissed God's consequences with a
sarcastic question.
The devil comes at us the same way. The devil never tells us
that drinking alcohol can make a person an alcoholic. He never tells a
person that smoking cigarettes can cause him or her to have lung
cancer. He never tells a person that eating too much of the wrong
foods can lead to chronic illness and premature death. The devil
points out only short-term benefits, never long-term disasters.
When we fast, we are suddenly aware once again of what is
good and evil. We have a heightened awareness not only of God's
goodness and of God's commandments, but of the evil that abounds in
the world around us.
A man once said to me about fasting, "It seems that when I
fast the world seems much more black and white, at least for a period
of time. I see right and wrong much more clearly. I see good and bad,
blessings and cursings, benefits and negative consequences, what is
godly and what is ungodly. I am much more discerning about what lines
up with God's commandments and what falls into the category of 'man's
commands.'"
I asked him what happened after he stopped fasting. He
laughed and said, "I am still very clear on these things, but there's
also a time after I end fasting that the whole world seems more vivid
and more colorful than ever before. I can distinguish tastes again.
The sky seems bluer than before. The air seems crisper in the
mountains. All of my senses seem to be heightened toward what is God's
creation-which is always good- and what is man's invention-which very
often has an element of evil to it."
Those who fast often experience greater discernment of good
and evil. In fact, it seems to be a major by-product of fasting. God
seems to give us an opportunity as we fast to take a look again at our
lives and the world around us and to discern what is good and what is
evil.
No comments :
Post a Comment