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- STE:A Few Observations on Fasting By Calvin Culver
-
- PROLEGOMENA
-
- For this topical study I adhered to the following procedure: first,
- using the New American Standard Concordance, I collected all references
- in the New American Standard Version of the Bible for the words Fast
- (when used as a noun), Fasted, Fasting and Fasts. I have listed these
- references in the document below. I then combed these passages looking
- for two things: 1. The motivations for fasting (WHY it was done) and 2.
- Those activities and items which seemed to be involved (WHAT was done).
-
- The following observations are based on the above procedures. Please
- keep in mind that they are only preliminary observations, based
- entirely on a reading of the passages in question and what knowledge I
- have of the backgrounds of the texts (which is undoubtedly often
- inadequate). No attempt was made to do any detailed study of the
- cultural, linguistic, or political milieus, and such studies, were they
- to be done, might easily alter or invalidate my observations. With
- these reservations in mind, then, I humbly offer these my preliminary
- observations. All scripture quotations are from the Holy Bible, New
- International Version, copyright 1978 by the New York International
- Bible Society.
-
- I was motivated originally to begin this study by the WHY category
- of questions on fasting. Why do we fast? Why did Biblical figures fast?
- What did they hope to achieve? And so on. Many of these questions were
- motivated by a desire on my part to find a scriptural basis for what I
- had been taught regarding the practice of fasting, and to see what role
- (if any) it played in the lives of those we see in the Bible,
- especially those of the New Testament.
-
- THE OLD TESTAMENT
-
- Old Testament References:
-
- Jdg 20:26 2Sa 12:21-23 2Ch 20:3 Est 4:3 Psa 109:24 Dan 6:18 Jon 3:5
- 1Sa 7:6 1Ki 21:9 Ezr 8:21 Est 4:16 Isa 58:3-6 Dan 9:3 Zec 7:5 1Sa 31:13
- 1Ki 21:12 Ezr 8:23 Est 9:31 Jer 14:12 Joe 1:14 Zec 8:19 2Sa 1:12 1Ki
- 21:27 Neh 1:4 Psa 35:13 Jer 36:6 Joe 2:12 2Sa 12:16 1Ch 10:12 Neh 9:1
- Psa 69:10 Jer 36:9 Joe 2:15
-
- As for the motivations for fasting, I find almost nothing in the
- references in the New Testament. The practice is mentioned a number of
- times, but almost always only in reference, without any indications of
- the reasons behind it. The Old Testament, on the other hand, gives
- indication of a variety of motivations for fasting, among them such
- things as distress, repentance, mourning, grief and as an act of
- humility. For example, looking at the first reference, Judges 20:26, we
- see Israel, reeling from repeated defeat at the hands of the tribe of
- Benjamin, 'weeping before the Lord. They fasted that day until evening
- and presented burnt offerings and fellowship offerings to the Lord.' In
- 2nd Samuel 1:12, the men of Jabesh Gilead recover the body of Saul and
- burn it, then 'They mourned and wept and fasted till evening for Saul
- and his son Jonathan, and for the army of the Lord and the house of
- Israel, because they had fallen by the sword.' When the Jews in exile
- learn of the king's edict that they be destroyed, we read that 'In
- every province to which the edict and order of the king came, there was
- great mourning among the Jews, with fasting, weeping and wailing. Many
- lay on sackcloth and ashes' (Esther 4:16). And, when the king had
- thrown Daniel to the lions, we read, in Daniel 6:18, that he 'returned
- to his palace and spent the night without eating and without any
- entertainment being brought to him.' In these passages, we see examples
- of fasting as an expression of grief or distress.
-
- Again, we can see elements of repentance in the practice of fasting.
- For example, we read in 1st Kings 21:27-29 of Ahab when he hears the
- rebuke of Elijah: 'When Ahab heard these words, he tore his clothes,
- put on sackcloth and fasted. He lay in sackcloth and went around
- meekly.' And in Nehemiah 9:1-3 we read of the rediscovery of the Law
- after the return from exile, and that 'On the twenty-fourth day of the
- same month, the Israelites gathered together, fasting and wearing
- sackcloth and having dust on their heads.... They stood in their places
- and confessed their sins and the wickedness of their fathers.'
-
- Coupled with repentance is the concept of confession. This can be
- seen in the account of Israel's reaction to the capture of the Ark of
- the Lord, which recounts that all Israel, distressed at the Ark's loss,
- 'assembled at Mizpah, [and] they drew water and poured it out before
- the Lord. On that day they fasted and there they confessed, "We have
- sinned against the Lord"' (1st Samuel 7:6). And, again, in the passage
- in Nehemiah 9:1-3, we see large implications of repentance.
-
- And, often, fasting was a means of humbling oneself before the Lord.
- In 1st Kings 21:27-29, the Lord responds to Ahab's fast by saying to
- Elijah 'Have you noticed how Ahab has humbled himself before me?
- Because he has humbled himself, I will not bring this disaster in his
- day, but I will bring it on his house in the days of his son.' In Ezra
- 8:21, Ezra, detailing the return of the remnant from Exile, says that
- 'by the Ahava Canal I proclaimed a fast, so that we might humble
- ourselves before our God and ask him for a safe journey for us and our
- children, with all our possessions.'
-
- Finally, often fasting is connected with the presentation of a
- petition or request before God. We see this clearly in the passage from
- Ezra quoted above, and again in Psalm 35:13, where the psalmist
- declares about his enemies that 'when they were ill, I put on sackcloth
- and humbled myself with fasting. When my prayers returned to me
- unanswered, I went about mourning as though for my friend or brother. I
- bowed my head in grief as though weeping for my mother.'
-
- Thus, in the early Old Testament period at least, fasting was
- largely associated with times of extreme distress or mourning, or of
- special confession and repentance, or as an act of humility before God.
- This seems to have remained the case at least through the time of the
- Babylonian Captivity, and even somewhat beyond.
-
- With the coming of the prophets, however, this seems to have begun
- to change. It is in the words of Isaiah that one begins to see attempts
- at a redefinition of the practice. In Isaiah 58:1-7 God describes
- Israel to Isaiah:
-
- "Shout it aloud, do not hold back. Raise your voice like a trumpet.
- Declare to my people their rebellion and to the house of Jacob their
- sins. For day after day they seek me out; they seem eager to know my
- ways, as if they were a nation that does what is right and has not
- forsaken the commands of its God. They ask me for just decisions and
- seem eager for God to come near them. 'Why have we fasted,' they say,
- 'and you have not seen it? Why have we humbled ourselves, and you have
- not noticed?' Yet on that day of your fasting, you do as you please and
- exploit all your workers. Your fasting ends in quarreling and strife,
- and in striking each other with wicked fists. You cannot fast as you do
- today and expect your voice to be heard on high. Is this the kind of
- fast I have chosen, only a day for a man to humble himself? Is it only
- for bowing one's head like a reed and for lying on sackcloth and ashes?
- Is that what you call a fast, a day acceptable to the Lord? Is not this
- the kind of fasting I have chosen: to loose the chains of injustice and
- untie the cords of the yoke, to set the oppressed free and break every
- yoke? Is it not to share your food with the hungry and to provide the
- poor wanderer with shelter--when you see the naked, to clothe him, and
- not to turn away from your own flesh and blood?"
-
- Thus, fasting begins to lose some of the cultic overtones it seems
- to have acquired (that is, as a means of obtaining something from
- God--his attention, or his blessing or favor, or what have you), and
- begins to take on something of the quality of an act of worship to God.
- Fasting becomes a part of the larger expression of the kingdom of God
- as it works itself out in shalom--the community of peace and of justice
- which God is establishing on earth.
-
- THE NEW TESTAMENT
-
- New Testament References:
-
- Mat 4:2 Luk 2:37 Act 27:9 Mat 6:16-18 Luk 5:33-35 Mat 9:14,15 Luk
- 18:12 Mat 17:21 Act 13:2,3 Mar 2:18-20 Act 14:23
-
- In the New Testament, we find very little data for determining the
- purposes of fasting. In Matthew 4:1,2 we have the record of Jesus' 40
- day fast in the wilderness, but there is nothing explicitly giving the
- reasons for his fast. We might say he went out to pray before the
- inauguration of his ministry, but the text itself does not say this. Or
- we might say that he fasted, seeking the strength and the wisdom to
- resist and defeat the enemy in the battle of temptation he knew was
- coming. But again, the text does not state this explicitly.
-
- Again, in Matthew 6:16-18 we have Jesus' instructions on how to
- conduct one's fast; in secret, where only the Father will know. But,
- still, there is no indication as to WHY one should fast, only some
- ground rules for HOW he should do it.
-
- One of the more interesting of the New Testament passages on fasting
- is that found in Matthew 9:14-17, and echoed in Mark 2:18-22 and Luke
- 5:33-35. Here, the disciples of John ask Jesus why Jesus' disciples do
- not fast. Jesus responds by saying that when he (the bridegroom) has
- been taken from them, then they will fast, but while the bridegroom is
- present, it doesn't make sense to do so. He then, in all three
- accounts, follows this up with the parables of the patch and the
- wineskins. In the context, these parables were obviously intended as
- explanation to the disciples of John, and they seem to hold the most
- promise for answering the question as to why we should fast.
- Unfortunately, I am really not certain as to what Jesus meant to convey
- by them.
-
- The remainder of the New Testament references simply mention the
- practice, as for instance in the description of Anna the prophetess,
- who ministered daily in the Temple (Luke 2:37), or the Pharisee in the
- story of the Publican and the Sinner (Luke 18:12), who claims to have
- fasted twice a week. Each of these stories indicates that fasting had,
- by Jesus' day, taken on a more ritualistic form, and was regarded as a
- badge of spirituality of some sort; something which the truly serious
- religious practiced regularly. In Anna's case, it seems to have been a
- true expression of her love for God (though, again, the text doesn't
- say so explicitly) while the Pharisee seems to use it in a prideful
- manner, to appear religious; he sort of wears it on his sleeve.
-
- The last two references of interest in the New Testament are found
- in Acts, in the 13th and 14th chapters. In Acts 13:2,3 we read of the
- commissioning of Paul and Barnabas for the ministry to which God had
- called them: 'While they were worshiping the Lord and fasting, the Holy
- Spirit said, "Set apart for me Barnabas and Saul for the work to which
- I have called them." So after they had fasted and prayed, they placed
- their hands on them and sent them off.' And in Acts 14:23 we read that
- as Paul and Barnabas revisited the churches they had planted they
- 'appointed elders for them in each church and, with prayer and fasting,
- committed them to the Lord in whom they had put their trust.' Both of
- these passages connect fasting not only with prayer, but with some sort
- of dedication or consecration ceremony for Christian leaders as well.
-
- CONCLUSION
-
- It is not the intent of this study to draw conclusions about the
- practice of fasting, but simply to offer some preliminary observations
- based on a cursory reading of the pertinent passages. It is hoped the
- reader will be stimulated to pursue further study for himself. I myself
- am yet unclear as to what the proper motivations for fasting are,
- however a few tentative conclusions may be drawn about other facets of
- the practice.
-
- First, it seems apparent that, as originally conceived in the early
- Old Testament period, fasting was something that was done under
- exceptional conditions of distress, of mourning, or of conviction and
- confession. It was often accompanied by ritual offerings--burnt
- offerings, fellowship offerings, and drink offerings are explicitly
- mentioned--and by laying in or wearing of sackcloth and ashes. It was
- often accompanied as well by prayer, by confession and occasionally by
- reading the Word of God. And Jesus commanded that it was to be done in
- secret.
-
- In the grand tradition of the prophets, Isaiah attempted, in the
- post- Exilic period, to redefine the practice, to divorce it from the
- cults with which it had become identified.
-
- Finally, by the time of Christ, it would seem that Isaiah's reform
- had been--at least in part--adopted by the faithful. It had certainly
- become an act of worship or service to God, rather than a means by
- which one obtained something from him, though even this had its abuses.
- And we can see in Luke's account of the Acts of the Apostles that it
- was also used as a part of the ritual of consecration, accompanied by
- prayers of dedication.
-