Fasting: A Call to Justice and Compassion

Devotional

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True fasting, as Isaiah describes, is about loosening the chains of injustice, setting the oppressed free, and sharing with those in need. [00:57:57]

Sarah, a new mother here in LA, and due to a number of reasons, sadly she is all alone in this season of her life. The dad is out of the picture. Like many in the city, she's just trying to scrape by with the cost of living here. [01:53:32]

Paul is a business person here at vintage, and earlier this year, he found out at the Salvation Army, where vintage volunteers host a weekly dinner for our houseless neighbors, that the Salvation Army lost its funding for that Weekly Outreach dinner. [02:49:36]

Connie is a regular guest at that same Thursday night dinner. She's become friends with Kirk. I don't actually know Kirk. I got this from the staff. He sounds like a great dude. Maybe you're here, Kirk. He is a volunteer from vintage. [03:46:59]

Throughout church history, fasting was one of the core practices that followers of Jesus adopted to move toward those intentionally toward those that Jesus called the needy. That could be the poor or the hungry or the fatherless or those on the receiving end of evil and injustice. [06:38:40]

Fasting is not only to offer ourselves to God, grow in holiness, amplify our prayers. There's more to it. 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? [12:14:60]

Notice the motivation for this type of fasting is to fight injustice, to free people from oppression, to share your food with the hungry, to provide shelter for refugees, immigrants, and those with no home, to clothe the naked, and to meet the practical needs of your family, your friends, and the people in your community. [12:51:99]

Fasting allows us to stand in solidarity with the hungry, regularly going without food by choice can get us emotionally in touch with the millions of people around the world and in our own country and in our own city who regularly go without food, not by choice. [21:27:52]

Fasting with almsgiving is a little move against destructiveness. That said, fasting is not always as little as we may imagine. Finally, this type of fasting can enable us to stand against evil and injustice at a social level. [36:32:40]

Fasting is a way for the powerful to voluntarily align with the powerless, as Jesus did for us, but at a spiritual level, which is a bit more in our paradigm, fasting is a way to stand against what the New Testament calls the principalities and powers that are behind the systems and structures of injustice and evil in our world and age. [37:14:40]

The fast Isaiah has in mind is one where we stand in solidarity with the poor, we share our resources, and we stand against evil and injustice. This last type of fasting will have an effect not just on you or on me, but on our community and on the church as a whole. [38:44:79]

Fasting is temporary, but feasting is eternal. The story of scripture begins, arguably, depending on how you read the story, with a fast. A number of the church fathers and mothers point out that the first command in scripture in Genesis 3 is to not eat from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. [46:46:00]

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