Fasting: A Path to Deeper Spiritual Connection

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Fasting is not just giving something up. I mean, sometimes people use you fast from, you know, you fast from sugar, or you fast from social media, you fast from something like whatever it is that you enjoy in your life. You fast from meat. And we use that word fast to describe something you're giving up. That's common usage of the word. But actually, biblical fasting is not just giving something up. It literally means restraining from food. [00:49:31] (27 seconds)


Fasting is also, you see in the Bible, both individual and communal. Let's look at verse 16 again. And when you fast, do not look gloomy like the hypocrites, for they disfigure their faces, that their fasting may be seen by others. Truly I say to you, they have received their reward. Now, I think it would be wrong to say that Jesus is only encouraging a fasting that is personal, private, and in secret. [00:54:17] (25 seconds)


Ultimately, throughout the Bible you see it's because the people of God want to draw near to God. Fasting is not about you. It's about you and your relationship to God. Don't make it about yourself. It's about you and the Lord. And that's why intermittent fasting, while it could be good for your health, is not this kind of fasting. It may emulate the same action, but the intention is different. [00:56:07] (26 seconds)


If it's ultimately about your relationship to God, the main reason we fast is an offering of ourselves, an actual offering of our tangible selves to God. It is spiritual worship through denial of food, offering your hunger to God, offering your self-denial to God. [00:57:10] (22 seconds)


The early church practiced feasting and fasting because they wanted to experience the abundance of the Lord and the suffering of the Lord. And those of you who fasted, maybe more than just 24 hours, you understand. You go beyond 24, you go to two, three, five plus days, you experience a kind of death. You experience a kind of suffering that exists through that. [00:58:15] (29 seconds)


I mean, John Piper, another pastor, scholar, he calls fasting a whole body hungering for God. Hungering is wanting something you don't have. I mean, we understand this. Children come into this world understanding this. Even if they can't say anything, they just scream it because they're immediately hungry because they're detached from the biblical court. And they hunger. It's a whole body hungering. [00:59:23] (24 seconds)


But I'm assuming a majority of you, especially in this day and age, sadly, most people don't even see attending church as a regular thing to honor the Lord anymore. But if you're here listening, you likely want something in your relationship with God. You want nearness. You want more joy. You want more experiences of God. I want you to know that this actually can be a pathway towards more of that. [01:01:21] (26 seconds)


And that Paul says, offer your bodies, your whole self, not just your heart, your actual self, which includes all of you. Your heart, body, mind, soul, everything. Remember, we are not compartmentalized people as much as a modern society wants to compartmentalize us. We are inseparable as a whole person. [01:03:54] (20 seconds)


And the amazing thing about this is everyone can do this. Rich, poor, man, woman, every circumstance of life. If you want to know more of God and experience more of God, you can actually experience that through this practice of fasting. Jesus gave himself up for us, blood and body. [01:11:06] (20 seconds)


Fasting puts us in touch with the fact that we are not self-sustaining. We need something. It exposes all the delusions that we are strong, powerful, and capable. When you are hungry, it levels all humanity. In every place, in every language, in every socioeconomic group. Everyone is a dependent person. And fasting can do that. [01:14:21] (25 seconds)


And so even though it's never a command, and you can have a meaningful, full relationship with the Lord in many ways without fasting, I think by not having this, there's a part of us that's missing. And I think this is deeply important today in a culture of excess, in a culture where we pretend we are strong, in a culture where we think we have it all together. [01:17:51] (21 seconds)


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