Question:
about fasting?
Lakishia
2008-02-24 16:25:42 UTC
I'm a Christian and I want to begin fasting for religious reasons but I don't want to do it just to gain something from GOD but to be more loyal and more obedient to HIS words and will.

I need to know how many days must I fast? What to drink? What to stay away from (technology)? and other things?

Thanks!
Ten answers:
Nickster
2008-02-24 16:37:46 UTC
Hey Lakishia,



First praise God that you have a heart to want to know Him more and i think God will be honored by your heart to fast for Him.



If you are kind of new to fasting- i suggest perhaps finding a Saturday where you are at home - in a safe environment. And fasting is not just withholding food from yourself- but it's also filling yourself with God's spiritual food- and so i think if you can find a day or a place where you can get alone with God, with your Bible and a notebook - and just pray what you shared here: Wanting to be more obedient and ask the Holy Spirit to help you.



There are different types of fast- a good start is just fasting from food and usually when i do this with my youth group we drink water. You can also drink juice (to keep your energy up) and especially if you are Diabetic you have to be careful not to fast for too long. i don't think God is so much concerned with how long- but more along what is your heart??



People can also do things like fast TV, etc.?



I think the main thing is getting alone and focusing on God but also making sure you stay safe!



What a great encouragement- thanks for sharing and asking your question.



Bless Ya.



Kindly,



Nickster



PS: There is a book by Donald Whitney called: Spiritual Disciplines for the Christian Life and it has a great chapter on fasting in it.
2008-02-25 00:35:41 UTC
Fasting is a way of getting closer to God. Just keep away from anything that distracts you. If I were to fast, I would stay away from food and technology because I am too obsessed with these two things.
Carole Speaks\VINCENT HALE
2008-02-25 00:42:04 UTC
Hello, pray and ask God for His guidence and help, in fasting, He knows what we should fast for and for how long we should fast for. Fasting, you will automatically gain something from God, He loves when we will give up something our very bodies needs just for Him, this is when He will stand up and take notice of us, listen when you fast, God has put in on your heart to do so, it is not our idea. God has a blessing for you and you need to fast to have it, God will give you what you need to fulfill this, we don't always know why we fast, just when God puts it on our hearts, we obey. We don't know everything as God does. He can see what we can't. So, if it is put on your heart to fast, by all means do so. Even in just wanting to be more loyal and obedient to His Word, is wanting something. God is making that possible for you to have and has put this yearning in you, so He can fulfill this. I pray you all the best in what you are pursueing, in the life you are living for the Lord, GOD BLESS YOU, DAUGHTER, I AM VERY PROUD OF YOU.
just_ask
2008-02-25 00:32:18 UTC
well from my personal experience with fasting, which i do it every year



there are many way to fast the way i do it is for a whole month( not necessary)



no food or water from 7:00 am to 6: pm( or what ever you can Handel)

if you have any medical problems such as diabetes or high blood pressure try to not fast for long periods of time, especially if your pregnant



and try to just keep your self up and happy to other people, if not for religious reasons just to get your self more relaxed
♫άḑᶇởḩⱤ♥♫♪
2008-02-25 00:36:57 UTC
Your fasting in a personal commitment between you and God its not a requirment but is not condemn either fasting could be viewed as a sacrafice of thanksgiving or anything you mean it to be. usually you could drink water as far as the technology goes that is a conscious matter its your fast. Hope you success in your devotion to God.
2008-02-25 00:32:08 UTC
Fasting can be very good for your health if done properly and in moderation. I'd do a little research and fast in accordance with good health practice.



And then if you want to pretend that it pleases God that's okay. Such belief is mostly harmless.
2008-02-25 00:37:24 UTC
Allow yourself to be led by the Holy Spirit in regard to your fasting. Pray about it ... pray about your reasons for fasting and for how long, if you should completely abstain from food (EXTREMELY DIFFICULT AND DANGEROUS if you are keeping your regular schedule, unless you just lie down all day), abstain from CERTAIN foods, or for certain hours (e.g. midnight to 4 pm, then break the fast for dinner).



Also you can fast from things ... like using the Internet, tv, etc.
grtldy10
2008-02-25 00:29:48 UTC
Fast according to the religious doctrine you follow. Each religion has it's own routine. Check it out here -



http://www.beliefnet.com/features/fasting_chart.html
slow_hand_78
2008-02-25 00:29:29 UTC
have a goal in mind. what do you want to fast from? it doesnt always have to be food. if it is food, then traditionally its only bread and water as long as you are fasting. and i know some one who did it for 2 weeks.
The Answer
2008-02-25 00:29:54 UTC
FAST



Abstinence from all food for a limited period. Rightly motivated fasts were to show godly sorrow and repentance concerning past sins. (1Sa 7:6; Joe 2:12-15; Jon 3:5) They were also fitting in the face of great danger, when in sore need of divine guidance, while enduring tests and meeting temptations, or when studying, meditating, or concentrating on God’s purposes. (2Ch 20:3; Ezr 8:21; Es 4:3, 16; Mt 4:1, 2) Fasting was, not a self-inflicted form of punishment, but a humbling of oneself before Jehovah. (Ezr 8:21; 9:5; compare 1Ki 21:27-29.) Jesus fasted 40 days, as did Moses and Elijah, both of whom appeared in a visionary way with Jesus at his transfiguration.—Mt 17:1-9; Ex 34:28; De 9:9; 1Ki 19:7, 8.



The Mosaic Law does not use the term “fast,” but in connection with the Day of Atonement it does command, “You must afflict your souls.” (Le 16:29-31; 23:27; Nu 29:7) This is generally understood to mean fasting, and this view is supported by Isaiah 58:3, 5 and Psalm 35:13.



Isaiah chapter 58 deals with a time when the sins of the Jews were heavy; yet they did not sincerely repent, though they made a pretense of worshiping Jehovah, giving him lip service and performing religious acts or practices for show. Fasting was one such practice, and they thought it should gain them divine notice and favor. This failing, they asked in apparent bewilderment: “For what reason did we fast and you did not see, and did we afflict our soul and you would take no note?” Jehovah told them why. Even during the fast, while asking for his righteous judgments and acting as if they carried on righteousness itself, they were pursuing their own pleasure and business, indulging in strife, oppression, and violence; they showed none of the godly sorrow and repentance associated with sincere fasts. Their fast was not such as to make their voice heard in heaven, though their showy wailings were noisy indeed. Jehovah denounced the hypocritical act they put on: “Should the fast that I choose become like this, as a day for earthling man to afflict his soul? For bowing down his head just like a rush, and that he should spread out mere sackcloth and ashes as his couch? Is it this that you call a fast and a day acceptable to Jehovah?”—Isa 58:1-5.



To be acceptable, the fast must be accompanied by a correction of past sins. Through his prophet Isaiah, Jehovah made known what he considered to be a real fast, saying: “Is not this the fast that I choose? To loosen the fetters of wickedness, to release the bands of the yoke bar, and to send away the crushed ones free, and that you people should tear in two every yoke bar? Is it not the dividing of your bread out to the hungry one, and that you should bring the afflicted, homeless people into your house? That, in case you should see someone naked, you must cover him, and that you should not hide yourself from your own flesh?”—Isa 58:6, 7.



Christian Counsel on Fasting. When Jesus was on earth he gave instruction to his disciples: “When you are fasting, stop becoming sad-faced like the hypocrites, for they disfigure their faces that they may appear to men to be fasting. Truly I say to you, They are having their reward in full. But you, when fasting, grease your head and wash your face, that you may appear to be fasting, not to men, but to your Father who is in secrecy; then your Father who is looking on in secrecy will repay you.” (Mt 6:16-18) He alluded here to the insincere fasting of the Pharisees, which he mentioned in an illustration on another occasion. (Lu 18:9-14) It was customary for the Pharisees to fast twice a week, on the second and fifth days of the week.—Lu 18:12.



A person’s merely abstaining from food in a formalistic manner is described by Paul as subjecting oneself to decrees, “Do not handle, nor taste, nor touch,” and he says that “those very things are, indeed, possessed of an appearance of wisdom in a self-imposed form of worship and mock humility, a severe treatment of the body; but they are of no value in combating the satisfying of the flesh.”—Col 2:20-23.



Fasting has been enjoined on their members by some religious sects of Christendom, but the Bible itself gives no command to Christians to fast. When Jesus was talking to his disciples about fasting, as above (Mt 6:16-18), he and his disciples were still under the Mosaic Law and observed the Day of Atonement and its fast.



The text about fasting at Matthew 17:21, appearing in the King James Version, is not contained in some of the most important ancient manuscripts. Likewise, although the King James Version mentions fasting at Mark 9:29, Acts 10:30, and 1 Corinthians 7:5, according to such manuscripts these texts do not contain any references to fasting.



Some have taken Matthew 9:15 as a command for Christians to fast. In reality, Jesus was merely making a statement of what was going to happen when he died. While Jesus was with his disciples on earth, it was not appropriate for them to fast. When he died, they did mourn and fast. But they had no cause for mournful fasting after his resurrection and especially after the marvelous outpouring of holy spirit. (Mr 2:18-20; Lu 5:33-35) Certainly Christians were not under obligation to fast on the anniversary of the Lord’s death, for the apostle Paul, correcting abuses in connection with the eating of supper at the congregation’s meeting place before the observance of the Lord’s Evening Meal, said: “Certainly you do have houses for eating and drinking, do you not? . . . Consequently, my brothers, when you come together to eat it [the Lord’s Evening Meal], wait for one another. If anyone is hungry, let him eat at home, that you may not come together for judgment.”—1Co 11:22, 33, 34.



While not fasting as a religious requirement, the early Christians did fast on special occasions. When Barnabas and Paul were sent on a special missionary assignment into Asia Minor, there was fasting as well as praying. Also, there was the offering of prayer “with fastings” when elders were appointed in a new congregation. (Ac 13:2, 3; 14:23) Hence, Christians are neither under command to fast nor prohibited from doing so.—Ro 14:5, 6.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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