Fast for Breakthrough
Fast for Breakthrough
This year, let’s take our prayer lives even deeper by fasting often and praying for ourselves, our friends, our families, and the nation.
From The Christian Post. Fasting is hard because self-denial is hard (discipline), and overindulging is not rewarding. It becomes a never-ending cycle of defeat unless we break the cycle by choosing discipline over regret as we seek the will of God. (I recently released a documentary on my 40-day fast that can be viewed here.)
Connect with others in your state in prayer.
A slave either way
God teaches us through discipline because He loves us. We are also encouraged to discipline our bodies to experience breakthroughs. We cannot effectively be filled with the Spirit and lack discipline. Our faith is not passive; it’s active faith.
Romans 6:16 (NASB) sheds much-needed light: “Do you not know that when you present yourselves to someone as slaves for obedience, you are slaves of the one whom you obey, either of sin resulting in death, or of obedience resulting in righteousness?”
Either way, we are slaves — we are either God’s servants or a slave to our passions and desires. Self-discipline is a fruit of the Spirit, according to 2 Timothy 1:7.
Fasting is not legalistic
Those who say that fasting is legalism are dead wrong. We are called to yield to the Spirit and quench sin — but when we yield to sin, we quench the Spirit. The vast majority of the heroes of the faith fasted, and it’s still very common in many places. But in America, our fullness is our downfall. Leonard Ravenhill said, “When there’s something in the Bible that churches don’t like [such as fasting], they call it legalism.”
Fleshly appetites are subdued when fasting. Fasting is challenging because the flesh always wants to negotiate with us. It says, “Can’t we meet in the middle? Don’t completely remove food — that’s too extreme!”
Leaders are called to fast
Self-control is also required for leadership. In Titus 1:8 (NIV), Paul adds that a leader “must be hospitable, one who loves what is good, who is self-controlled, upright, holy and disciplined.” John Wesley required fasting so that his leaders disciplined their appetites rather than allowing their appetites to rule them.
It’s been said for centuries that no man who cannot command himself is fit to command another. Paul told the Corinthians that he strikes a blow to his body and makes it his slave so that he will not be disqualified for service (1 Cor. 9:27). An undisciplined leader is an oxymoron.
We also see the power of fasting in Joel 1:14 when the leaders are called to it: “Consecrate a fast, call a sacred assembly; gather the elders and all the inhabitants of the land into the house of the Lord your God, and cry out to the Lord.”
Fasting weakens the flesh
The magnitude of the situation determined the response. God’s people had departed from Him. The call was to return through fasting, prayer, and brokenness. Fasting is depriving the flesh of its appetite as we pray and seek God’s will and mercy. We are saying, “The flesh got me into this predicament, now it’s time to seek God’s mercy and humble myself before Him.”
Obviously, people have overcome challenges without fasting, but fasting adds extra strength, especially when overcoming addictions. One addiction may end, but others can continue. The alcoholic switches to caffeine, the nicotine addict switches to sugar, and the opioid user switches to food. It’s a never-ending cycle, but fasting can break the cycle. However, fasting is not a cure-all or a magic wand; it’s a spiritual discipline designed to aid in victory. Again, choose the pain of discipline over the pain of regret.
The physical affects the spiritual
Through fasting, our body becomes a servant instead of a master. When Jesus directs us, the outcome is always beneficial, spiritually and physically. Notice He said, “When you fast” (Matt. 6:16). Scripture doesn’t say, “When you sin, and if you fast,” but rather, “If you sin” and “When you fast.”
The obvious goal and benefit of fasting are spiritual, but there are physical benefits as well. Can we pray and seek God with all our hearts with a headache, tight pants, and a sluggish, lethargic body strung out on our favorite addictive substance? Of course not.
Does the way you feel affect your productivity and the quality of your life? Absolutely. Our diet affects key hormones such as serotonin for relaxation, dopamine for pleasure, glutamate for healthy thinking, and noradrenaline for handling stress.
If we allow junk food and addictions to control our attitude and productivity, it will hinder what we do for God. When we’re always dealing with stress, anxiety, and sickness, can we do much for God? No, we will be limited. Granted, there are those who, through no fault of their own, have a debilitating illness. I’m assuming the reader understands that I’m talking to those who can make changes.
The key: Fall forward
What you put in the mouth (body) and the mind (soul) affects the spirit — and when you feed the spirit, it affects the body and the soul. I’m often asked to pray for panic attacks, angry outbursts, and anxiety. That can be done, and God honors prayer, but are we opening the door to these things by not halting highly addictive caffeine, sugar, opioid, or nicotine habits? Or are we renewing our minds by meditating on the Word and spending time in prayer?
Again, the physical affects the spiritual, and the spiritual affects the physical. Much of the healing that I have witnessed over the years was the result of renewed stewardship of the body. You can do this … it’s all about falling forward.
How are you fasting in 2023? Share your thoughts and prayers below.
(Used with permission. By Shane Idleman from The Christian Post. Photo Credit: Katsia Jazwinska on Unsplash)
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Comments
whatever your need is today, pray.
“Holy Spirit, open our eyes to see Jesus as we need to today.”
Then we will find faith filling our hearts to receive our miracle!
Through prayer the Lord has lead to times of regular fasting. Once a week a day for fasting. I have a few friends as well as some on our prayer team going through a Daniel Fast. In my reading I find that corporate prayer is even more important to impliment in seeking God’s answers and intervention. Derek Prince book “Shaping history through prayer and fasting” has been life changing for me.
“ Though fasting ,our body becomes a servant instead of a master.”
Very well said… awesome article!!
About 15 years ago, the pastor at the church I was attending invited all of us to participate in a 21-day Daniel Fast at the beginning of each new year in January. I have found this discipline to be rewarding, although challenging, each year. There are many resources available for participating in a Danial Fast; I like knowing that I am part of a community of other believers as I fast.
The Lord has led me to fast one day a week. I think he is calling me to a longer fast so I am praying about that. It isn’t easy to fast but my heart desires to be obedient and obey his call.
I don’t plan to fast unless the Lord convinces me otherwise.
Sister, I have found that this very perspective in me has been a sound barrier to hearing the Lord’s Voice guide me. When we rephrase our heart attitudes, spiritual ears are opened to hear His instructions. I learned not to presume the Lord will outright get my attention in hearing what the Spirit wants to tell me. The Lord works with and relates to us differently than an employer sending a memo of orders to employees. Spiritual eyes to see and ears to hear our Great Shepherd’s Voice are quite something else. Our willingness to say yes BEFORE He asks is the one that will hear the call to fast! God bless you in your hearing, Leslie.
“Jerome was a marvelous advocate of chastity: yet hear his confession: “O, how often have I thought myself to be in the midst of the vain delights and pleasures of Rome, even when I was in the wild wilderness.” Again, “I, who for fear of hell had condemned myself to such a prison, thought myself oftentimes to be dancing among young women, when I had no other company, but scorpions and wild beasts. My face was pale with fasting, but my mind was inflamed with desires in my cold body: and although my flesh was half-dead already, yet the flames of fleshly lust, boiled within me, etc.”
― Martin Luther, Commentary on Galatians
“Let us not believe that an external fast from visible food alone can possibly be sufficient for perfection of heart and purity of body unless with it there has also been united a fast of the soul. For the soul also has its foods that are harmful. Slander is its food and indeed one that is very dear to it. A burst of anger also supplies it with miserable food for an hour and destroys it as well with its deadly savor. Envy is food of the mind, corrupting it with its poisonous juices and never ceasing to make it wretched and miserable at the prosperity and success of another. Vanity is its food which gratifies the mind with a delicious meal for a time but afterward strips it clear and bare of all virtue. Then vanity dismisses it barren and void of all spiritual fruit. All lust and shift wanderings of heart are a sort of food for the soul, nourishing it on harmful meats but leaving it afterwards without a share of its heavenly bread and really solid food. If then, with all the powers we have, we abstain from these in a most holy fast our observance of the bodily fast will be both useful and profitable.”
― John Cassian, Making Life a Prayer: Selected Writings