There are few things that are absolutely necessary for
human life. What are they? Breathing is important and
highly recommended. Adequate clothing and shelter
protects us from harsh weather. Drinking is also a vital
part of life because we can only go a few days without
water. And lastly, we need food to fuel our bodies. And
so, despite this most beautiful Gospel reading today,
I'd like to point out that St. Paul was yelling at the
Corinthians because of what they were eating and its
impact on the parish in Corinth. So even though we are
still a week away from the Great Fast, I want to talk a
little about fasting.
Now in today's epistle St. Paul writes that food does
not bring us closer to God in and of itself, but how we
use food can indeed have important consequences for our
spiritual life. As Father Alexander Schmemann rightly
pointed out, we, as human beings are hungry. That's what
went so badly in the Garden of Eden because Adam and Eve
were hungry. They ate fruit from the one tree they were
told not to eat from, because of their hunger; a hunger
that they should have satisfied by turning to God and
obeying His command. Instead of that, they chose to
satisfy themselves and sin entered into paradise. Ever
since that time men and women still have that same
hunger for a deeper union with God, but like the First
Parents they also look for substitutes to fill up that
spiritual need, to find satisfaction on their own, in
their own way, by their own choosing trying to fill up
with all kinds of things that never quench the hunger
only God can fill.
Just as Adam and Even wanted to assert their
independence from God by
eating, we as Christians can choose to show our
dependence on God by fasting.
When Satan tried to tempt Jesus to turn stones into
bread, Jesus rebuffed him by telling him that man does
not live by bread alone but by every word that comes
forth from the mouth of God. The temptation of food
could not sway Jesus even though His time of prayer and
fasting in the desert was over. He came to do the will
of His Father, not His own will. We fast so that we can
do the will of our Father depending on Him.
We pray before meals but I suspect that often it is not
so easy for us to get a sense of our dependence upon
God, or to be genuinely thankful that we have this food
before us. Strangely enough it may be harder for us to
see the connection between our eating and God's loving
kindness because we have so much food available to us.
Of course there are many people in the world who are
hungry and even starving. There are many more who have
enough to eat but there is very little choice of what
they can eat. We not only have plenty to eat, we can
even buy strawberries in winter and kiwis from the other
side of the globe. When we can eat whatever we like and
as much as we like, there is a tendency to think that we
are in control and what is wrong with that? Fasting
helps us better realize our dependence on God, and it
should also open us up to gratitude for the gifts we
have been given. Not eating certain foods can help us to
thank God for all He has given us because it can give us
a better perspective on the riches we enjoy.
Fasting also changes the rhythms of our lives. By
abstaining from certain foods, we break up our normal
daily routine and habits, and we spend a bit more time
choosing what goes into our mouths. This change in
routine and habits is especially good if it also pushes
us to more prayer, because prayer and fasting go
together like peanut butter and jelly, (both of which
are fasting foods.) This change in eating habits can
also be good if it helps us to think more about our life
in Christ. What a great exercise it would be if, every
time we thought about what fasting foods we were going
to eat, we also asked ourselves the question, "What will
satisfy me?" Not in the sense of food, of course, but
rather what will satisfy me in my life. When I am not
simply eating whatever I want to eat, it can be a very
good time to ponder whether or not I am choosing well in
other areas of my life, and again, am I truly dependent
upon God, and am I grateful for what He has given me?
Fasting is an important part of Christian life and
always has been, although in our day it may not be
practiced as much as in some other times. Our present
Church law is very, very minimal. You are only required
to keep the fast on the first day of Lent and on Good
Friday. And maybe that is best, so that we may choose
for ourselves which kind of fasting and how much fasting
we ourselves will do according to our particular
circumstances, our health needs and other factors that
need to be considered. Fasting is not some kind of
endurance contest that exists for its own purposes. It
is only helpful if it helps our life in Christ. But at
the same time let us not be afraid to restrict our food
so that we can enlarge our faithfulness.
I read a little piece about a guy who is so fixated on
"eat healthy" that when he and his wife are invited to
other people's homes for dinner, he makes his wife carry
fruit and nuts in her purse. Sometimes he even brings
his own food and cooks it in the host's kitchen. A
friend asked him if he felt embarrassed by cooking his
own food instead of eating what his hosts had cooked. He
answered, "I would never be embarrassed. I'm embarrassed
for them and they way they eat." That is so 2014! That
is the anti-fast. It is, of course, never just about
what we eat, but certainly
about how and why we eat. That was true in the Garden of
Eden, and it is still true for us today.
Yes--eat healthy! But more importantly--eat holy! And
give thanks to God.