

Featured Article for
the Week of March 4th, 2007
Insight into the Christian
Mysteries...
This article was taken
from 'The Truth of Our Faith'. A booked published by Uncut
Mountain Press in December 2000. It gives insight into the
wisdom and teachings of Elder Cleopa Ilie, a monk of the
Sihastria Monastery. During this Lenten time and during
our preparation for the Holy holiday of Easter, I felt it
was important to reflect upon the Christian Mystery of Fasting.
Chapter 12 - On Fasting
Inquirer: Some
say that the great Apostle Paul conveyed a different teaching
concerning fasting from that of our Saviour Christ. Can
you explain this to me?
Elder Cleopa:
Fasting, according to the testimony of Saint Basil the Great,
is the oldest commandment given by God to man. This great
father of the Church of Christ says:
"O Man, be pious
and meditate with the fear on the antiquity of the fast,
for as old as is the world so old is also the commandment
of fasting. Indeed this commandment was given in paradise
when God said to Adam: 'Of every tree of the garden thou
mayest freely eat; but of the tree of the knowledge of
good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it. For in the day
that thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die.'"
With the word "fasting"
we mean abstinence from food, but also from all evil desires,
so that the Christian may communicate his prayers to God
with peace and fervour, kill his evil desires and acquire
the Grace of God. The fast is a work of virtue for it bridles
the desires of the flesh, strengthens the will, assists
in repentance and thus is a means of salvation.
At the same time it is
also a liturgical action, an effort that glorifies God,
when it is done for Him, for it is a sacrifice which originates
from our love and reverence for God. It is a means of perfection,
of cutting off the inclinations of the body, a visible sign
of our zeal and struggle to acquire the likeness of God
and His angels who have no need of nourishment. The fast,
according to Saint Symeon of Thessaloniki, "is a work
of God for Whom the necessity of nourishment is non-existent."
The aim of the fast is
the benefit of the body and the soul. The fast strengthens
and toughens the body and cleans the soul, maintains the
health of the body and gives wings of ascent to the soul.
This is why the Old Testament recommends and imposes it
many times, such as in Exodus 34:28, Deutoronomy 9:18, 1
Samuel 7:6, and Joel 2:15. And Jesus the son of Sirach hs
this to say: "Be not insatiable in any dainty thing,
nor too greedy for meats; for excess of meats bringeth sickness,
and gluttony will turn into ill temper. By intemperance
have many perished, but he that taketh heed prolongeth his
life."
The Saviour Himself fasted
40 days and 40 nights in the desert before He began to preach
the Gospel and He Himself teaches us how to fast. He tells
us that the devil cannot be driven out except by prayer
and fasting. his holy apostles and disciples also fasted,
and they temselves instituted formal fasts for Christians.
Furthermore, we see how
Holy Scripture honours the fast in certain cases and events.
Moses fasted 40 days and 40 nights, with Daniel doing likewise.
The fast is beneficial when the judges and magistrates sit
before God in judgment of the people, during difficulties
and dangers, and it is good with regards to impending peril.
The fast is prescribed during both advantageous times and
times of persecution for the Church. The fast must be accompanied
by prayer, by the confession of sins, and by humility. The
fast assists in the return of the alienated to God, and
in times of grief and sorrow.
The Holy Fathers of the
Church of Christ strenuously extol and commend the fast.
Here is what Holy John Chrysostom says about the fast: "The
fast tempers the volatility of the body, bridling the insatiable
appetites, purifying and enlightening the soul, and raising
it up high."
The fast in practice
is of many types. In particular:
- The complete fast,
when we don't eat and don't drink at all for almost an
entire day.
- Fasting with uncooked
foods, when we eat, privately, dry foods in evening only,
i.e., bread and water, dry fruit, fresh fruit, etc.
- The conventional fast,
when we eat all the accustomed fasting food, abstaining
from such food as meat, fish, cheese, milk, eggs, wine
and oil.
- The light fast, when
we eat food such as fish, wine, oil, etc., allowed by
the Church on great feasts which fall on days normally
reserved for fasting.
Days reserved for fasting
throughout the year are as follows:
- Wednesday and Friday
- The day of Elevation
of the Holy Cross
- The Beheading of the
Honourable Forerunner of the Lord, John the Baptist
- Eve of the Theophany
of the Lord
All of these days were
established from the earliest days of the Church when the
catechumens were being prepared for their baptism on the
feast by fasting and prayer.
The periods of fasting
established by the Church of Christ are:
- The Great Fast or
Great Lent, being the 40 days before Holy Week and Pascha
- The Nativity Fast,
being the 40 days before Christmas
- The Dormition Fast,
being the 15 days before the Feast of the Dormition of
the Mother of God; celebrated on August 15th
- The Apostles' Fast,
being the period between the feast of All Saints and the
feast of Sts. Peter and Paul on June 29th
Inquirer: Father,
isn't it possible that this is all an exaggeration? Man
is free to eat whatever food he likes, for food in and of
itself does not injure or defile him. Thus, we shouldn't
make a distinction between fasting and non-fasting foods
since they are clean, as the Saviour said: "Not that
which goeth into the mouth defileth man, but that which
cometh out of the mouth, this defilth man." The Lord
explains further to the Aposle Peter: "Do ye not yet
understand that whatsoever entereth in at the mouth goeth
into the belly, and is cast out into the drain? But those
things which proceed out of the mouth come forth from the
heart, and they defile the man." Consequently, there
is no reason to make a distinction among foods, since neither
by fasting foods are we saved, nor by non-fasting foods
are we defiled or punished.
Elder Cleopa:
It is true that man is not deflied by the food he eats,
for all is clean. However, this does not mean that fasting
should not exist. Previously, I established from Holy Scripture
that the fast is the oldest commandment given by God to
man. Next I enumerated certain Biblical passages that witness
to the law of fasting and its benefits. The aim of fasting
is not only to make a distinction between certain foods,
but to discipline the body and the powers of the soul in
order to realize the purification from the passions. If
the Holy Prophets, Apostles and all the Saints of God were
thinking as you are, they would not have fasted so often
in their lives, nor would they have left teachings on fasting
to their disciples.
The passages to which
you made reference do not support whatsoever the abolition
of fasting, but rather refer only to the practices of the
Scribes and Pharisees who never ate without first washing
their hands. The Saviour explains to His disciples that
which they do not understand, teling them that for someone
to eat with unwashed hands is not an impure action, for
the impurity of mand does not originate externally but rather
internally, i.e., from his heart. Such was often the case
with the hearts of the hypocritical Scribes and Pharisees,
from which sprang words of blasphemy, hate, non unclean
hands, were the cause of their defilement. Our God and Saviour,
seeing, in the depths and innermost parts, this spiritual
filthiness, reproved them and called them "blind."
The Scribes had the need to clean their hearts of the passions
and be pure before God, and although they were, in fact,
hypocrites, they appeared to the people to be zealots for
their customs, such as cleaning their hands before each
meal, thinking that this pleased God. This is the actual
meaning of the passage that you quoted me. With the words
of this passage the Saviour is not saying to his disciples
"don't fast any longer," nor can this even remotely
be inferred, especially if we remember that the Saviour
Himself, even as the only sinless One, fasted for us and
our salvation 40 days and 40 nights.
Inquirer:
There is also another passage about which I have been thinking.
The Apostle writes concerning the false prophets that will
appear in the last times: "Now the Spirit speaketh
expressly that in the latter times some shall depart from
the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits and doctrines
of devils, speaking lies in hypocrisy, having their conscience
seared with a hot iron, forbidding to marry, and commanding
to abstain from foods, which God hath created to be received
with thanksgiving by those who believe and know the truth.
For every creature of God is good, and nothing to be refused
if it be received with thanksgiving; for it is sanctified
by the Word of God and prayer...For bodily exercise profiteth
little, but godliness is profitable unto all things, having
promise of the life that now is, and of that which is to
come."
Elder Cleopa:
Some are convinced that we should eat of all foods, at all
times, without discretion. They say that we should cast
off all the restrictions of the fast and make wide the road
to the belly. However, we have a teaching from our Saviour
Christ that the demons are not cast out except by prayer
and fasting. HIs holy disciples and apostles ministered
to the Lord with fasting, as it is written: "As they
ministered to the Loard and fasted..." and again, "And
when they had fasted and prayed and laid their hands on
them, they sent them away." The Great Apostle Paul
did not set aside the work of fasting even in the midst
of his trials: "in stripes, in imprisonments, in tumults,
in labours, in sleeplessness, in fasting..."
Thus, whom should the Christians obey? Our Saviour
Christ and His holy Apostles or he who subverts and distorts
the meaning the of Scripture? The passage, which came to
you in your thoughts, does not assert the abolition of fasting.
From a similar misreading of this passage sprang the delusion
of the ancient heretics, the so-called Gnostics. The Gnostics
forbade marriage and the eating of meat. These prohibitions
they kept not in short stretches of time, as we do during
the periods of the fast. but they perpetually forbade marriage
so as not to propagate "matter", while meat they
considered to be unclean.
Inquirer:
Is it possible that fasting is something neutral or negligible?
In other words, that it is not a matter of being good or
bad, and therefore by keeping the fast we cannot become
more pleasing to God. They holy Apostle says, "But
food commendeth us not to God, for neither are we the better
if we eat, nor are we the worse if we eat not." "For
the Kingdom of God is not food and drink, but righteousness
and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit." Thus, shouldn't
we conclude that it is not sin to neglect the fast? Those
who are observant do not do wrong, but neither do those
who are unobservant. Likewise, if someone keeps the fast
it is not a virtue, nor are those who neglect the fast committing
a sin.
Elder Cleopa:
This is how it appears to you, my dearest to Christ, however
it is not at all like this. You say that the fast cannot
make anyone acceptable before God. What did the Ninevites
do in order not to be lost and to call off the just judgement
of God? They fasted. Their fasting brought down God's mercy
upon them and averted the destruction of the 120,000 inhabitants
who had fasted together with their king and animals. Was
not the Prophet King David able to appease God with his
prayer and fasting after his fall into debauchery and murder?
Listen to what he says: "I ate ashes like bread,"
and elsewhere he says, "But as for me, when they troubled
me, I put on sackcloth. And I humbled my soul with fasting
and my prayer shall return to my bosom." Did not the
fast of the three youths who were cast into the fire without
being burned please God? Did not the Prophet Daniel close
with fasting the mouths of lions in the den? Let these testimonies
suffice, for here there is not room to show you how many
other people pleased God throught fasting.
Besides this, you should know what the two passages
you cited do not at all refer to fasting, but to the sacrifices
of food offered by the idol worshippers, as is apparent
from the text of the two passages. Examine the above passages
and you will see that those who were scandalized by the
sacrifices of food offered to idols were judaizing Christians
who kept with great accuracy the laws of the Old Testament
pertaining to the handling of food. They did not eat the
meat from the sacrifices and wanted to prohibit those Christians
who come from among the Gentiles from doing so. With this
pretext the Aposle Paul wrote the above passages.
Inquirer:
Father, in our thoughts perhaps we should remain far from
such matters, as the Aposlte Paul says: "Let not him
that eateth despise him that eateth not; and let not him
that eateth not, judge him that eateth; for God hath received
him. Who art thou who judges another man's servant...He
that eateth, eateth to the Lord, for he giveth God thanks;
and he that eateth not, to the Lord he eateth not and giveth
God thanks." "Let no man, therefore, judge you
in meat or drink, or in respect to a holy day or the new
moon or the Sabbath days, which are a shadow of things to
come, but the body is of Christ."
Elder Cleopa:
The first passage, like those to which you made appeal earlier,
does not forbid or abolish the fast. The Apostle is referring
only to the distinction made between foods forbidden and
allowed or betweent clean and uncleand food, according to
the old order of the Old Testament. In the second passage
cited he is countering the judaizing Christians who accused
certain Christians coming from the gentiles, of eating the
meat of animals offerend to idols. The Apostle shows that
the actions of the gentile Christians have no implication
for their salvation. From this dispute arose the opportunity
to put an end to the unrest, disorder and disagreement that
had appeared between the Jewish and Gentile Christians as
concerned, particularly, the handling of food and, generally,
the problem of the obligations of Christians to the mosaic
law. The text gives ample explanation as to the nature of
the problem. If you read the Holy Scripture, with care,
with the help of the patristic commentaries, you will understand
the text clearly and won't be lead astray into error. However,
if you only read one passage or one text and give rest to
your thoughts falling into agreement with a few others,
then little by little delusion overtakes you.
Inquirer:
Some believe that the true fast is only the so-called "black
fast" which consists of total abstention for a designated
length of time from every type of food and drink. This fast
should be assumed, however, with a free will, according
to the abilities and conditions of each, and never on defined
days or in determined periods of they year.
Elder Cleopa:
Neither does our Church condemn the "black fast."
On the contrary, it commends it for it has a Biblical basis.
Yet, this fast may be very difficult and everyone is not
able to practice it, owing to differences in the health
and temperament of the body. For this reason the Church
ordained another, more lenient type of fast, that also has
Biblical basis, to be obligatory for each Christian.
Inquire:
How then are we to observe the true fast according to the
teaching of the Orthodox Church?
Elder Cleopa:
The ture fast, my brother, must be observed not only with
the body, but also with the soul. In other words, we don't
only eat fasting foods but we abstain from the passions,
enticements and sin. When we abstain from lush and pleasurable
food, we struggle to purify not only the body but also the
soul by means of prayer and repentance. The complete, true
and perfect fast is not only of the body, but also of the
soul.
We are taught this in the troparion (hymn) which
we chant during Great Lent: "Let us keep the acceptable
fast, that which is pleasing to the Lord." The true
fast is the estrangement from evil, the bridlingof the tongue,
the negation of wrath, the turning away from lust, hate,
deceit, lies, and from untruthfulness.
Let's end our discussion on this subject with
the teaching of Holy John Chrysostom:
"Dost thou fast?
Give me proof of it by thy works! Is it said by what kind
of works? If thou seest a poor man, take pity on him! If
thou seest an enemy, be reconciled to him! If thou seest
a friend gaining honour, envy him not! If thou seest a beautiful
woman, pass her by! For let not the mouth only fast, but
also the eye, and the ear, and the feet, and the hands,
and all the members of our bodies. Let the hands fast, by
being pure from pillaging and avarice. Let the feet fast,
by ceasing from running to the hateful theatres and along
the pathways of sin. Let the eyes fast, being taught never
to fix themselves rudely upon handsome countenances, or
to busy themselves with strange beauties. For looking is
the food of the eyes, but if this be such as is unlawful
or forbidden, it mars the fast; and upsets the whole safety
of the soul; but if it be lawful and safe, it adorns fasting.
For it would be among things the most absurd to abstain
from lawful food because of the fast, but with the eyes
to touch even what is forbidden. Dost thou not eat flesh?
Feed not upon lasciviousness by means of they eyes. Let
the ear fast also. The fasting of the ear consists of refusing
to receive evel speaking and calumnies. Let the mouth, too,
fast from disgraceful speeches and railing."