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Fasting: Feasting on God When Food Fails to Satisfy - Story

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The Orthodox Church has preserved the ancient practice of fasting not as legalism but as spiritual medicine for souls addicted to consumption. Fasting reveals how much we depend on physical comfort for emotional stability and spiritual strength. When we fast, we discover that we're hungry for more than food—we're starving for God. Jesus' forty-day fast preceded His ministry launch, demonstrating that spiritual power requires physical discipline. His response to Satan—'Man shall not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of God' (Matthew 4:4)—reveals fasting's purpose: replacing physical feeding with spiritual nourishment. Orthodox fasting involves both food restriction and spiritual intensification—more prayer, more Scripture, more almsgiving. It's not about weight loss but soul strengthening. Joel 2:12 calls for returning to God 'with fasting and weeping and mourning.' This isn't punishment but preparation—clearing away distractions to focus on God's voice. Daniel's partial fast (Daniel 10:3)—avoiding rich foods and sweets—preceded one of Scripture's greatest prophetic visions. Physical simplicity creates space for spiritual complexity. Fasting breaks the tyranny of appetite, teaching us that we can survive with less than we think we need. It trains us in self-control, preparing us for bigger spiritual battles. When we voluntarily say 'no' to permissible pleasures, we strengthen our ability to say 'no' to sinful temptations. Fasting is feasting—on God's word, on prayer, on the joy of disciplined devotion.

Scripture References

Matthew 4:4, Joel 2:12, Daniel 10:3

Emotional Tone

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