Fasting
is one of the keys to opening doors in the Spirit that have been set
before us, though if we do not know how to turn the doorknob we may end
up running headlong into the wood and falling flat on our backs, more
trouble than acceleration. The same goes for the enemies of fasting, we
will either posture our hearts correctly to enter into what our
Heavenly Father has for us or we will end up going about it wrong and
making friends with these "Enemies" rather than embrace Revelation and
true breakthrough.
Enemy #4: Eating Disorders
One
danger zone in fasting that must be avoided, especially among women, is
the temptation to fast out of wrong motivations that flow from eating
disorders, which are at an all time high in our culture today among
Christians and non-Christians alike. The tricky part to be alerted to
is that a person might begin fasting with pure motivations before God,
and as time passes, slowly diverge into false motivations while being
unaware of the transition. Empowered by thinking they are responding to
the biblical exhortations to fast, they are truly strengthening an
eating disorder. Eating disorders are very dangerous and are rooted in
darkness, not light. Anyone who has struggled with one in the past
knows that fasting can be a serious trap that may ensnare a person in
darkness. We fast only to position our hearts to receive more from the
Lord, not to enhance our appearance! We must not seek our identity in
being thin but in being loved by God. And on a practical dimension, as
we have already considered when we looked at the changes that fasting
brings to our metabolism, we recognize that fasting is never a way to
lose weight. I urge people to watch over those in their midst who may
be prone to this. Satan wants to kill, steal and destroy human life
(John 10:10) by any means possible. If he cannot destroy us by
overindulgence then he will go to the other extreme and try to trap us
with denying our flesh with impure motives.
Enemy #5: Legalism and the Religious Spirit
Legalism
seeks to earn one’s standing with God. It was a religious spirit that
drove and motivated the Pharisees. They fasted to earn something from
God. It is not fasting to gain God’s approval through our own works but
rather to enter into the experience of His freely given love. We
embrace fasting out of the place of being overwhelmed with the
revelation of His marvelous grace toward us; all of sudden we have the
courage to fast. It’s not fasting to earn or deserve, but to have a
greater capacity for agreement with the Holy Spirit, whom we love.
Anyone who is not grounded in the grace of God should wait before they
start fasting—otherwise legalism will be strengthened in them by the
very act of fasting. The only foundation for a fast that doesn’t
degenerate into legalism is the knowledge that God embraces us with
delight, even in our weakness.
Paul
addressed the problem of legalism in the book of Galatians, (Gal.
3:1-3) and he went on to exhort them to stand fast in the liberty by
which Christ has made us free by His glorious work on the cross, and to
not be entangled with a yoke of religious bondage (legalism). This
would cause them to be estranged from Christ, for they would fall from
grace if they attempted to stand before God based on their good works
and dedication (Gal. 5:1-8).
Let’s
ask ourselves a few questions. Do we feel more confident before God and
worship with greater assurance because we are fasting? Do we tend to
shrink back in shame when we are not fasting? If so, we know we are
putting confidence in our dedication to God rather than His dedication
to us. This is a deceptive trap, that leads to one of two dead
ends—either condemnation or pride. If we do not fast we end up in
condemnation, thinking God is disappointed in us, and when we do fast,
we fall into spiritual pride, imagining that God is pleased with us
based on our asceticism. The religious spirit of self-loathing that
condemns us when we do not fast is the same spirit that boasts in us
when we follow through in our fasting and prayer, and both find their
roots in spiritual pride.
If
we think that we are more desirable to God because of our prayer and
fasting, we are on the road to dead religion. Paul warned the early
church against the spiritual deception and pride that can come with
self-denial. Some in the city of Colosse based their confidence before
God on their religious rigors. They kept rules of “Do not taste, touch
or handle.” Paul said in essence, “Why do you subject yourselves to
your own regulations and rules that you created—finding confidence in
these lists?”
All
of God’s children can enter into the free enjoyment of God, regardless
of whether we have fasted that week or not. The knowledge that a tender
Bridegroom cherishes us is the force behind our desire to be fully
surrendered to the Lord. People who fast before their image of an angry
God are desperately scrambling to avoid the disapproval of the Judge.
With this view of God we end up condemning ourselves most of the time,
and missing the affection and tenderness of God in our fasting. It is
only in the presence of a Bridegroom of joy that our fasting is safe
and most edifying to us.
A
religious spirit does not enhance our gratitude, or our affection
toward God and others. Rather, it compares itself with others and
boasts in its greater commitment. If we are fasting because of love,
there is no boasting or comparison. There is no competition. There is
only the desire to love and receive love for God, and to bring others
into this marvelous experience of God’s affections also.
Enemy #6: Inappropriate Asceticism (Self-Denial)
There
are two great enemies we must watch out for—the destructiveness of
self-indulgence and the destructiveness of religious self-denial.
Though there are more perils in self-indulgence than in abstinence, the
perils of fasting come when our focus is not on a God of love, a God of
burning affections. The Bridegroom fast leads us into confidence into
His burning heart, not in our flesh—an essential deliverance from
ungodly self-denial.
Jesus calls
us to take up our cross and deny ourselves as we follow Him in the
grace of God (Matt. 16:24-25). False asceticism leads people into
confidence in their religious deeds instead of God. The enemy seeks to
pervert this glorious pathway of obedience and derail anyone who takes
it seriously, deceiving us into extremes that are not prescribed by
Scripture.
Some
monasteries in the dark ages entered into strange kinds of
asceticism—beating themselves with whips and wearing painful clothing
or objects. Paul speaks of the false ascetics making celibacy mandatory
and imposing dietary restrictions. Throughout church history, people
have tried tortuous regimes of self-denial in an attempt to keep
themselves from immorality and indulgence of the flesh. This is not by
any means biblical and will not lead us to the heart of Jesus. These
extremes are rooted in false assumptions about God and how His grace
operates. What keeps the heart in holiness is revelation of the love
and beauty of God. We are seated with Christ in heavenly places (Eph.
2:6). Therefore, we have access to God’s presence and thus, to the
beauty of His majesty. Paul had a passion about people having
confidence in grace. It is not about marking off religious to-do lists
and how severely “spiritual” we can be. The strength of God’s love
seals and empowers our heart, not the strength of man’s own flesh (Song
8:6).
Enemy #7: Spiritual Pride
A
premier pitfall in the fasted lifestyle, and the one that perhaps hits
most close to home in many of our lives, is the fierce temptation
toward spiritual pride. Abstinence from food and pleasure can greatly
stoke our pride. This pride is the most common danger of the fasted
lifestyle, and it is lethal to true spiritually. There is nothing more
powerful than a group of people in unity of abandonment to God—praying
and fasting together. However, such a community has a corresponding
great and continual temptation to pride and judgment.
What
does spiritual pride look like? We find ourselves desiring to be
recognized as one uniquely dedicated and close to God. We love being
acknowledged as one who fasts. We feel gratification when we get
“caught” fasting. We can become desperate to appear close to Jesus even
if it requires us to leave exaggerated and false impressions about the
depth of our spirituality. We want others to believe more about us than
what is actually true. We are disgusted that others aren’t fasting as
much as we are. We feel superior or judgmental toward those who don’t
fast. Though we may hear all of these manifestations of spiritual pride
and quickly decide they do not apply to us, we must remember just how
subtle pride is, and be always on the lookout for its residue in our
motivations and mindsets. It may be more personal to us than we realize.
Another Face of Spiritual Pride is in an unholy confidence to judge people. Fasting
provides a tremendous open door for religious arrogance—an unholy
confidence to judge others. Without a purposeful resistance, we will
unknowingly forge a negative assessment over others. In light of this,
Paul urged, “Therefore let us not judge one another anymore, but
rather resolve this, not to be a stumbling block or a cause to fall in
our brother’s way” (Romans 14:13).
Sometimes
those who have given themselves to intense prayer and fasting are the
most angry and judgmental people. They have a strange boldness to judge
others. Who killed the Messiah? Pharisees who fasted twice a week; they
were emboldened in their religious deception and pride. Instead of
looking down at others with contempt, the Lord wants us to grow in
gratitude for the grace working in our hearts that enables us to
sustain a fasted lifestyle. Jesus told a parable about two men who went
to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector.
The Pharisee thanked God that he was not like other men, noting that he
fasted twice a week and gave tithes of all he possessed. The tax
collector cried out, “God be merciful to me, a sinner!” He was the one
justified, not the Pharisee (Luke 18:10–14).
If
God has given us a revelation of the importance of prayer with fasting,
and has also given us the grace to sustain it, the right response is to
say, “Thank You, for this glorious gift.” When gratitude for grace
arises in our hearts, the dragon of pride is held somewhat in check.
Why have we learned of this noble way of life? It is not because we are
good followers of Jesus, but rather that He is an excellent leader. It
is not that we are good students; rather, He is an excellent teacher.
It has never been about our ability to listen all that well, but about
His exceptional ability to communicate in a way that gets our
attention.
As
we humble ourselves and receive the revelation that God’s grace is the
only reason we can obey Him in any capacity, we are in a good position
to resist the devil’s schemes against the fasted lifestyle. Sincere
believers who love Jesus and want to enter the fasted lifestyle must
develop a strong foundation in what the Word says about the grace of
God. During times of fasting we must stay focused on intimacy with
Jesus, stay connected to the Body of Christ in authentic relationship,
stay in the Word (even twice as much as usual), and continue in
humility of spirit, easily receiving correction from those in spiritual
authority. We will thus avoid the seven dangers of the fasted lifestyle
and move forward into the abounding benefits and rewards God desires to
bring forth in our lives.