Category Archives: Humility

Please, stop judging the fast that another has chosen!

You can catch up on our series, 31 Days of Fasting in January here!

During the first month of the year, we hear of people fasting quite often. As we have stated in the last week, it is a time of renewal, refreshing and reviving of our spirit and denying our flesh. Kind of a fresh start to a new year. Naturally, The Daniel Fast has taken the Christian world by storm and there are plenty of helps out there if that is the fast you have chosen. Yes, I even have a book on the subject and yes, I share it here on Hope in the Healing. It isn’t required, it is available.

But, along with anything so popular, there must surely be something that is wrong with it, right?

No. There is never anything wrong with a fast unless it is done to be seen by others or you think you are getting extra credit points with God. The Bible talks clearly about that, they already have their reward! Being seen of others is sadly all the reward they will ever have.

 Luke 18:9-14. “And he spake this parable unto certain which trusted in
                     themselves that they were righteous, and despised others: Two men went up
                     into the temple to pray. . . The Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself,
                     God, I thank thee, that I am not as other men are . . . I fast twice in the week,
                     I give tithes . . . And the publican, standing afar off, would not lift up so much
                     as his eyes unto heaven, but smote upon his breast, saying, God be merciful to
                     me a sinner. I tell you, this man went down to this house justified rather than
                     the other: for every one that exalteth himself shall be abased; and he that
                      humbleth himself shall be exalted.”

When you fast, don’t walk around with a long face and a plastered grimace that tells the world you are about to fall in the floor because you are so weak from fasting. This draws attention to YOU and it isn’t about you. Fasting is denying your flesh things that it would normally enjoy, and when you do without, then you will have more time to focus on HIM, on Jesus Christ and His will for your life!

Fasting isn’t a magic pill, forcing God to move;

it’s an act of humility and submission to His will!

I grew up thinking that if anyone knew I was fasting that I had failed and it was all in vain. Where did we get that? There are many times that you and a friend may fast together or you and your spouse might go on an extended fast for a particular purpose. That is called UNITY; you aren’t putting on a show for others, you are binding together with another child of God in one mind, one accord.

Did they do that in the Bible? Did they have what we call today, Corporate Fasts?

Yes!

Here are just a few examples:

  • Esther called for the Jews to fast for her for three days and nights before she went in to petition the King in Esther 4.
  • Church elders fasted and prayed before sending Paul and Barnabas on their missionary journey in Acts 13.
  • The people of Nineveh called for a fast after Jonah preached to them in Jonah 3.
  • Samuel and the people of Israel fasted after bringing the ark of the covenant to the house of Abinadab in 1 Samuel 7.
  • In the Book of Judges, the people fasted in relation to a certain battle they were about to fight. They needed direction from God so they all fasted together.
  • Ezra called a fast! “Then I proclaimed a fast there, at the river Ahava, that we might humble ourselves before our God, to seek from him a safe journey for ourselves, our children, and all our goods….So we fasted and implored our God for this, and he listened to our entreaty.” Ezra 8

There are many more examples, do a study on it and get excited about the prayers that God answered when His people humbled themselves, prayed AND fasted, together or in private!

God cares about the motive behind the fast;

if it’s just to be seen by others it is all in vain!

Back to The Daniel Fast: Yes, it has gained popularity in recent years and some criticize the fast as just a vegetarian diet. If that is someone’s purpose, just to go vegan for a week or two (or three!) then yes, they have it all wrong. But fasting is denying yourself things you would normally enjoy. I think most of us enjoy sweets, treats and meats.

The Daniel Fast is a great introduction to fasting for those that haven’t been on many longer fasts. It gives them confidence, for lack of a better word, that they could try a complete one-day fast, drinking only water. Then, maybe they could work up to a three day fast or try a longer juice fast.

We have repeated many times here on Hope in the Healing that The Daniel Fast isn’t a time to become a gourmet cook and fix elaborate meals every day. It is also not a time to pretend you are a contestant on The Food Network, have only been handed vegetables, and must make all the ingredients taste like pancakes and bacon.

You should prepare simple meals and not overeat, just normal portions. Some even have a light snack in the afternoon or mid-morning, there aren’t any RULES, but pray about what God would have you to do. The point is to DENY yourself things that you love. Maybe give up the Starbucks for the fast and resist the desserts and loaded potatoes. Eat simply and light and don’t spend all of your time trying to recreate all of your favorite dishes.

The bottom line is this:

Just because you fast with only water doesn’t mean it doesn’t count with God when someone else chooses a vegetable and water fast.  Let us be thankful that The Church is returning to fasting and that even what some would call an easy fast does count with God when done with a right spirit.

If we are spending all of our time finding fault with the way someone else is fasting maybe we need to look inward at our own selves and our motives.

Fast unto the Lord! Whatever you choose, combine it with prayer and make it a priority to spend more time with Jesus, listening for His voice. You will find Him there, you will gain strength through His Word and be able to hear Him more clearly when you are denying the flesh of things that it loves.

Be blessed in your fasting, whatever you choose and give grace to your brother and sister, praying God would bless them abundantly for their sacrifice.

Fasting unto the Lord, Nannette

Do you have your copy of my easy-to-read Fasting Devotional? Don’t let the title fool you! It is a 21 day devotion for ANY FAST. Each day is an example of someone in the Bible who fasted, some for the wrong reason as well, and what we can glean from them. There are also Daniel Fast recipes and instructions for following that fast as well. Available at Amazon.com in Kindle or paperback!

Light a lamp for me!

I’m not crazy about the dark.

I struggle driving at night anymore. 

I have always feared going blind! 

I would claw your eyes out if you put me in a room with no windows and no lights.

Seriously.

Now you know a little more about me. Let’s look at someone else who didn’t like the darkness.

The Apostle Paul is standing before King Agrippa (the same one who says, “Almost, you have persuaded me to become a Christian.”) and explaining to him how he went from persecuting Christians to preaching the Gospel. He relates how he was on the road to Damascus to gather up more Christians and “put them in chains” but then a light came down from heaven, blinding Paul, and he head a voice say, “ ‘I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting,’ the Lord replied. ‘Now get up and stand on your feet. I have appeared to you to appoint you as a servant and as a witness of what you have seen and will see of me. I will rescue you from your own people and from the Gentiles. I am sending you to them to open their eyes and turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan to God, so that they may receive forgiveness of sins and a place among those who are sanctified by faith in me.’…” (emphasis mine)

Paul was blind for three days until Ananias arrived and told him that he was to be a messenger for the Lord.

You light a lamp for me

In Paul’s darkness, God lit a lamp for him! 

This “chief of sinners” was raised at the feet of one of the greatest scholars of that time, “I am a Jew, born in Tarsus of Cilicia, but brought up in this city. I studied under Gamaliel and was thoroughly trained in the law of our ancestors. I was just as zealous for God as any of you are today.” Acts 22:3 NIV

He was zealous for God but did not know Him! He had been in darkness all of his life and was still blind to the Truth, he did not know Jesus until the Lord came and turned on the light!

“In darkness God’s truth shines most clear.”
― Corrie ten Boom, The Hiding Place

In that darkness, God’s light shined through and reached down to the most dangerous man of that time. God transformed the Apostle Paul into the most influential and powerful preacher who ever lived. Something miraculous happened on that road to Damascus and Paul was never the same.

Will we be like Paul, allowing the Light to come in and push away the darkness? Or will we be like those Timothy speaks of in the last days? “…having a form of godliness but denying its power….always learning but never able to come to a knowledge of the truth.” 2 Timothy 3 NIV.

Lord Jesus, help us to allow the Light of Your Truth to shine in our lives! Push back the darkness and fill us with Your love, making us more like You so others can see Your glory!

It is crucial in this dark hour that we, The Church of the Living God, allow the Light of the Holy Spirit to shine through us. We must share this Gospel and not be laden down with the cares of this world. Our most important job that He has given us is to reach the lost. When we are filled with His spirit, others will see that Light and be drawn out of darkness to the One true God, Jesus Christ.

He will light a lamp for you! He will light up your darkness…if you allow Him to.

Light a lamp for me!

 

 

the hand of god was upon us

The Daniel Fast: The hand of God was upon us

Fasting Together in JanuaryIf you have missed any of our 31 Days of Fasting in January you can go here to catch up.

Ezra. Some thought he had nothing to say. He was one of those who did so much for his present world but yet his mind was clearly on the one to come!

The seventh chapter of the book bearing his name tells us right away what kind of man he was: “This Ezra went up from Babylon; and he was a ready scribe in the law of Moses, which the Lord God of Israel had given: and the king granted him all his request, according to the hand of the Lord his God upon him.” Ezra 7:6 KJV.

Ezra’s lineage was traced all the way back to Aaron, the brother of Moses. He was a teacher, a soper, translated as a scribe, a writer, recorder or secretary.  It also meant that he could obviously read and write; he was a learned man who could teach what he read in the Law of God.

He had favor with the pagan ruler, King Artaxerxes, and the king was willing to grant him whatever was requested of him.

So what was Ezra’s request? Jewels? Land? Power?

No.

Ezra didn’t choose any of these; he chose to take some of the people of God back to Jerusalem. “For Ezra had prepared his heart to seek the law of the Lord, and to do it, and to teach in Israel statutes and judgments.” Ezra 7:10 KJV.

The King gave a letter to Ezra outlining how all of this was to take place. The trip was to take four months. They were to have certain privileges along the way. The king gave them plenty of gold and silver for their journey and they were to stop and get more in Babylon.

Check this out: They were carrying 3.5. tons of silver, 600 bushels of wheat, 600 gallons of wine, 100 baths of olive oil, and an unlimited salt supply. This was not to be a poor caravan traveling through the desert; these people were going in style!

How did King Artaxerxes benefit from all of this generosity? He hoped to have peace with his neighbors “…for why should we risk bringing God’s anger against the realm of the king and his sons?” Ezra 7:23 NKJV.

Ezra was busy gathering the people for the trip and then he asked God for His blessing on the journey. Ezra’s character and true spirit come out here in this prayer.

“Then I proclaimed a fast there at the river of Ahava, that we might humble ourselves before our God, to seek from Him the right way for us and our little ones and all our possessions.”  Ezra 8:21 NKJV.

Ezra wanted the people to humble themselves. The King James Version says to afflict, to repent, to show dependence on their God for the huge expedition they were about to embark upon. Ezra realized without God’s help they would be subject to thieves because they were carrying so much gold and other treasures.

But what he said next is amazing. “For I was ashamed to request of the king an escort of soldiers and horsemen to help us against the enemy on the road, because we had spoken to the king, saying, ‘The hand of our God is upon all those for good who seek Him, but His power and His wrath are against all those who forsake Him.’ So we fasted and entreated our God for this, and He answered our prayer.” Ezra 8:22, 23 NKJV.

He could have asked for a military escort because of all he was carrying but Ezra didn’t want to do that since he had already told the king that the hand of God was on them. Now he had to act on that faith.

Everything Ezra taught, everything he said, and now everything he believed, was being put into action.

So he did what he needed to do. He humbled himself, and made the people do the same. They fasted and entreated God, or prayed and asked God for help! Ezra knew that this God that he had put his faith and confidence in, this God that he had trusted and read about, wrote about and taught about continually, would be faithful. He was not disappointed for the Bible says,

“…and He answered our prayer.”

What need do you have today?

Is there something you have been struggling to even ask God about?

Is it His protection you wish?

Do you need His wisdom for a particular situation?

What about mercy? Are you struggling to give it where it is needed?

You don’t have to worry, fret and wring your hands in despair, trust as Ezra did, he lived for His God; he didn’t just talk about Him, he knew Him.

So when trouble came his way, or doubt tried to creep in, uncertainty or even thieves lurked nearby, he knew exactly what to do.

He humbled his soul with fasting, he prayed for God’s protection and then…

He stepped out in faith!

He arrived safely at his destination. He never lost any of the 25 tons of silver, silver articles weighing 3.75, tons, 3.75 tons of gold, 20 huge bowls of gold, all which would have been worth millions of dollars today. All of the people could now worship their God in their homeland. Once again, Jehovah had protected them from harm.

So walk in victory today. God is on your side! You can trust Him to be faithful when you live for Him and put Him first.

“And the hand of our God was upon us, and He delivered us from the hand of the enemy…” Ezra 8:31 NKJV.

the hand of god was upon us

 Fasting unto the Lord, Nannette