|
Site Map
Contact Fr. Gregory
© Copyright - material in this site may not be
reproduced in any media without the express permission of
the Web Master.
Care has been taken by this site to ensure that
all necessary copyright permissions have been obtained. If this is not the case in any
instance, this is an inadvertent error. Please contact the Web Master and this will be
rectified.
Disclaimer & Credits
|
The
Need for Fasting
In 1955 in a labour camp in Soviet Russia, the time was approaching for the release of
the prisoners. Everyone prayed in expectation and one of the prisoners, a priest, gave the
following sermon: "We all know that Saint Nicholas is a great intercessor, helper and
miracle worker. He even helped people of other faiths. Let us therefore pray to Saint
Nicholas for our release and let us keep a three day fast before his feast day".
Forty of the camp inmates agreed to do this and for three days before the feast of the
translation of the relics of Saint Nicholas (22nd of March according to the civil
calendar), they proposed to eat nothing at all, although camp conditions were severe. When
the time came to keep the fast, only 26 of the prisoners observed the fast, plus the
priest who communed them during this time. On the feast day of the saint, news arrived of
the release of the prisoners. Only 27 names appeared on the release document. How
devastated were those who had abandoned the fast!
Whenever a fast approaches, people look at the minimum that they can do. Instead we
should always look at the maximum and recognize our weakness and lack of faith. And indeed
those who look at the minimum tend in the long run to abandon fasting altogether. The
Wednesday fast is an example. This fast day should be observed the same as the Friday
fast. We should not expect to eat any food until after the ninth hour, that is after 3
p.m. We should also eat only one meal which should be very simple, consisting of raw
vegetables or fruit. This is an example of the maximum. Metropolitan Philaret emphasizes
this in one of his sermons. The Metropolitan explains that fasting is not set aside only
for clergy or monastics, although we have many examples of great ascetics in the Church
such as Saint Chariton, but is a general rule of the whole church. Fasting is a law of the
Church. Not to keep the law of the Church requires a special reason. If such a reason
exists it is because the Church reaches out to meet our needs and weaknesses in many ways.
For example, sick people are not expected to keep a strict fast. This also applied to
travellers, especially in the days when travel was long and hazardous. A dispensation from
fasting was usually to allow the weary traveller to eat an extra meal, for journeys were
long and people had to walk or ride great distances. Today of course there is no need for
a dispensation when you can recline in the seat of an aircraft (order a vegetarian meal -
editor's note) and 11 hours later arrive at your destination no worse for wear. We should
never use this former travel dispensation to indulge our appetite.
Unfortunately many people say "It is all the same to God whether I eat potatoes or
ham". Of course God does not need your fast, but you should understand that the fast
is for you. God does not need to fast. It is you, who are overfed, that needs to fast.
Saint Seraphim of Sarov says that he who does not keep the fast is not a Christian. Let us
therefore acknowledge our weakness to please our stomachs and refrain from the hypocrisy
of denying the law of the Church. If we cannot keep the maximum, let us confess it. Never
say that fasting is a new invention or that it is not necessary. If you keep the fast then
you will know what benefits God bestows on them that truly love Him and keep His
commandments.
Priest Serafim Gascoigne, Russian Orthodox Cathedral Of
St. Nicholas (Seattle, WA, USA)
(Reprinted from: "Kafedral'nyie viesti" ["The Cathedral News"],
No. 29, November 1998, pp. 6-7)
return to Archive Page |