Fasting is a medicine. But medicine, as
beneficial as it is, becomes useless because of the inexperience of the user. He
has to know the appropriate time that the medicine should be taken and the right
amount of medicine and the condition of the body which is to take it, the
weather conditions and the season of the year and the appropriate diet of the
sick and many other things. If any of these things are overlooked, the medicine
will do more harm than good. So, if one who is going to heal the body needs so
much accuracy, when we care for the soul and are concerned about healing it from
bad thoughts, it is necessary to examine and observe everything with every
possible detail.
Fasting is the change of every part of
our life, because the sacrifice of the fast is not the abstinence but the
distancing from sins. Therefore, whoever limits the fast to the deprivation of
food, he is the one who, in reality, abhors and ridicules the fast. Are you
fasting? Show me your fast with your works. Which works? If you see someone who
is poor, show him mercy. If you see an enemy, reconcile with him. If you see a
friend who is becoming successful, do not be jealous of him! If you see a
beautiful woman on the street, pass her by.
In other words, not only should the
mouth fast, but the eyes and the legs and the arms and all the other parts of
the body should fast as well. Let the hands fast, remaining clean from stealing
and greediness. Let the legs fast, avoiding roads which lead to sinful sights.
Let the eyes fast by not fixing themselves on beautiful faces and by not
observing the beauty of others. You are not eating meat, are you? You should not
eat debauchery with your eyes as well. Let your hearing also fast. The fast of
hearing is not to accept bad talk against others and sly defamations.
Let the mouth fast from disgraceful and
abusive words, because, what gain is there when, on the one hand we avoid eating
chicken and fish and, on the other, we chew-up and consume our brothers? He who
condemns and blasphemes is as if he has eaten brotherly meat, as if he has
bitten into the flesh of his fellow man. It is because of this that Paul
frightened us, saying: “If you chew up and consume one another be careful that
you do not annihilate yourselves.”
You did not thrust your teeth into the
flesh (of your neighbor) but you thrusted bad talk in his soul; you wounded it
by spreading disfame, causing unestimatable damage both to yourself, to him, and
to many others.
If you cannot go without eating all day
because of an ailment of the body, beloved one, no logical man will be able to
criticize you for that. Besides, we have a Lord who is meek and loving
(philanthropic) and who does not ask for anything beyond our power. Because he
neither requires the abstinence from foods, neither that the fast take place for
the simple sake of fasting, neither is its aim that we remain with empty
stomachs, but that we fast to offer our entire selves to the dedication of
spiritual things, having distanced ourselves from secular things. If we
regulated our life with a sober mind and directed all of our interest toward
spiritual things, and if we ate as much as we needed to satisfy our necessary
needs and offered our entire lives to good works, we would not have any need of
the help rendered by the fast. But because human nature is indifferent and gives
itself over mostly to comforts and gratifications, for this reason the
philanthropic Lord, like a loving and caring father, devised the therapy of the
fast for us, so that our gratifications would be completely stopped and that our
worldly cares be transferred to spiritual works. So, if there are some who have
gathered here and who are hindered by somatic ailments and cannot remain without
food, I advise them to nullify the somatic ailment and not to deprive themselves
from this spiritual teaching, but to care for it even more.
For there exist, there really exist,
ways which are even more important than abstinence from food which can open the
gates which lead to God with boldness. He, therefore, who eats and cannot fast,
let him display richer almsgiving, let him pray more, let him have a more
intense desire to hear divine words. In this, our somatic illness is not a
hindrance. Let him become reconciled with his enemies, let him distance from his
soul every resentment. If he wants to accomplish these things, then he has done
the true fast, which is what the Lord asks of us more than anything else. It is
for this reason that he asks us to abstain from food, in order to place the
flesh in subjection to the fulfillment of his commandments, whereby curbing its
impetuousness. But if we are not about to offer to ourselves the help rendered
by the fast because of bodily illness and at the same time display greater
indifference, we will see ourselves in an unusual exaggerated way. For if the
fast does not help us when all the aforementioned accomplishments are missing so
much is the case when we display greater indifference because we cannot even use
the medicine of fasting. Since you have learned these things from us, I pardon
you, those who can, fast and you yourselves increase your acuteness and
praiseworthy desire as much as possible.
To the brothers, though, who cannot
fast because of bodily illness, encourage them not to abandon this spiritual
word, teaching them and passing on to them all the things we say here, showing
them that he who eats and drinks with moderation is not unworthy to hear these
things but he who is indifferent and slack. You should tell them the bold and
daring saying that “he who eats for the glory of the Lord eats and he who does
not eat for the glory of the Lord does not eat and pleases God.” For he who
fasts pleases God because he has the strength to endure the fatigue of the fast
and he that eats also pleases God because nothing of this sort can harm the
salvation of his soul, as long as he does not want it to. Because our
philanthropic God showed us so many ways by which we can, if we desire, take
part in God’s power that it is impossible to mention them all.
We have said enough about those who are
missing, being that we want to eliminate them from the excuse of shame. For they
should not be ashamed because food does not bring on shame but the act of some
wrongdoing. Sin is a great shame. If we commit it not only should we feel
ashamed but we should cover ourselves exactly the same way those who are wounded
do. Even then we should not forsake ourselves but rush to confession and
thanksgiving. We have such a Lord who asks nothing of us but to confess our
sins, after the commitment of a sin which was due to our indifference, and to
stop at that point and not to fall into the same one again. If we eat with
moderation we should never be ashamed, because the Creator gave us such a body
which cannot be supported in any other way except by receiving food. Let us only
stop excessive food because that attributes a great deal to the health and
well-being of the body.
Let us therefore in every way cast off every
destructive madness so that we may gain the goods which have been promised to us
in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ and the Father and the Holy Spirit. Amen.By St. John Chrysostom, extracted from his homilies “On Fasting”
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