I discovered that the ancient Church teaches just what the New Testament
teaches on the point, namely, that fasting is a salutary thing for us to
undertake. Jesus fasted and assumed that His followers would. "When ye fast," He said, not "if." Saint
Paul both practiced it and taught it. It seems to constitute a reminder to u
that our appetites are not all and that man shall not live by bread alone.
Furthermore, if we may believe the universal testimony of Christians who do
practice it, it also clarifies our spiritual vision somehow. Lastly, it is a
token of the Christian's renunciation of the world. There is no thing that a Christian will insist he must have at all costs.
Fasting supplies an elementary lesson here.
Lent asks us to ponder Christ's self-denial for us in the wilderness. It draws
us near to the mystery of Christ's bearing temptation for us in His flesh, and
of how in this Second Adam our flesh, which failed in Adam, now triumphs.
Lent also leads us slowly toward that most holy and dread of all events, the
Passion of Christ. What Christian will want to arrive at Holy Week with his
heart unexamined, full of foolishness, levity, and egoism? To those for whom
any special observances hint of legalism or superstition one can only bear
witness that the solemn sequence of Lent turns out to be something very
different from one's private attempts at meditating on the Passion. To move
through the disciplines in company with millions and millions of other
believers allover the world is a profoundly instructive thing.
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