ChristianityTodayLibrary.com
Member Login  |  E-mail:  Password    Not a member?  Join now!
home
 Search:  browse by topicbrowse by publicationhelp

Seminary &
Grad School Guide
Search by Name
 

or use:
Advanced Search
to search by major, region, cost, affiliation, enrollment, more!


Member Services
My Account
Contact Us
Christianity TodayApril 2009


 ARTICLE TOOLS

Review
The Beauty of Fasting
It's a tangible, bodily thing.



Fasting: The Ancient Practices
by Scot McKnight
Thomas Nelson, February 2009
176 pp., $12.99



Here's the thing about fasting: You don't eat. The discipline is as humble and as ponderous as that, which is why, I suspect, we are oddly moved to do it. Scot McKnight's one-word title—Fasting (Thomas Nelson)—honors what is sacred; he adorns the word no more.

But for being such a straightforward discipline, our reason for practicing it still begs an explanation. What's really accomplished when we fast? Wouldn't it be better just to pray? Isn't it best to do all things, including eating, in moderation, so that we will have strength to serve? Who is going to be hurt if we don't fast? And who's going to be helped if we do? Isn't fasting an extreme ascetic practice made irrelevant by modern enlightened faith?

These are the questions that play around in my subconscious thought about 10 days into Lent. McKnight—a religious studies professor at North Park University, prolific blogger, and author of, among other books, The Jesus Creed—does not dismiss them, nor does he think so lowly of me as to assume these questions are no more than a front. He knows I don't need an apologetic for fasting as much as I need some pastoral reflection on an abstention I already crave.

"Fasting is a person's whole-body, natural response to life's sacred moments," he explains in the book's introduction. It's the "body talking what the spirit yearns, what the soul longs for, and what the mind knows to be true." Drawing from the example of the psalmist, McKnight points out that David's sadness was not "fully bloomed" until the body—clothed in sackcloth, and fasting—was involved. Turning forward to the prophet Isaiah, McKnight notes that far from being inwardly directed and pious, fasting is also the angry response to feckless greed: "Is not this the kind of fasting I have chosen: to loose the chains of injustice … to share your food with the hungry?" (Isa. 58:6–7).

Both examples highlight the strength of McKnight's appeal—which is also the appeal of Thomas Nelson's Ancient Practices Series, of which this book is a part. The supposition of the series is that we are hungry for the forsaken practices of the ancient church because we are hungry for our lost selves. How did the ancient church keep daily vigil with Christ before the empire of words and commerce began to out-shout the flesh? Do their practices hark back to an expression of the scriptural witness that we have lost? Who are we before Christ when the shopping mall closes down and the factory does too? These are the questions that lie at the heart of fasting.

McKnight uses some creative wordplay to engage these questions. "Fasting as Body Talk," he titles Chapter Two; "Fasting as Body Turning" Chapter Three; "Fasting as Body Plea" Chapter Four; and so on down the line. If the titles seem a bit gimmicky, at least their point is clear: The spiritual exercise of fasting presumes that we commune with God through our bodies. McKnight, responding to some classroom conversations he's had with students at North Park, thinks we have some catching up to do on this. But rather than make an example out of his students, he takes a jab at himself: "I think of my body as a wallflower but tend to act like it's a cornucopia, which means I'm overweight and don't care enough about it to do something radical like making a major lifestyle change."

McKnight's point isn't that he needs to cut back on carbs and head to the gym. His problem, he says, is not will power. His problem, he says, is that like many post-Enlightenment Protestant Christians, he has given little thought to his body's participation in discipline, worship, grieving, and repenting, and thereby has missed out on half the spiritual empathy of earthly existence.

More Than Will Power

This might be the finest feature of McKnight's book: he diminishes the role of will power in fasting, directing our attention instead to fasting's natural place in responsive spiritual living. To graph this idea, he offers a table—A á B á C—wherein A equals a sacred moment, B equals fasting, and C equals a result, be it forgiveness, hope, answers, or health. Often, he says, our approach to fasting is instrumental. We engage a fast (B) with a view toward results (C). McKnight reverses the direction of this table, suggesting that his study of biblical fasting shows that persons in Scripture fasted (B) in response to a divine encounter (A). "They were in B because of the grievous sacredness of A," McKnight says. Sometimes the fast yielded a result, but that was completely incidental to the spiritual pause that told their bodies this was a time to forgo food.

But here's where McKnight makes some big assumptions about his audience. He assumes that we are comfortable with undefined pauses and that we regularly grieve. Really, grievous is such a loaded word in McKnight's portrayal of fasting that I wonder why he doesn't reflect on it more. In his chapter titled "Fasting as Body Calendar," McKnight does give attention to the fact that evangelicals have largely done away with traditional Wednesday fasts, Friday fasts, and Lenten fasts because we "consider it something Catholics do … [and] we have been saved from such rituals." He uses this observation to counter that these fasts are not legalistic rituals but living reminders of our corporate identity in a story that centers on the Cross as much as it centers on the Resurrection.

But what's true about the liturgical calendar is only meant to reflect what's true about human existence: that we are seeds continually going into the ground to die so that our true identity in Christ might be born. Readers whose practical theology bypasses the uncomfortable passage of this waiting or this death, favoring instead a triumphant resolution or remedial approach to the problem, might not have a category for fasting as a natural bodily companion in the Christian life.

Or do we? McKnight's one-word title gives us the benefit of the doubt. Western Christianity is sated, he seems to suggest; perhaps we are positioned to welcome a grievous cutting back. McKnight calls on the witness of Scripture, church tradition, and such contemporary voices as John Piper to recommend this bodily engagement as a spiritual aid that can restore us.

Marcy Hintz, a staff member at Church of the Resurrection in Glen Ellyn, Illinois, works in the advancement office at Wheaton College.



Related Elsewhere:

Fasting: The Ancient Practices is available at ChristianBook.com and other book retailers.

Christianity Today also has more book reviews.



Christianity Today
Try 3 Issues of Christianity Today RISK-FREE!

Name
Street Address
City/State/Zip
E-mail Address

No credit card required. Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Offer valid in U.S. only. Click here for International orders.

If you decide you want to keep Christianity Today coming, honor your invoice for just $19.95 and receive nine more issues, a full year in all. If not, simply write "cancel" across the invoice and return it. The trial issue is yours to keep, regardless.

Buy 1 gift subscription, get 1 FREE!

Subscribe to the FREE CT Newsletters
Get CT headlines direct to your mailbox!

CTDirect (daily)
CTWeekly


   RSS Feed   RSS Help


Subscribe!

Subscribe to Christianity Today
Risk-free trial issue

Give a gift subscription


Shopping
ChristianBook.com
  Books|Music|Videos|Gifts

Bible Studies
Christian History
Leadership Training
Small Group Resources

Featured Items




Subscribe to CTDirect
Get CT headlines in your mailbox every day!


ChristianityToday.com
Magazines:
Books & Culture
Christianity Today
Church Law & Tax Report
Church Finance Today
Leadership Journal
Men of Integrity
Your Church
ChristianityTodayLibrary.com
Resources:
BuildingChurchLeaders.com
ChristianBibleStudies.com
Christian College Guide
ChristianHistory.net
Christian Music Today
Christianity Today Movies

Church Products & Services
Church Safety
PreachingToday.com
PreachingTodaySermons.com
Seminary/Grad School Guide


Christianity Today International
www.ChristianityToday.com
Copyright © 2010 Christianity Today International
Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Advertise with Us