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												QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON FASTINGQUESTION #78 -- I would like 
												to ask a few questions on the 
												subject of fasting: Should one 
												fast even when to do so is to 
												jeopardize the health? Does 
												fasting involve complete 
												abstinence from food and drink 
												(I have been told that the Jews 
												sometimes counted it fasting 
												when they yet used water and 
												simple food to keep up their 
												strength)? What is the teaching 
												of Isaiah 58 on fasting (does it 
												teach that blessings are to be 
												received on the condition of 
												fasting, or does it teach that 
												all forms are useless if the 
												heart is sinful)?
 ANSWER #78 -- No, I think one 
												should not fast to the detriment 
												of his health. Take a mother of 
												children whose daily toll taxes 
												her strength and her nerves: in 
												my judgment such a one should 
												confine herself to partial 
												abstinence, and not undertake 
												extended fasts. While people who 
												have no children and no great 
												drain upon the nervous system 
												can assume a standard of fasting 
												much more rigorous. Fasting was 
												and is of both kinds: full and 
												partial, and either kind is 
												good, and one or the other is 
												adapted to everyone. I would not 
												take Isaiah 58 for a stronghold 
												on fasting; for as you suggest 
												in your alternatives, the 
												thought there is that fasting 
												and all outward forms and 
												practices are mockery in the 
												absence of true holiness of 
												heart and righteousness of 
												conduct.
 
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 QUESTION #79 -- Please explain 
												Matthew 6:17: "But thou, when 
												thou fastest, anoint thine head, 
												and wash thy face."
 
 ANSWER #79 -- You should read 
												the following verse in 
												connection with this one. It 
												says, "That thou appear not unto 
												men to fast, but unto thy Father 
												which is in secret: and thy 
												Father, which seeth in secret, 
												shall reward thee openly." I 
												judge you are not troubled about 
												the literal side of this 
												commandment, for that part of it 
												was local and current, referring 
												only to the customary way of 
												indicating that you are prepared 
												for the usual duties of the day. 
												To us that would mean -- Well, 
												this is fast day with me. Yet I 
												got up this morning and shaved, 
												put on a clean collar, and have 
												made no appeal to anyone today 
												-- not even to the mentioning 
												that I am fasting. For I am not 
												fasting unto men but unto God. 
												That is what the text means to 
												me.
 
 * * *
 QUESTION #80 -- Please give some 
												suggestions regarding fasting. 
												How often should one fast, and 
												for how long?
 
 ANSWER #80 -- A thoughtful 
												minister said, "Fasting is to 
												the soul what sleep is to the 
												body." And if there is any truth 
												at all in this comparison, then 
												it seems that every Christian 
												should fast at least once a week 
												or oftener. There is only one 
												limit I would place on the 
												practice of fasting, and that is 
												that one should not carry it far 
												enough to jeopardize his health. 
												I have found fasting a very 
												great means of grace and an 
												assistant to my efforts to pray.
 
 * * *
 
 QUESTION #81 -- Is any good 
												accomplished by fasting one or 
												more meals a week or should we 
												wait until the Lord puts a fast 
												on us?
 
 ANSWER #81 -- There is advantage 
												in the regular and systematic 
												practice of fasting, just as 
												there is advantage in regular 
												and systematic Bible reading and 
												prayer. The fact that the 
												voluntary faster gets hungry in 
												no wise detracts from the 
												spiritual advantage of the 
												practice, and, like prayer, one 
												is much more likely to be 
												trusted with a fast from the 
												Lord if he is faithful in 
												observing fasting as a rule than 
												if he goes on without any 
												regularity in the matter.
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