Our progress to eternal life is continual. Each day we must remind ourselves of the glory of God and the bounty He has provided to us through His goodness and mercy. The world we live in has been freely given. The sun has been placed where it is for us. The moon has been put in such an exact position for us, that if it was bigger or smaller, closer or farther away, our entire existence would change and life would not be sustainable. If Earth was like other planets with their atmospheres or no atmosphere there would be no life and no order. There would be no up. There would be no down. Our whole existence is a precise calculation by God. There is a need for order. We could not exist with out it. If the celestial bodies that make life exist on this planet were not to obey the laws of physics (laws of God) there would be chaos.
In the beginning the word was with God and together created existence as we know it in six days (ages). Our days are based on the Earths rotations on its axis and which side faces the sun. What measures a day for God? We don't know. In Genesis we see God's first law. Adam and Eve were forbidden from eating of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good/Evil. We all know that food creates change in our bodies. Without it we can not live. Our minds and bodies become weak. Rational thought will leave you. It affects us like other drugs can affect us. Is it so outlandish to think that God could create a fruit that could permanently open our minds to greater thought? Man has created drugs that alter the mind. Of course those were made by imperfect beings and can cause a lot of damage to those who indulge. But a fruit, created by the Master Scientist would work exactly how intended.
God knew that man was created by corruptible material. He knew that Satan would tempt Eve and she would partake of that fruit. He knew that although the planets would follow His law without question, man, who He endowed with a portion of His spirit and given agency would, at some point, error. For order to exist there must be laws to follow. Otherwise: Chaos. Eve, not knowing the difference between good and evil before she ate, only knew God's law. Once she partook, she knew she had broken that law. God, who cannot lie, was bound to punish as He said He would. Despite her being ignorant, her disobedience caused the penalty of breaking the law to fall upon her: death. We know that Adam also partook.
God, in His infinite wisdom, knew what would take place and created a plan of salvation, because, being God, He loves His creations and wants happiness for them.
Jesus had to be a sacrifice. We know that Jesus was with God from the beginning. He and God created the earth and everything that is in it. Jesus is the God of this creation, but not God of the universe. He is the first and only begotten of the Father. God said "let US make man in OUR image". This is all in Genesis.
Jesus became the greatest sacrifice imaginable. Him who took part in our creation would come to die for our breaking of the law of God. We will all die, because of the transgression of Adam and Eve, but we will all live again, because of Jesus. He came endowed with so much of the Father's spirit; he was capable of living a perfect life (obeying the 10 commandments). He even showed us how to enter the Kingdom of the Father by doing those things necessary (baptism by water and the spirit, obedience).
Jesus was killed by his own and then returned to life by his Creator. He stayed a while and then returned. While he was here he was a teacher to many. When he was on the Earth, people flocked to him for learning and healing. When present during his ministry, the power of God was on Earth in the most concentrated amount possible. He did many things which were different than the Law of Moses. As he was not destroying but fulfilling the law, many had questions.
One of these is what I am here to discuss. It concerns fasting. You can find it in Matthew 9: 14-15, "Then came to him the disciples of John, saying, why do we and the Pharisees fast oft, but thy disciples fast not? 15 And Jesus said unto them, Can the children of the bride chamber mourn, as long as the bridegroom is with them? but the days will come, when the bridegroom shall be taken from them, and then shall they fast".
He mentions mourning in relation to fasting. During the time he was here, those who believed in him had a direct connection to God. There was no reason to mourn. There was no want. There was joy at his presence and his message. Not until after he was gone would the people have mourn and have need to fast.
The etymology of the word fast comes from the word fastan, which has evolved to mean "hold firmly", and then "firm control of oneself", to "holding to observance".
My view of fasting is as follows:
We eat to sustain life. Food makes us feel full and content. Being without food causes a bodily tribulation that can be endured. It's a sacrifice. Jesus gave his life as a sacrifice so that we can be with God. With proper mental preparedness (through prayer) we can become closer to God through fasting.
I'm going to make a connection here. The energy (power that moves us) we receive from food originates in the sun. Many times God is referred to as the Father of light. In all instances of God, Jesus, or angels appearing to humans it is written that He (or they) is surrounded by light. Light is also something that we use everyday, not only for energy, but also to transfer information. Anyone have high-speed internet connection? Do you know what fiber optic cables transmit? Light gives us life, it gives us vision, it gives us colors, and it lets us transfer information over millions of miles. Light has great utility and is pretty amazing.
I believe that fasting allows us to give up a tangible manifestation of God's power (in food) in order to receive His LIGHT in another way. Fasting allows us to give up something that we have physical proof sustains us and lets us sacrifice our dependency of that in order to find focus in another manifestation.
I challenge anyone reading this to pray regarding fasting. If you have a desire to learn more about truth (even a very small desire you wish to grow with in you), ask for God to give you truth and understanding as you give up the material manifestation of energy (food). This helps to remind us of all that we have and to follow in the example of Jesus.
Paul to the Colossians (1 Col 19-29) King James Version:
"19 For it pleased the Father that in him (Jesus) should all fulness dwell; 20 And, having made peace through the blood of his cross, by him to reconcile all things unto himself; by him, I say, whether they be things in earth, or things in heaven. 21 And you, that were sometime alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath he reconciled 22 In the body of his flesh through death, to present you holy and unblameable and unreproveable in his sight: 23 If ye continue in the faith grounded and settled, and be not moved away from the hope of the gospel, which ye have heard, and which was preached to every creature which is under heaven; whereof I Paul am made a minister; 24 Who now rejoice in my sufferings for you, and fill up that which is behind of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his body's sake, which is the church: 25 Whereof I am made a minister, according to the dispensation of God which is given to me for you, to fulfil the word of God; 26 Even the mystery which hath been hid from ages and from generations, but now is made manifest to his saints: 27 To whom God would make known what is the riches of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles; which is Christ in you, the hope of glory: 28 Whom we preach, warning every man, and teaching every man in all wisdom; that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus: 29 Whereunto I also labour, striving according to his working, which worketh in me mightily.
In order to truly appreciate the sacrifice Jesus made for each of us, I find it important to sacrifice in this life. To be without something we hold as a necessity allows us to appreciate how much we actually have been freely given.
Until I wrote everything up until this quote from Colossians, I did not understand how it applied to fasting. I have now found, through fasting; in order to write about fasting, that it is a similitude of the sacrifice Jesus made, of shedding our worldly concerns and deriving our sustenance from God. We give something in order to attain something, just as Jesus gave his life in order for all of us to receive life. Paul delights in his suffering because he knows that through his tribulations that are required of him by God, he will attain a greater reward after. He says he is “striving according to his working”, which, from my view, means Jesus’ example. He sacrificed the lesser (his mortal body) to attain something greater (immortality for all of us). It's a marvelous thing. So yes, we must fast, we must mourn, we must appreciate, but we must also rejoice that such a plan was set forth for us. Most of all, we must continue to remember who we are, why were are here, and what is ahead. Fasting will help you do that.