Sermon on the Mount: Fasting and the Way of Jesus
Notes
Transcript
Matthew 6:16-18
Fasting and the Way of Jesus
Introduction: If you’re joining us for the first time - Welcome. We’re
currently teaching through Jesus’ most famous teaching known as the
Sermon on the mount.
Contrary to what some may think the Sermon on the Mount is not teaching
us how to get into the kingdom of God- the Bible makes it clear that
entrance to God’s kingdom is only through grace - by the sacrificial work
of Jesus.
The sermon is also not teaching us how we stay in the kingdom. Rather it
is a description of the character and conduct of those who already belong
to God’s kingdom.
The Sermon is not a call to repentance, though that may be involved at
times, it is a description of the expression and evidences of true
repentance.
Though anyone can listen and learn from this sermon, and respond to it’s
offer of the fulness of life, it's primary audience and focus is the disciple of
Jesus. It describes the life that necessarily results from genuine salvation;
it describes what God is doing in us and wants to do in us. What he is
making us into by the work of his spirit and grace upon us.
This sermon of Jesus has been used for centuries to shape and form
God’s people into the way of Jesus and we are believing that this is what
God will do with us as well.
This morning we're gonna talk about some deep level spiritual disciplines.
I hope that it is received as an invitation from Jesus, to enter into his heart
and love for the world. Throughout our teaching on the Sermon on the
Mount we have seen how Jesus is aiming at our hearts. He doesn’t just
want to give new rules or renewed laws for his people. He is giving us
practices, habits, new desires and hopes, a new way of being in order to
make us into a certain type of people - Kingdom of God people.
The Spiritual Disciplines contained in the Sermon on the Mount forgiveness, mercy, righteousness, justice, charity, prayer and fasting,
etc. are absolutely vital for the Christian in order to renew our hope,
refresh our faith and reorder our loves toward our king and his
kingdom. And absolutely necessary for shaping us into the people
God intends us to be.
This morning we are talking about Fasting.
Have you ever done a fast?
I’m not talking about an internet, social media, or sugar fast.. that’s giving
up something for health reasons, it might be good for you, but that’s not
really fasting.
1. What is Fasting?
1. In Christian tradition - we fast in order to gain some benefit - this
might be personal discipline, spiritual growth, victory over a certain
sin, and a greater chance at getting our prayers answered because
God sees how serious we are - we skipped breakfast…
2. My understanding growing up, though I honestly didn’t give much
thought to it, was that fasting was in some sense a way to put God
in your debt - you gave something up - he owes you an answered
prayer or something..
1. The crazy thing I found is that you can’t find anything close
to this teaching in the Bible..
2. True Fasting
1. In scripture what we find is that fasting is a whole body response to
human grief and serious conditions. In Jewish tradition it was done
during times of national crisis such as drought, famine, destructive
earthquakes, crop disease, military attack or attack from wild
predators.
2. “Fasting means a human being refrains from food or drink, or both,
for a limited time in response to some sacred, grievous moment.
Such sacred or grievous moments include death, the threat of war,
sin, our neediness, or our fear of God’s judgment on our sin,
(whether personal or national)….The focus of the Bible on fasting is
not what we get from fasting or on motivating people to fast in order
to acquire something, but instead lands squarely on responding to
sacred moments in life." - Scot McKnight, Sermon on the Mount
1. Think about that for a moment… Have you ever been hit by
something so heavy (The death of a loved one, news of cancer,
family tragedy, a wayward child, 9/11, mass shooting) but the
moment you were in didn’t allow for you to physically enter into
the the grief that your heart and your head felt? Maybe the
person or people connected we’re far removed from you? Maybe
you couldn’t spend the whole day talking to God about it?
3. Fasting is the way we act in solidarity, and true sympathy with the
sufferings of the world around us. Not only that but fasting enters
into how the God of the Bible thinks and feels about death, sin, war,
violence and injustice… - one example - Think about Jesus weeping
at the tomb of Lazarus..
4. In the Bible we really have three major ideas that emerge about
fasting.
1. Fasting is connected to Yom Kippur - The Day of Atonement. The
Israelites prepared for confession, atonement, and forgiveness
for themselves and for their nation (Leviticus 16:29-31; 23:26-32)
1. On this day they were grieving their sin the term used in the
Hebrew word “Anah” - it means to deny or humble yourself food, drink -sustenance and what delights, while looking to
Yahweh for forgiveness, redemption and ultimately the
restoration of all things.
2. Fasting also includes a response to a grievous event. Listen to
how David responded when tragedy hit not his friend but his
enemy, “Ruthless witnesses come forward; they question me
on things I know nothing about. They repay me evil for
good and leave me like one bereaved. Yet when they were ill,
I put on sackcloth and humbled (Anah) myself with
fasting. When my prayers returned to me unanswered, I went
about mourning as though for my friend or brother. I bowed
my head in grief as though weeping for my mother.” -Psalm
35:11-14
3. Lastly, in Isaiah 58, the Israelites are fasting while simultaneously
oppressing the weak, the poor, and the the destitute among them
- total and utter hypocrisy since fasting is a mourning and
grieving sin and unrighteousness. The prophet connects true
fasting to doing justice, caring for the poor, and providing for the
hungry.
1. When taking all 3 of these together we see that fasting is
directly related to mourning and grieving sin, the brokenness
of the world -the lack of righteousness, justice and peace, the
hurt of others and looking toward Yahweh in longing for
forgiveness, healing and redemption.
3. Should Christians today Fast?
1. Short answer - Yes
2. Long answer - just like in charity and prayer - Jesus says “When
you fast or whenever you fast”. It is assumed by Jesus that his
people will fast.
3. But Jesus warns us that when we fast - we aren’t to make a show of
it - it shouldn’t be done to draw attention to ourselves, to get people
to notice how “spiritual” we are, or “closer to God” we are than
others. In Jesus’ day there were appointed mourners and people
who would fast for the sins of the nation of Israel - if they had a
good rain and good crop that year this would bring fame and
recognition to these mourning and fasting individuals. -God saw
their fasting and rewarded them = “super holy”. Which brings on
Jesus’ criticism of doing it in such a way -(disheveled hair, ripped
clothes, dust on your head) for others to notice. I know - it seems so
weird to us, and to our context - but so it was.
4. By and large I don’t think we have a problem with fasting (at all, or)
in order for people to notice our personal piety… but this is what I
have seen - so I’ll address it. I have seen people in the church make
the pain, grief and tragedy of others an opportunity for personal
attention - rather than entering into true solidarity and sympathy
with others, praying and physically supporting someone in their
tragedy.. they make the whole thing about them… An opportunity to
pontificate their theological stance on suffering and sovereignty…An
opportunity for people to know that they stand for this or that
cause… that they care about injustice…You love other people’s
drama because it’s an opportunity for recognition for you to talk
about how it affects you….. someone else’s tragedy is not an
opportunity for your virtue-signaling.
1. We must be very careful of this. And this is why what Jesus
teaches us is so powerful - if you feel for the pain of others, if you
hurt for the suffering of the world, rather than looking for a soap
box or opportunity to make it known, to blow a horn for
recognition - enter into silent solidarity through fasting - show
your pain to God, do it before him… And he who sees in secret
will reward you.. Healing, restoration, redemption - the
Kingdom??
4. What does true fasting look like for the follower of Jesus?
1. If we go back and take the 3 main ideas from scripture (Mourning
personal and national sin, entering into the pain and sorrow of
others, fasting as a connection to righteousness and justice) I
believe it really connects back to Jesus' teaching on those who
mourn and those who hunger and thirst for righteousness…
1. As God’s kingdom people Jesus is calling us to be those who
would stand in the gap, between our God of redemption and
Resurrection Hope and Power and the suffering, hurting, broken
world. He is calling us to be those who would stand in solidarity
with the sufferers of our world - even as Jesus identified with the
lowly, the weak, the poor, the outcast, the oppressed of his
day. As we mourn, as we fast, in solidarity with the world we
cultivate within ourselves the heart of God and we grow a deep
longing, a hunger and a thirst for his kingdom and his
righteousness.
2. I think a good analogy is connecting Fasting to Advent - in
observing Advent the Church thinks and reflects back to the
longing of the people of God as they awaited God’s kingdom and
his King, while living under the tyranny, brutality and oppression
of the Roman Empire. Think of the song, O Come O Come
Emmanuel…. “O Come thou dayspring come and cheer our
spirits by thine advent here - dispel the gloomy clouds of night
and death’s dark shadow put to flight” - all of this reflecting,
creates incredible sympathy and of empathy in us and a renewed
hope and longing for us - so then we can sing out - REJOICE,
REJOICE, EMMANUEL SHALL COME TO THEE O ISRAEL! We
feel with Israel, we feel their pain and their longing…
3. Fasting creates a great longing in us for the arrival of the true
King. We enter into the pain and suffering of our world, we enter
the sacred, grievous moments of life while looking with greater
longing, with groaning’s and great ache to the ONE who will
make all things new. Looking to the Great High Priest, Jesus,
who did in fact stand in the gap between the God of redemption
and the pain and suffering of the world.
1. Listen to Paul - “For I consider that the sufferings of this
present time are not worth comparing with the glory that
is to be revealed to us. For the creation waits with eager
longing for the revealing of the sons of God. For the
creation was subjected to futility, not willingly, but
because of him who subjected it, in hope that the creation
itself will be set free from its bondage to corruption and
obtain the freedom of the glory of the children of God. For
we know that the whole creation has been groaning
together in the pains of childbirth until now. And not only
the creation, but we ourselves, who have the first-fruits of
the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for adoption
as sons, the redemption of our bodies.” -Romans 8:18-23
5. Closing: Let’s talk personally for a minute - Some of us aren’t even
willing to go there, and honestly I get it. who wants to look at this stuff
-it’s heart breaking. We don’t want to face the evil and suffering of the
world, we don’t want to face our own darkness, and selfishness.. it’s
too bleak, it’s too hopeless for us, it hurts too much!! So we ignore it,
we avoid it, we stay on the surface in relationships and conversations,
we distract ourselves with humor, new purchases and vacations. Most
of us live lives in safe neighborhoods where danger does not come to
our door - we are cut off, removed from the real world of pain and
suffering.
1. I have 4 reasons, for us, and especially those I just mentioned,
why we need fasting in our regular rhythm of following Jesus:
1. First - Because this is what Jesus has done for us - Jesus
didn’t just deny his hungry stomach or his thirsty mouth in
solidarity with the world - Jesus gave his body as food for the
life of the world as he says, in John 6:51, "I am the living
bread that came down from heaven. Whoever eats this
bread will live forever. This bread is my flesh, which I will
give for the life of the world.”
1. Jesus stood in the gap. He didn’t just sympathize with our
pain, he took it upon himself - he entered into the pain and
suffering of the world, he took all upon himself and there on
the cross he bore all our sickness and our sorrow, in order
to redeem us and bring us into the kingdom of God. This is
what Jesus has done for you and in fasting he gives you
and I very tangible and practical way to be with him, and to
become more like him - in his heart, compassion and love
for a suffering world.
1. John Stott paints a vivid picture of the empathy of our
God when he writes,“I have entered many Buddhist
temples in different asian countries and stood
respectfully before the statue of Buddha his legs
crossed, arms folded, eyes closed, the ghost of a smile
playing round his mouth, a remote look on his face,
detached from the agonies of the world.’ But each time
after a while I have had to turn away. And in my
imagination I have turned instead to that lonely, twisted,
tortured figure on the cross, nails through hands and
feet, back lacerated, limbs wrenched, brow bleeding
from thorn pricks, mouth dry and intolerably thirsty,
plunged in God forsaken darkness. That is the God for
me! He laid aside his immunity to pain. He entered our
world of flesh and blood, tears and death. He suffered
for us.” “The cross of Christ is God’s only self
justification in such a world as ours.” -John Stott, The
Cross of Christ
1. That’s Our God, and we are his people. The Gospel
shapes us into people who do for others what God
has done for us. He entered into our pain, we enter
into theirs and so become like our King..
2. Second - If we ignore the pain and suffering of the world
around us, we will be unprepared when tragedy hits us, and it
will. We will stunt our maturity and growth as humans and our
ability to care for others in rich and meaningful ways. Fasting
prepares us for action.
3. Third - if you turn your heart off to the pain and suffering of
the world, toward sympathy, if you just ignore it - your heart
won’t just remain the same, it will grow hard as stone.
1. “To love at all is to be vulnerable. Love anything, and your
heart will certainly be wrung and possibly be broken. If you
want to make sure of keeping it intact, you must give your
heart to no one, not even to an animal. Wrap it carefully
round with hobbies and little luxuries; avoid all
entanglements; lock it up safe in the casket or coffin of your
selfishness. But in that casket - safe, dark, motionless,
airless - it will change. It will not be broken; it will become
unbreakable, impenetrable, irredeemable. The alternative to
tragedy , or at least to the risk of tragedy, is damnation. The
only place outside heaven where you can be perfectly safe
from all the danger and perturbations of love is hell." - C.S.
Lewis, The Four Loves.
4. Lastly - we will never learn to look to God, to hunger and
thirst for righteousness, and justice, for hope and
redemption….Fasting shapes and refines our hope.
The Spiritual Disciplines contained in the Sermon on the Mount forgiveness, mercy, righteousness, justice, charity, prayer and fasting,
etc. are absolutely vital for the Christian in order to renew our hope,
refresh our faith and reorder our loves toward our king and his
kingdom. They are needed and necessary for shaping us into the
people God intends us to be.