Saturday, February 3, 2024

The Fundamentals of Fasting XIII

 Among the many fasts outlined in the Bible, the fast of intercession is one of the most misunderstood, ignored, and overlooked. There is no clearer example of an actual fast of intercession than Daniel. Yes, that Daniel, the one for whom the angels shut the mouths of the hungry lions. Although his experience in the lion’s den is more exciting by half, his reaction to having understood Jeremiah’s prophecy is more of a teachable moment.

Daniel 9:1-3, “In the first year of Darius the son of Ahasuerus, of the lineage of the Medes, who was made king over the realm of the Chaldeans – in the first year of his reign I, Daniel, understood by the books the number of the years specified by the word of the Lord through Jeremiah the prophet, that He would accomplish seventy years in the desolations of Jerusalem. Then I set my face toward the Lord God to make request by prayer and supplications, with fasting, sackcloth, and ashes.”

For those who prefer to stare at their navels rather than put their hand to the plow, for those who believe that just knowing what is to come exempts them from drawing close to the Lord, fasting, praying, and making requests by supplication, it would be time well spent to see what Daniel’s reaction was upon discovering that he understood the prophecy of Jeremiah the prophet.

Yes, it is easier to armchair quarterback and tell others how they’re not plowing right while sitting under the shade of a sycamore tree sipping on some lemonade, but it’s laborers that are few, not management, and it’s always been the case.

As an aside, Daniel wasn’t wasting his days away stargazing and dreaming of better tomorrows. He was studying the words of the prophets, meditating upon them, and waiting upon the Lord to give him light and discernment as to what they meant. Far too many people insist they know what the Bible says on a given topic without ever bothering to read it. What they really mean isn’t so much that they know what the Word has to say but what they would like it to say. Given that the little god mindset is still prevalent in mainstream Christianity, because they want the Word to say a certain thing, it is thus just by the power of their will and desire. I declare, therefore, it is thus!

Everyone’s a junior theologian, with a thousand and one quotes from their contemporaries about how this or that is no longer frowned upon, or at least shouldn’t be, but not a one from the Book, not one from the Scriptures. Rather than focusing on obeying the Word and doing their utmost to know and understand more of it, everyone seems obsessed with defending some pet sin and finding justification for some practice they’re trying their best to shield and protect.

People aren’t looking for truth; they’re looking for spiritual leaders willing to echo their feelings back to them and validate their proclivities. In exchange, those spiritual leaders will be well compensated because you can’t put a price on a numbed conscience. It’s also the reason so many shy away from reading the Bible. The Word will rebuke sin in one’s life. It will grate against the conscience and call to repentance because the Word can’t be bought and sold; it is and will remain until every jot and tittle is fulfilled.

The Lord had spoken, and Daniel had understood it. Seventy years was the cap on the desolation of Jerusalem. After seventy years, the people would return, the temple would be rebuilt, and that would be that. The word had been given, the prophecy recorded, and even understood by Daniel, so why not kick back, relax, enjoy the breeze, and wait for fulfillment?

It wasn’t a negative prophecy. It wasn’t a prophecy of judgment or destruction but of a future restoration Jeremiah prophesied, and Daniel was given to understand. It was good news, a word the Lord would surely bring to pass, yet Daniel came before the Lord in sackcloth, in fasting, and in prayer.

Even when God has spoken a thing, and you understand its timing, you are still expected to do the things you would do as a believer and as one who desires to draw ever closer to God. You can fast and pray for the fulfillment of a word just as readily as you can fast and pray that God might hold back from fulfilling a word. Either way, you are interceding on behalf of someone, whether a person, a city, or a nation.

The people of Nineveh fasted and prayed that God would show mercy and spare them from the judgment He had promised to unleash in forty days. Daniel fasted and prayed that the hearts of the kings and the people might be turned toward the plan and purpose of God and that they might not resist it when the time came for God to fulfill His promise of restoration. There is never not a good and proper time, situation, or circumstance to fast. There is never not a good and proper time, situation, or circumstance to pray. There is never not a time to seek the face of God, and make request by supplication Not demands; requests.

Many believers today have sidelined themselves, grown comfortable and slothful because they are fully convinced that any day now, they’ll part ways with this dreary place, and that will be that. They don’t consider that their duty and mandate as children of God is to be ever mindful that God sees His children's prayers, intercessions, fastings, and supplications. Just because I know my destination is fifty miles away doesn’t mean I stop driving, content in knowing the distance. Yes, Jesus is coming, but that doesn’t mean we don’t have to continue being His in spirit and truth just because we know He is returning.

It didn’t take the devil or persecution to sideline the church; it sidelined itself, and no one was the wiser. Even with the knowledge he possessed that the 70 years were almost complete, Daniel still fasted, prayed, and interceded on behalf of Israel.

With love in Christ,

Michael Boldea, Jr.  

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