Fasting
is a voluntary act of abandoning
worldly life. It is a sign of
man’s obedience to, and respect
of God’s laws and his observance
of God’s offices by his
voluntary abstinence from food
or drink for a specific period
of time, by the end of which he
can eat light, small and fat
free meals, consisting of
cereals, beans fruits and
vegetable oils. A fasting person
refrains from eating meat and
animal products except for fish
and all seafood and honey
because bees are insects with no
fleshly lust.
Grades
Scholar Bar Hebraeus (+1286)
states:
“Fasting has three degrees:
General, special and exclusive.
One may practice general fasting
by refraining completely from
eating or drinking during
daytime and in the evening one
eats cereals and beans or one
might practice it by refraining
from eating meat and animal
products during the day. This
type of fasting has its own laws
and regulations, for so many
people might refrain from eating
without the intention of
practicing fasting and as such
they would not be considered as
keeping this office.
Special fasting is that type
practiced by recluses.
Exclusive fasting is that
practiced by the perfect ones,
who couple their abstinence from
having food and indulgence of
senses with purification of soul
and by holding themselves back
from evil thoughts: The only
condition requested for such a
type of fasting is the
eradication of every mundane
thought that might exist deep
down one’s heart. Although this
grade of fasting is so difficult
to attain, yet it can be
attained so easily through
training as the saying goes:
Of our desires the masters we
are. With the least granted,
they might be content.
Objectives
The main objectives of fasting
are the weakening of the lust of
the flesh, training the will to
control whims and giving the
spirit the precious opportunity
to transcend mundane desires and
be elevated above worldly
desires into heavenly thoughts
for attaining purification, and
being cleansed and becoming able
to express the spirit’s love of
God, Almighty manifesting thus
its preference of spiritual life
to physical one, making the
spirit triumphant over the
flesh.
The Apostle Paul says in this
context:
" This I say then, Walk in the
Spirit, and ye shall not fulfill
the lust of the flesh. For the
flesh lusteth against the
Spirit, and the Spirit against
the flesh: and these are
contrary the one to the other:
so that ye cannot do the things
that ye would". (Gal.5: 16,17).
Apostle Paul says also.
“For if ye live after the flesh,
ye shall die: but if ye through
the Spirit do mortify the deeds
of the body, ye shall live”.
(Rom.8: 13). The psalmist says:
“I humbled my soul with fasting”
(Ps. 35:13). Humbling the soul
is the mourning mentioned by the
Lord when defining fasting to
the disciples of John saying:
“Can the children of the bride
chamber mourn, as long as the
bridegroom is with them?” (Matt.
9:15). Humbleness and mourning
are one and the same thing,
which is the evident sign of
true Repentance – the ultimate
goal of fasting- and one of the
conditions of true fasting
deemed acceptable to God.
It is not only the body that
fasts by abstaining from food or
drink or some of it, but the
soul as well, which keeps away
from sin. Both flesh and soul
avoid the motives leading to it.
This can be deduced from the
Lord’s command in the month of
Prophet Joel who says:
“Turn ye even to me with all
your heart, and with fasting,
and with weeping, and with
mourning: And rend your heart,
and not your garments, and turn
unto the Lord your God: for he
is gracious and merciful” (Joel
2:12).
Exemption from Fasting
Fasting is enjoined on the
faithful who are adults and
healthy. The elderly, children,
babies, sick people, nursing,
postpartum and pregnant women
are necessarily exempted.
Fasting in the Old
Testament
God Almighty, enjoined the first
man to fast when he commanded
him in the Garden of Eden saying
“Of every tree of the garden
thou mayest freely eat: But of
the tree of the knowledge of
good and evil, thou shalt not
eat of it: for in the day that
thou eatest thereof thou shalt
surely die”. (Gen. 16:17).
Adam’s failure to keep God’s
command and obey him by
abstaining from eating from the
forbidden fruit resulted in his
expulsion from the Garden of
Eden and in being sent to the
land of suffering and torment.
Needless to say that the food of
the first man was free of meat
and limited to cereals beans and
fruits in the Garden of Eden.
This is supported by God’s
address to Adam and Eve. “Behold
I have given you every herb
bearing seed, to you it shall be
for meat”. (Gen. 1:29). It was
only after the flood that God
permitted man, represented by
Noah, to eat meat. (Gen. 9:3).
Patriarchs of the Old Testament,
Prophets, the righteous and the
pious observed fasting with the
aim of gaining God’s favor
through faith and good deeds.
According to the Holy Book and
before the tenor of God’s
Commandments, Moses did neither
eat bread, nor drink water for
forty days. (Ex. 34:28).
It is also reported by Prophet
Elijah that in fulfillment of
God’s Command, he " did eat and
drink, and went in the strength
of that meat forty days and
forty nights unto Horeb the
mount of God" (1 kings 19:8).
Prophet Daniel abstained from
eating meat and drinking wine
saying “I ate no pleasant bread,
neither came flesh nor wine in
my mouth” (Dan.10: 2-3). Based
on the story of Daniel and his
friends we know that they ate
just pulse and refused to defile
themselves with the portion of
the king’s meat. (Dan. 1:8-17)
and as such set a model for
those who eat only seeds, beans
And fruits while fasting. God
commanded Prophet Ezekiel.
“Take thou also unto thee wheat,
and barley, and beans, and
lentils, and millet, and
fitches, and put them in one
vessel, and make thee bread
thereof, according to the number
of the days that thou shalt lie
upon thy side, three hundred and
ninety days shalt thou eat
thereof. And thy meat which thou
shalt eat shall be by weight,
thou shall drink also water by
measure”. (Ezek 4:9).
Fasting for Repentance
When Prophet Jonah warned the
people of Nineveh according to
the word of the Lord saying:
" Yet forty days, and Nineveh
shall be overthrown. So the
people of Nineveh believed God,
and proclaimed a fast, and put
on sackcloth, from the greatest
of them even to the least of
them. For word came unto the
king of Nineveh, and he arose
from his throne and he laid his
robe from him, and covered him
with sackcloth, and sat in
ashes. And he caused it to be
proclaimed and published through
Nineveh by the decree of the
king and his nobles, saying, Let
neither man nor beast, herd nor
flock, taste anything: let them
not feed, nor drink water: But
let man and beast be covered
with sackcloth, and cry mightily
unto God: yea, let them turn
everyone from his evil way, and
from the violence that is in
their hands. Who can tell if God
will turn and repent, and turn
away from his fierce anger, that
we perish not? And God saw their
works, that they turned from
their evil way; and God repented
of the evil, that he had said
that he would do unto them; and
he did it not. (Jon 3:1-10).
Canonical Fasts
The people of Israel observed
fasting throughout their
generations especially with the
aim of repentance and turning
back to God. God enjoined fasts
on them on diverse occasions,
through His Prophets and Saints
according to the book of
Leviticus where the Lord says:
“And this shall be a statute for
ever unto you: that in the
seventh month, on the tenth day
of the month, ye shall afflict
your souls, and do no work at
all, whether it be one of your
own country, or a stranger that
sojourneth among you: For on
that day shall the priest make
an atonement for you, to cleanse
you, that ye may be clean from
all your sins before the Lord”
(Lev.16: 29-30). And in the Book
of Prophet Zecharia the Lord
says:
“The fast of the fourth month,
and the fast of the fifth, and
the fast of the seventh, and the
fast of the tenth, shall be to
the house of Judah joy and
gladness, and cheerful feasts;
therefore love the truth and
peace”. (Zec. 8:19).
True Fasting Coupled
With Mercy
The concept of true fasting
accepted by God in the Old
Testament can be illustrated by
God through prophet Isiah’s
words:
“Is not this the fast that I
have chosen? to loose the bands
of wickedness, to undo the heavy
burdens, and to let the
oppressed go free, and that ye
break every yoke ? Is it not to
deal thy bread to the hungry,
and that thou bring the poor
that are cast out to thy house?
When thou seest the naked, that
thou cover him; and that thou
hide not thyself from thine own
flesh? (IS.58: 6-7).
Fasting Twice a Week
Lord Jesus’ parable of the
Pharisee and Publican
illustrates that a good Jew
fasts on Monday and Thursday
every week (Luke 18:10-14).
Patriarchs Enjoin Fasts
At times of crises Patriarchs of
the Old Testament enjoined fasts
on their people as did Ezra who
said: “Then I proclaimed a fast
there, at the river of Ahava,
that we might afflict ourselves
before our God, to seek of him a
right way for us, and for our
little ones, and for all our
substance…So we fasted and
besought our God for this: and
he was entreated of us”. (Ezra
8:21-23). The Holy Book also
reports that a seven-day fast
was enjoined on the children of
Israel as a sign of mourning for
the death of King Saul and his
sons (1Sam 31-13).
Special Fasts
David, the Prophet fasted and
afflicted himself before God in
hope that his son might be cured
(2 Sam. 2:21). Just like David,
special fasts were enjoined now
and then by individuals and
groups on themselves voluntarily
in quest of God’s mercy on them
and for delivering them from
temptations.
Fasting in Christianity
In the New Testament, it was
Lord Jesus who set the law of
fasting in Christianity when he
fasted forty days and forty
nights (Matt 4:2).
“He did eat nothing: and when
they were ended, he afterward
hungered”. (Luke 4:2).
Lord Jesus was not in need for
fasting. He fasted to set us an
example. He enjoined fasting on
us to demonstrate to us its
powerful spiritual impact
especially when coupled with
prayer. Fasting coupled with
prayer will, therefore, be an
effective spiritual weapon that
will destroy Satan and his
troops, our spiritual enemies.
The Lord revealed this to us
when He said:
“Howbeit this kind goeth not out
but by prayer and fasting”.
(Matt 17-21).
The Lord said in answer to the
question of John’s disciples,
who wondered why his disciples
did not fast, “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 in those days”. (Matt.
9:14,15 Luke 5:35).
The Lord’s words were deemed as
an authorization, he vested his
disciples with, to set dates of
fasting. Accordingly the Holy
Apostles and the righteous
disciples started fasting after
the Lord’s ascension to heaven.
They fasted on diverse occasions
and in different ways. In “The
Acts of the Apostles” we read
the following about them:
“As they ministered to the Lord,
and fasted, the Holy Ghost said,
Separate me Barnabas and Saul
for the work whereunto I have
called them. And when they had
fasted and prayed, and laid
their hands on them, they sent
them away” (Acts 13:2,3).
The Apostle Paul prides himself
on keeping the practice of
fasting by saying:
“But in all things approving
ourselves as the ministers of
God, in labors, in watchings, in
fastings”. (2 Cor. 6:4-5).
Lord Jesus, who authorized his
Holy Apostles to practice
fasting when the heavenly
bridegroom shall be taken away,
that is after His ascension,
Glory be to him, to heaven, did
also authorize them, by the
inspiration of His Holy Ghost,
to consecrate Sunday instead of
Jewish Saturday and to elect
bishops, priests and deacons. He
also authorized them to set the
rites of their ordination, that
is their consecration by laying
hands on them.
In addition to that His Holy
Spirit, which poured out on them
at Pentecost, inspired them to
arrange the rites and do the
service of His Holy Sacraments,
that are necessary for the
economy of His Church.
The Lord had illustrated the
best way practiced in the
fasting approved by God.
He warned His disciples saying:
“when ye fast, be not as the
hypocrites, of a sad
countenance: for they disfigure
their faces, that they may
appear unto men to fast. Verily
I say unto you, They have their
reward. But thou, when thou
fastest, anoint thine head, and
wash thy face; 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”. (Matt. 6:16-18).
Jesus Christ instituted the
principle of fasting and praying
and vested the church with
authority to regulate dates and
times convenient for the
believers to practice them.
“When ye fast” is a reference of
the Lord to fasting prescribed
under the law. The Lord does not
mean by that that one has the
full freedom to adhere to the
practice of fasting or to refuse
it, otherwise His words “When
thou prayest” (Matt 6:5) would
have meant that one is free to
be committed to praying or not
and that there should be no
places for worship, no
congregational prayer, no call
for prayer or specific hours for
praying.
Special fasts are those enjoined
by man on himself as for
strengthening his piety in
exactly the same way he says his
individual private prayer for
himself.
In his Epistle to the
Colossians, Apostle Paul said:
“Let no man therefore judge you
in meat, or in drink, or in
respect of a holyday, or of the
new moon, or of the Sabbath
days: Which are a shadow of
things to come; but the body is
of Christ.
Let no man beguile you of your
reward in a voluntary humility
and worshiping of angels,
intruding into those things
which he hath not seen, vainly
puffed up by his fleshly mind”
(Col. 2:16-18).
The Apostle Paul does warn the
believers against the shadows of
Jews and against a group of
converts into Christianity who
were still adherent to Jewish
principles and who did not
recognize the decision of the
first Jerusalem Council held in
AD 51 which declared that the
believers need not be committed
to Circumcision or any other
Jewish principles. He focused on
“abstaining from pollutions of
idols, and from fornication and
from things strangled, and from
blood”. (Acts 15:20)
The Apostle Paul, while
commending married couples to
keep spousal rights, stated that
the married couples should not
copulate during fasting days,
saying"
“Defraud ye not one the other,
except it be with consent for a
time, that ye may give
yourselves to fasting and
prayer; and come together again,
that Satan tempt you not for
your incontinency” (1 Cor. 7:5).
Some people object to practicing
fasting arguing that fasting is
against the Lord’s will who
says:
“Not that which goeth into the
mouth defileth a man; but that
which cometh out of the mouth,
this defileth a man”. (Matt.
15:11).
It is quite clear that the Lord
does not mean to say that we
should not fast, for He is the
one who set us the example of
true fasting which is approved
by God. In fact He aimed at
refuting the objections of the
Pharisees when they beheld the
Lord’s disciples eating without
washing their hands according to
the Pharisees ritual rinsing
which they consider as
compulsory for cleansing man
before eating. No matter how
clean one’s hands might be one
shall have to practice these
formality rites in order to be
cleansed. They also had their
own special way of washing food,
which would be considered
defiled if this ritualistic way
of washing was not applied.
Lord Jesus refuted their void
views and showed them the
importance of purity of the
heart saying:
“Not that which goeth into the
mouth defileth a man; but that
which comes out of the mouth
that defileth a man (Matt.15:
11). This means that it’s the
sinful thoughts and filthy words
that come out of the heart of a
sinful man that defile man.
Fasting, therefore, is a divine
prescription and a heavenly
providence practiced by the Lord
Jesus himself, who taught us to
adhere to it. He vested his Holy
Apostles with authority to set
dates for it and illustrate ways
of practicing it through which
the believers can best express
their faith in God, their
adherence to his offices and
their preference of soul to the
body and angelic life to worldly
materialistic life.
Order of Fasts in the
New Testament
The Lord Jesus
instituted the Law of Fasting,
which was handed over to the
Apostles as a Spiritual
Principle. Setting occasions of
Fasting, duration and the way of
practicing it, were all
entrusted to the church to be in
charge of based on the spiritual
authority the Lord has given to
church when he addressed His
Holy Apostles saying:
“He that heareth you hearth me;
and He that despiseth you
despiseth me; and he that
despiseth me despiseth him that
sent me” (Luke 10:16); and when
He said:
“Moreover if thy brother shall
trespass against thee, go and
tell him his fault between thee
and him alone; if he shall hear
thee, thou hast gained thy
brother. But if he will not hear
thee, then take with thee one or
two more, that in the mouth of
two or three witnesses every
word may be established. And if
he shall neglect to hear them,
tell it unto the church: but if
he neglect to hear the church,
let him be unto thee as a
heathen man and a publican.
Verily I say unto you,
Whatsoever, ye shall bind on
earth shall be bound in heaven:
and whatsoever ye shall loose on
earth shall be loosed in
heaven". (Matt 18:15-18).
Glory be to the Lord who said to
St. Peter the chief of the
Apostles:
“And I will give unto thee the
keys of the kingdom of heaven:
and whatsoever thou shalt bind
on earth shall be bound in
heaven: and whatsoever thou
shalt loose on earth shall be
loosed in heaven.” (Matt.
16:19).
By virtue of this spiritual
authority vested in the church
by the Lord, General Canonical
fasts were arranged, to which
people and clergy were obliged
to be committed. They were held
sinful if they refused to abide
by them, because listening to
the commands of the church means
obeying God, and rebellion
against Church’s Commands is
deemed a rebellion against the
Lord.
Ever since the dawn of
Christianity both clergy and
laity practiced fasting which
means abstinence from food or
drink for a period of time set
by the church. It also means
abstinence from eating meat and
animal products afterwards
during fasting. All Apostolic
Churches all over the world have
agreed to sanctify the
principles of fasting and have
always considered it a divine
prescription and a Holy office.
Easter Fast
The first fast instituted by the
church is Easter fast. It is
also called passions Fast, in
which the believers abstain from
eating and drinking from Good
Friday, the Commemoration day of
the Lord’s passions, his
Crucifixion, and death, through
the dawn of Resurrection Sunday
in sympathy with the enlivening
passions undergone by our Lord
Jesus Christ for our sake and
for the salvation of humanity in
fulfillment of St. Paul’s words:
“Know ye not, that so many of us
as were baptized into Jesus
Christ were baptized into his
death? Therefore we are buried
with him by baptism into death:
that like as Christ was raised
up from the dead by the glory of
the Father, even so we also
should
walk in newness of life. For if
we have been planted together in
the likeness of his death, we
shall be also in the likeness of
his resurrection”. (Rom.6: 3,4).
The church used to practice this
fast and celebrate the
Commemoration of Lord Jesus’
Passions and His Resurrection
once every thirty-three years.
The church, however, started
celebrating this fast annually
due to the fact that a lot of
people were born and died
without having the chance of
witnessing this Commemorative
Celebration.
In the long run four days were
added to the beginning of this
fast to become one whole week,
called Passion Week, during
which people used to abstain
from eating or drinking until
late afternoon and would
breakfast by eating just bread
and drinking salty water.
Nowadays people abstain from
eating till noon or the
afternoon and have afterward
fasting food free from meat and
animal products and consisting
of cereals, beans and fruits.
People abstained even from
eating sweets in sympathy with
the Passions of the redeemer,
who was given, when thirsty,
vinegar mingled with gall.
Lent
It was in the third century AD
that Lent was initiated to which
the Fast of Passion Week,
practiced a long time earlier,
was added in the second quarter
of the fourth century. With the
addition of Passion Week, Lent,
therefore, lasted seven weeks. .
Lent was enjoined on the
faithful as a reminder of the
struggle of Lord Jesus and of
His fasting in the wilderness.
The Lord, who is in no need for
fasting, started his public
divine economy in the flesh by
fasting. “He fasted forty days
and forty nights, He was
afterwards an hungered” (Matt.4:
2). He did that in order to
teach us the practice of fasting
and the spiritual struggle
against Satan.
He triumphed over Satan, the
tempter, and endowed us with the
power to defeat Satan in the
name of the Lord. Moreover he
revealed to us once the mystery
of spiritual triumph saying:
“Howbeit this kind goeth not out
but by prayer and fasting”.
(Matt. 17:21).
The believers used to practice
Lent by abstaining from eating
and drinking until the
afternoon, then they would
breakfast eating just bread,
beans, cereals, fruits and
vegetable oils and drinking
salted water. During Lent they
used to give alms to the poor.
In the fourth century St. Ephrem,
the Syrian (373) said in
reference to this:
(SYRIAC)
“Oh faithful, fast Lent and
give your bread to the poor as
alms. Pray seven times daily as
taught by (Prophet David) son of
Jesse”.
Ecclesiastic laws stipulated
that all the faithful observe
Holy Lent. Strict church
sentences were imposed on clergy
and Laity who violated these
laws.
No fast practiced by abstinence
from food and drink is allowed
on Saturdays and Sundays. On
these two days the Holy mass is
usually celebrated and after the
Holy mass the fasting person
usually eats fasting food. In
this context the teachings of
the Apostles stipulated the
following:
" Every clergy who fasts on
Sunday or Saturday, except for
the Saturday of Light, shall be
divested of his rank and every
layman shall be excommunicated".
In His Book (The Dove), written
for the benefit of monks and
hermits who had no guides,
scholar Bar Hebraeus (1286)
stated:
“Fasting shall not be
observed on Saturdays and
Sundays in compliance with
laws”.
In Sanctification of Sunday our
Holy Syrian Church does not
start any fast on a Sunday. In
the event of such coincidence
fasting starts on Monday morning
in honor of Lord’s day and
consequently the number of
fasting days will be one day
less that year.
No wedding festivities were
permitted during Lent pursuant
to a decision taken by the
Council of Laodecea in 364. That
Council prohibited also the
celebration of the Holy Liturgy
and of the commemoration of
martyrs on any day in Lent other
than Saturdays and Sundays.
During Lent the celebration of
the Holy Liturgy was replaced by
the celebration of the rite of
(SYRIAC) or what is called the
Pre-Sanctified liturgy-
introduced to our church by
Patriarch Mar Severus, the Great
(+538) early in the sixth
century.
During Lent the Holy Liturgy is
celebrated only on Saturdays and
Sundays, Except for Mid Lent and
the 40th. Friday of Lent,
Maunday Thursday, and Saturday
of Lights. In the event of
having Annunciation day falling
during Lent, the Holy Liturgy is
usually celebrated on that day
even if it falls on Good Friday.
The faithful eat fasting food
after the Liturgy.
The fifth Canon in “Nomocanon”
by Bar Hebraeus, (First Section,
Chapter five) stipulates the
following:
“The church celebrates
Annunciation day on whatever day
it may fall”, because it is the
basis of all Lord’s days.
Accordingly, no shifting of Holy
Days is ever allowed. In respect
of fasting on Good Friday or the
Saturday of Light, the believers
refrain from food or drink on
those two days and they say the
prayer assigned for this day. In
the event of having the
Presentation of Lord Jesus into
the temple on Monday of Lent,
which scarcely happens, then the
Holy Liturgy shall be
celebrated. This took place in
1915 and will also take place in
2010. In such a case the mass of
the commemorative day and the
Holy Liturgy shall be celebrated
as usual in the morning. The
prayer said for fasting shall be
said at noon, then the faithful
stops his or her abstinence from
eating. The prayer of
forgiveness (Shubkono) is
postponed till the next morning.
The church prohibited drinking
wine and all alcoholic drinks
during fasts.
The Holy Church’s objective of
devoting days for fasting is not
to prohibit eating certain kinds
of food and allow others. It
rather aims at subjugating the
will of the faithful to God,
Almighty, through chastity and
practice of sublime virtues,
especially the virtue of
obedience to God’s Commands that
are articulated by his
ministering servants, the
Pontiffs of the church who were
vested with the authority to
loose and bind, to enact laws
and set acts and ordinances for
the benefit of the faithful and
for the glorification of God’s
Holy name.
The church is a kind mother and
a good teacher and as such she
would not lay on the shoulders
of the faithful too grievous
burdens to bear in observance of
God’s words:
" Woe unto you also, ye lawyers!
For ye lade men with burdens
grievous to be borne, and ye
yourselves touch not the burdens
with one of your fingers". (Luke
11:46).
Based on this concept Late
Patriarch Elias III of Good
memory (1932) permitted eating
fish in Lent, and approved that
the faithful in the church of
America fast only the first and
last weeks of Lent in addition
to Wednesdays and Fridays. He
permitted breaking the fast the
rest of Lent.
In response to the petition
submitted by the Church of India
Late Patriarch Ephrem I Barsoum
(1957) of Good Memory had
similar steps taken in relevance
to this In addition to
shortening the periods of other
fasts for all the faithful in
AD1946. Late Patriarch Yacoub
III of Good Memory (+1980)
permitted the Clergy and Laity
to fast only in the first and
last weeks of Lent in addition
to Wednesdays and Fridays,
permitting them to eat all sorts
of food during the rest of Lent
in 1966. He also permitted
having festivities, weddings,
baptism and liturgies and
commemorations on all the days
that fall between the two
aforementioned weeks.
This tolerance shown by our
predecessors, the Holy
Patriarchs, towards the faithful
by curtailing the period of
fasting during Lent is but an
expression of mercy lest the
faithful might violate the
commandment and be subject to
God Almighty’s wrath, God
forbid. Therefore, whoever
benefits from this tolerance
shall not be considered as
sinful. He shall be considered
among those who abided by the
Commandments. Whoever fasts all
the days of Lent in addition to
Passion Week shall be double
rewarded by God.
Clergy of all hierarchical
ranks, except for the sick and
the elderly among them, shall
have to set a good example for
the faithful and be their model
in observing the Lord’s acts and
His Holy Laws by being committed
to fasting in Lent and during
enlivening Passion Week as
practiced by our Holy
Forefathers. This can be applied
by abstaining from food and
drink starting from midnight
till after the next midday. The
faithful eat afterwards fasting
food free of fat. This exemplary
way of fasting is highly
favored.
Twice a Week Fast,
Wednesday and Friday
Ever since the end of the first
Century AD the Holy Church
instituted fasting on Wednesdays
and Fridays weekly instead of
Monday and Thursday Fast
practiced by pious Jews as
illustrated by the parable of
the Pharisee and the publican
(Luke 18:12).
Christians fast on Wednesday
because it was on that day that
Jews plotted to arrest Lord
Jesus and kill him. They fast on
Friday because it is the day on
which the Jews crucified the
Lord Jesus and he died on the
Cross for our Salvation.
A reference to this fast is
found in the book titled “The
Teachings of the Apostles,”
which dates back to the end of
the First Century or the
beginning of the Second Century
AD; and in the works of some
fathers of the First Century AD.
According to the Apostles
teachings both clergy and laity,
who fail to observe this fast,
shall be pronounced anathema and
excommunicated.
It was the custom of the church
in old times not to have fasting
observed on Wednesdays and
Fridays that fall between
Resurrection day and Pentecost,
and in the event of having the
Lord’s day, or a commemoration
day of the Virgin Mary or of a
Patron Saint of the local church
or of the region falling on any
of them. It was the custom of
later generations to allow
non-adherence to fasting on
Wednesdays and Fridays falling
between Christmas and Epiphany.
The faithful in our dioceses in
Iraq do not fast on Fridays
falling between the Holy fast of
Nineveh and Holy Lent, which are
Friday of Holy Fathers, Friday
of souls of alien faithful,
Friday of Souls of all faithful.
Nowadays the faithful fast on
Wednesdays and Fridays by
abstaining from eating till
noon, then they eat fasting
food, or they may have fasting
food in the morning and at noon:
It is preferable that the
faithful eat fasting food
throughout Wednesdays and
Fridays from the evening through
the next evening- the way our
fathers practiced fasting ever
since the dawn of Christianity.
Christmas Fast
The institution of this fast was
towards the beginning of the
fourth century AD.
This can be gathered from
reading memres of St. Ephrem the
Syrian (+373) and the hymns he
composed in the fourth Century.
Christmas fast is practiced in
preparation for welcoming the
commemorative day of Lord Jesus’
birth in the flesh and in memory
of the grief brought by sin,
which we experienced before the
Lord’s birth. The darkness of
ignorance, Satan’s enslavement
of us, and the infliction of the
created world, in expectation of
salvation accomplished through
the birth of the savior, who
redeemed us by His incarnation.
We practice this fast to become
pure in our souls and body and
be worthy of welcoming the
commemoration of the redeemer’s
birth, the word of God
incarnate, the way Moses fasted
before the written word of God,
that is the Law of the Old
Testament, was handed over to
him.
Christmas fast used to last for
forty days. The church, however,
shortened the period to 25 days.
In 1946 and pursuant to a
decision taken by the Council
held in Homs, Late Patriarch
Ephrem I Barsoum of Good memory
limited it to 10 days starting
on December 15 and ending on
Christmas Day, Dec. 25.
Fast of the Apostles
It was named as such out of the
habit of calling something after
the name of the one who
instituted that thing. It’s only
God to whom fasting is due. The
practice of this fast means
following in the Apostle’s
footsteps (Heb. 13:7) who fasted
it in fulfillment of Lord Jesus’
words:
“The days will come, when the
bridegroom shall be taken from
them, and then shall they fast”
(Matt. 9:15). After the
Ascension of Lord Jesus to
heaven and the outpouring of the
Holy Ghost on the disciples,
they started to fast. In
reference to this the following
is stated in the Acts of the
Apostles:
“As they ministered to the Lord,
and fasted” (Acts 13:2).
The duration of this fast
differed in length based on the
eastern Calendar of Easter.
Starting accordingly on the next
day after Pentecost and ending
on the Commemorative day of St.
Peter and St. Paul, the two
chief Apostles.
By virtue of a decision taken by
the Council of Homs in 1946,the
duration of this fast was
shortened to three days starting
on June 26 and ending with the
commemorative day of the two
chief Apostles, St. Peter and
St. Paul on June 29.
Fast of the Virgin Mary
We do practice this fast in
preparation for the celebration
of Assumption of the Virgin Mary
and following in her footsteps
and those of the Holy Apostles
who fasted at the dormition of
the Virgin Mary. This fast used
to last for 15 days but pursuant
to the decision taken by the
Council of Homs in 1946 it
became five days starting on
August 10 and ending on
Assumption Day of the Virgin
Mary on August 15.
By virtue of the Patriarchal
encyclical issued by Patriarch
Ephrem I Barsoum, of celebrated
memory, on Dec. 7, 1946 the old
periods of Christmas fast, The
Virgin Mary’s fast and Apostle’s
fasts referred to in Nomocanon
of Bar Hebraeus were cancelled
and substituted them by new
periods set by the patriarch to
become the new Law in Force.
Nineveh’s Fast
It was called after Nineveh,
because the Ninevites were the
first to practice such a fast
praying for God’s Mercy and
forgiveness. This fast is
practiced following the example
of the people of Nineveh of old
times who hearkened to the
warning of God through Prophet
Jonah and proclaimed a fast
enjoined on man and beast, on
the greatest of them even to the
least of them in supplication of
God.
And God repented of the evil he
had said he would do unto them
and he did it not. (Jon. 3).
This fast began to be practiced
in our church towards the fourth
Century AD. This can be inferred
from the memres of St. Ephrem,
the Syrian (373) and the hymns
he composed in the past. This
fast used to last for six days,
but now it is only for three
days starting on the third
Monday that precedes Lent. It
had been neglected through the
ages. Mar Dionysius Bar Salibi
(1171) states that Mar Marutha
of Tikrit (+649) was the one who
enjoined it on the Church of the
East first in the region of
Nineveh. Bar Hebraeus reportedly
states that the confirmation of
this fast was due to the crises
the church went through in (Hirat).
The people there fasted three
days and three nights praying
constantly in fulfillment of the
command of their bishop and they
were rescued from the ordeal by
God.
Armenians embraced this practice
of the Syrians calling it (Sorep
Sarkis). The Copts did the same
during the patriarchate of the
sixty-second Patriarch of
Alexandria, Anba Eprem, the
Syrian.This fast is highly
favored among Syrians. Some
faithful abstain from food and
drink throughout this three day
fast, then they receive the Holy
Communion on the third day and
afterwards they go on eating
fasting food until Thursday
morning. The rest of the
faithful abstain from having
food till noon or till late
afternoon and afterwards they
eat fasting food. Prayers that
are sung to melodies of Lent
usually accompany fasting. In
the event of having the
presentation of Lord Jesus into
the Temple, which we usually
celebrate on Feb.2, during this
Fast it is mandatory that we
celebrate the commemoration day
and afterwards we carry out the
celebration of the Holy liturgy
in the morning as usual, whereas
the prayers of Nineveh’s Fast
are said at noon. Abstinence
from food ends directly after
the mass by eating fasting food.
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