Fasting in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
fast, fast'-ing (tsum; `innah nephesh, "afflict soul or
self," i.e. practice self-denial; nesteia, nesteuein): It is
necessary to get rid of some modern notions associated with
fasting before we can form a correct idea of its origin and
significance in the ancient world. For instance, in the case
of many ailments the dieting of the patient is an essential
part of the remedy. But we may readily assume that
originally fasting was not based on the salutary influence
which it exercised on the health of the subject.
Considerations of therapeutics played no part in the
institution. The theory that fasting, like many other
ancient customs, had a religious origin, is in favor with
scholars, but we must not assume a religious origin for all
practices which in process of time came to be associated
with religion.
Many customs, purely secular in their origin, have gradually
obtained a religious significance, just as purely religious
customs have been dissociated from religion. It is also
possible and, in the light of some usages, probable, that
different motives operated in the association of fasting, as
of some other customs, with religion. Scholars have been too
ready to assume that the original significance of fasting
was the same in all countries and among all nations.
Robertson Smith in his Religion of the Semites advanced and
defended theory that fasting was merely a mode of
preparation for the tribal meal in which sacrifice
originated, and came to be considered at a later stage as
part of the sacrificial act. This hypothesis apparently
accounts for the otherwise strange fact that both fasting
and feasting are religious acts, but it does not give a
satisfactory explanation of the constant association of
fasting with the "wearing of sackcloth," the "putting of
ashes on the head," and other similar customs. It is obvious
that very different motives operated in the institution of
fasting and of feasting religious observances.
It is a matter of common observation and experience that
great distress causes loss of appetite and therefore
occasions abstinence from food. Hannah, who was greatly
distressed on account of her childlessness, "wept, and did
not eat" (1 Sam 1:7). Violent anger produces the same effect
(1 Sam 20:34). According to 1 Ki 21:4, Ahab, "heavy and
displeased" on account of Naboth's refusal to part with his
estate, sulked and "would eat no bread." Fasting, originally
the natural expression of grief, became the customary mode
of proving to others the inner emotion of sorrow. David
demonstrated his grief at Abner's death (2 Sam 3:35) by
fasting, just as the Psalmist indicated his sympathy with
his adversaries' sorry plight in the same way (Ps 35:13). In
such passages as Ezr 10:6; Est 4:3, it is not clear whether
fasting is used in its religious significance or simply as a
natural expression of sorrow (compare also Lk 5:33 and see
below). This view explains the association of fasting with
the mourning customs of antiquity (compare 1 Sam 31:13; 2
Sam 1:12). As fasting was a perfectly natural and human
expression and evidence of the subject's grief, it readily
claimed a place among those religious customs whose main
object was the pacification of the anger of God, or the
excital of His compassion. Any and every...
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