
I have been questioning my stance on fasting today.
Here’s the story. Over the last few weeks I have been thinking about spiritual disciplines in relation to incarnational approaches to Christianity, particularly in terms of which are most consistent with it, and well, the strange thought that occurred to me today was: maybe I have been too dismissive of fasting in the past.
Let me explain. Part of my indifference towards fasting, if not outright antipathy, has been the traditional conjunction between it and asceticism. With asceticism being the epitome of mind-body dualism, and incarnational Christianity being its holistic antithesis, I couldn’t see how any discipline that encouraged a distain for the body could actually be all that helpful.
Well, what has struck me today was that, in reacting against historical abuses, I may have been throwing the out baby with the bathwater. It struck me that fasting acknowledges the mind body spirit link more than any other discipline, or at least as much as any other discipline. Taken to an extreme it is certainly harmful, and I still reject that, but practiced in moderation, I’m thinking, it actually has the potential to reinforce that training of mind body and spirit is simultaneous.
This led me to thinking about yoga and the way both horrendous self-abuse and superb self-control reside within that tradition. Maybe I have to explore this some more and give thought to how that happens. What are helpful approaches and what are not so helpful?
In reflecting on this, it also struck me, fasting was at home within the Hebrew tradition, which was far more holistic than the NeoPlatonist inspired traditions we more often associate it with. Why did I not acknowledge this before? Blind spot? I suspect I have discovered a new thing for me to work on.







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