Orthodox
Fasting
http://www.oca.org/QA.asp?ID=93&SID=3
QUESTION:
Why do Orthodox Christians fast on Wednesdays and Fridays?
Who decided that Orthodox fasting must include abstaining from animal products?
Wouldn't it be more sacrificial for someone to give up foods
that they really loved such as candy rather than meat which they may not care
for that much anyhow? How picky are Orthodox Christians supposed to be in
regards to checking the ingredients in certain dishes. For example, before
eating a package of wheat crackers, should they read the ingredients to make
sure no egg or milk extracts were used? Also, doesn't it defeat the
purpose of fasting if products such
as non-dairy milk or vegetable pepperoni or fake cheese are used in place of
the real thing?
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ANSWER:
Thank you for your inquiry. I'll respond to your question
point by point.
YOU WRITE:
Why do Orthodox Christians fast on Wednesdays and Fridays?
RESPONSE:
Orthodox Christians fast on Wednesday in remembrance of the
betrayal of Christ and on Fridays in remembrance of
His crucifixion and death.
YOU WRITE:
Who decided that Orthodox fasting must include abstaining
from animal products?
RESPONSE:
This form of fasting was passed on in the early Church from
Jewish practice. In Matthew, Christ says, "When you fast do not be like
the hypocrites," which indicates that the Jews fasted -- it also indicates
that Christ assumes that one fasts, for He says "when you fast" not
"if you fast." Fasting is not something that only developed alongside
Christianity; rather, it is a practice that had been followed by the Jews, and
even Scripture mentions that Christ fasted.
YOU WRITE:
Wouldn't it be more sacrificial for someone to give up foods
that they really loved such as candy rather than meat which they may not care
for that much anyhow?
RESPONSE:
The purpose of fasting is not to "give up" things,
nor to do something "sacrificial." The purpose of fasting is to learn
discipline, to gain control of those things that are indeed within our control
but that we so often allow to control us. In our
culture especially, food dominates the lives of many people. We collect
cookbooks. We have an entire TV network devoted to food [the "Food
Channel"]. We have eating disorders, diets galore, weight loss pills,
liposuction treatments, stomach stapling -- all sorts of things that proceed
out of the fact that we often allow food, which in an of itself cannot possible
control us, to control us. We fast in order to gain control, to discipline
ourselves, to gain control of those things that we have allowed to get out of
control. Giving up candy -- unless one is controlled by candy -- is not
fasting. It is giving up candy, or it is done with the idea that we fast in
order to suffer. But we do not fast in order to suffer. We fast in order to get
a grip on our lives and to regain control of those things that have gotten out
of control. Further, as we sing during the first week of Great Lent,
"while fasting from food, let us also fast from our passions."
YOU WRITE:
How picky are Orthodox Christians supposed to be in regards
to checking the ingredients in certain dishes. For example, before eating a
package of wheat crackers, should they read the ingredients to make sure no egg
or milk extracts were used?
RESPONSE:
Just as we would say that with anything in life
"moderation is best," so too we need to approach fasting with
moderation. Fasting, as I have written, helps us to let go of the control food
so often has on us. But if fasting itself starts to control us -- if we spend
countless hours reading every ingredient label and the like -- then we can
become just as controlled by our fasting and, in the process, miss the whole
point of fasting in the first place. There is nothing essentially wrong with
meat and dairy products, in and of themselves, but even the Jenny Craig folks
will tell you that if you want to "lighten your physical load", red
meat and dairy products should be the first things to go, or at least to be
eaten in moderation. Hence, an obsession with reading labels can be just as
problematic as an obsession with food. There needs to be a balance, lest our
fasting be of the sort that Christ Himself condemns -- the fasting of the
Pharisees.
YOU WRITE:
Also, doesn't it defeat the purpose of fasting if products
such as non-dairy milk or vegetable pepperoni or fake cheese are used in place
of the real thing?
RESPONSE:
Indeed, being controlled by the "substitution
syndrome" is just as bad as being controlled by the food one is striving
to substitute. I have seen lenten
cookbooks with a gazillion recipes for "Lenten lobster tail" [in our
culture, a gourmet treat] which warn that "drawn margarine" should be
used instead of "drawn butter," since butter is a dairy product! Sorta misses the point. I would be the first to day,
"Hey -- I can't wait until Friday so I can eat lobster tail instead of a
Big Mac."
Since I am especially fond of lobster, with or without drawn
anything, butter, margarine, or otherwise, while I might eat the lobster with
margarine and remain within the "law" of the fast, I precisely miss
the "spirit" of fasting. One can become just as controlled by soy
milk, tofu burgers, and drawn margarine as one can be controlled by whole milk,
hamburgers, and drawn butter. I know a family which is not particularly fond of
turkey but absolutely loves the "tofu turkey" readily available at
heath food stores. They spend a great deal of time telling everyone how it
looks like a turkey -- the ones I've seen are shaped like a real turkey,
complete with little paper booties on the ends of their little tofu legs -- and
tastes just like a turkey [hard to imagine, but then again I'm not too anxious
to try tofu anything], and even smells just like a turkey. What I hear in these
ramblings is, "Don't eat turkey, but to be just as satisfied as you would
be when you eat turkey, eat tofu turkey, 'cause it tastes just like turkey but
because it's not meat, you're still fasting while enjoying a traditional turkey
dinner." A little convoluted -- and a sign of being controlled.
Perhaps it would be better to just eat the real thing and be
done with it, because it takes more time to make tofu taste, look and smell
like the genuine item than it would to simply eat turkey. This misses the whole
point of fasting in the first place, and I dare say, one can become even more
controlled by trying to make tofu taste like turkey than by simply eating
turkey in the first place, which is a no-brainer. Hence, the "substitution
syndrome" which focuses on following the "letter of the law"
while ignoring the "spirit on which the law is based." Common sense
must be used at all time, and the often heard "try this dairy-free Lenten
chocolate cake -- it takes so much better than the non-Lenten version" is
not fasting. At best, it is a way to observe the "law" while missing
the very "spirit" of fasting in the first place. I even know people
who eat the dairy-free Lenten chocolate cake when it is not a fast day or season
simply because it tastes so much better than the regular version -- which
indeed misses the whole point. In conclusion, the point of fasting is not only
to avoid certain foods, but also to avoid the control we allow food to have
over us. If we can't discipline ourselves in terms of what goes into our
mouths, we will hardly be in a position to discipline ourselves with regard to
what comes out of our mouths.
Hope this helps.
In Christ,
Fr. John Matusiak, OCA
Communications Office