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Beyond Ritual: Rediscovering the True Purpose of Fasting in Today’s Modern Church

By Sam Agogo

Every January across Nigeria and many parts of Africa, a familiar ritual unfolds. Billboards scream “21 Days of Fasting and Prayer.” Pastors thunder on national television, declaring the year’s consecration. Social media timelines overflow with individuals announcing their participation, sometimes with more pride than piety. For many congregations, the new year is incomplete without a corporate fast, a tradition that has become almost institutionalized. Yet beneath the noise and publicity lies a troubling reality: what was once a solemn spiritual discipline is increasingly reduced to ritual, routine, and spectacle.

This practice has deep roots. In the early days of revival movements, fasting was embraced as a way to consecrate the year to God, to seek divine direction, and to prepare spiritually for the challenges ahead. Over time, it became a badge of identity for churches. Some are known for their 21-day fasts, others for 40 days, and some even extend to 70 or 100 days. But alongside this growth has come distortion. What began as a sacred act of humility before God is now often treated as a public performance. Individuals announce their fasts on Facebook or WhatsApp, sometimes more concerned with optics than devotion. Others abstain from food but neglect prayer, waiting only for the time to break the fast. And many justify this by saying, “Well, everyone else is doing it.” But Scripture makes it clear: the fact that others are doing it does not make it correct.

Fasting is not a modern invention. It is woven throughout the Bible, appearing in moments of crisis, repentance, and preparation. Moses fasted for 40 days on Mount Sinai before receiving the Ten Commandments. David fasted in grief and repentance. Esther called for a national fast before approaching the king to save her people. Jesus Himself fasted for 40 days in the wilderness before beginning His ministry. The early church fasted before making key decisions, such as appointing leaders. In all these examples, fasting was never about publicity. It was about humility, dependence on God, and spiritual clarity.

Scripture presents fasting as far more than abstaining from food. It is an act of brokenness before God, a companion to fervent prayer, a sign of repentance, and a means of seeking divine will. The people of Nineveh fasted as they turned from sin. The early church fasted before appointing elders. Yet today, fasting is often misunderstood and misapplied. Jesus warned against fasting for show, teaching that it should be done in secret, with sincerity. Many fast without prayer, waiting only for the time to break the fast, missing the essence of communion with God. Social media announcements, while sometimes inspiring, risk turning fasting into a trend rather than a spiritual discipline.

The danger lies in fasting becoming a hollow ritual rather than heartfelt devotion. When churches declare fasting as a yearly ritual, individuals may participate mechanically, without grasping its spiritual significance. True fasting is not about conformity but about transformation. God Himself describes the kind of fasting He desires in Isaiah 58: loosening chains of injustice, setting the oppressed free, sharing food with the hungry, and sheltering the poor. Jesus emphasizes fasting in secret, with the Father as the only audience. Joel calls the people to return to God with all their heart, with fasting, weeping, and mourning.

While collective fasting can unite a congregation, it must never overshadow the personal, spiritual essence of fasting. Churches must teach believers that fasting is not about ritual itself but about drawing nearer to God. The challenge today is balance: how to preserve the communal strength of corporate fasting while ensuring individuals understand and embrace its true spiritual purpose.

Fasting is a powerful spiritual discipline when practiced biblically. It is not about public announcements or waiting to break the fast but about prayer, humility, repentance, and seeking God’s will. The fact that “everybody is doing it” does not make it right. Scripture calls believers to a higher standard, one rooted not in ritual or routine but in genuine devotion. As Christians, we must return to the scriptural foundation of fasting, ensuring that it remains a tool for transformation rather than a hollow ritual of routine.

For comments, reflection, and further conversation:
📧 Email: samuelagogo4one@yahoo.com
📞 Phone: +2348055847364

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