daniel

How to Overcome Your Fear of Fasting [Guest post by Kristen Feola]

 

With Lent just around the corner, we’re excited to publish this timely guest post from Kristen Feola, author of The Ultimate Guide to the Daniel Fast.

 

Fasting is a unique opportunity to know God in a deeper way and to hear His voice more clearly. When you fast, you deny yourself food, or certain foods, for a specified period of time as an act of surrender and worship. Those who have participated in this spiritual discipline can testify to experiencing an increased sensitivity to the Holy Spirit, greater awareness of their dependence on the Lord, and a stronger compulsion to intercede for others.

 

Types of Fasts

absolute – no food or water.
liquid – water, fruit and vegetables juices, and/or broth.
partial – eat certain groups of foods and restrict others (Daniel Fast)

However, despite the many benefits that fasting offers, many Christians choose not to fast. Although there are a variety of reasons why this is the case, I believe it’s mostly because of fear.

 

Fear can be a crippling emotion, often keeping us from moving forward when the Lord wants us to step out in faith. When it comes to fasting, many believers find themselves in this position – intrigued by the idea but afraid to commit. Unwilling to trust God in this area of their lives, they remain stuck in place, immobilized by their fears. Some of the most common hindrances to fasting are as follows:

  • Fear of failure.
  • Fear of being hungry.
  • Fear of letting go of what brings comfort.
  • Fear of physical side effects.
  • Fear of not seeing answers to prayer.

 

Perhaps you can relate. You’ve heard testimonies of people sharing about the closeness they share with the Lord on a fast. You’re familiar with the verses in the Bible on the subject. Yet, you can’t get past the anxiety of going without food or certain foods, so you dismiss the whole idea.

 

It’s normal to be afraid when we stand on the horizon of the unknown. However, fear is never a valid excuse for disobedience. In fact, the Lord makes it clear that when are afraid, we should put our trust in him. During times of weakness, he wants us to acknowledge our inadequacy and recognize that he alone is our Source of strength.

 

The discipline of fasting is mentioned several times throughout the Bible, but one verse in particular shows us that this practice is to be a regular part of our lives. In Matthew 6:16, as Jesus is teaching his disciples on the issue of fasting, he begins with, “When you fast,” not “If you fast.” His words imply that fasting is not optional for his followers.

 

How, then, do you deal with the panicky feelings that often accompany a fast?

Read More…

Share

God is with You, and He Doesn’t Quit [Excerpt by Kristen Feola]

 

Excerpt from The Ultimate Guide to the Daniel Fast by Kristen Feola.

 

Feel like you're up against an impossible challenge?

Nehemiah had a successful career as cupbearer to the king, yet deep within him, he sensed the Lord calling him toward something different. Something radical. Something only God could do.

 

The task seemed monumental and impossible. The walls of Jerusalem were broken down, leaving the people defenseless against attack. Nehemiah knew that God wanted him to leave the comfort of palace life to lead his people in rebuilding the city walls.

Nehemiah responded in faith and obedience. He fasted and prayed. He boldly requested permission from the king and for his help in getting supplies. He wisely examined the condition of the walls before beginning reconstruction. He started the work.

 

From day one, Nehemiah and God's people endured intense persecution. Their enemies ridiculed and mocked them, hoping that they would give up. But the Israelites kept working day after day with all of their hearts, believing that the Lord would give them success. As a result, the massive city walls of Jerusalem were completed in record time. When the surrounding nations heard that the walls were completed in just fifty-two days, they were afraid and lost their self-confidence, because they realized that the work had been done with the help of God.

 

'I am carrying on a great project and cannot go down.' -Nehemiah

God calls each of us to a great work. Like Nehemiah and the Israelites, we undoubtedly will face fierce opposition. When the enemy hurls accusations our way and tries to defeat us, we can stand our ground on the truth of God's Word. I love Nehemiah's response to his enemies' relentless attempts to distract him: "I am carrying on a great project and cannot go down" (6:3). He refused to be shaken and remained focused on the purposes of God. We must remember that just as God was faithful in helping his people to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem, he will also complete the good work he has begun in our lives.

 

Those who carried materials did their work with one hand and held a weapon in the other, Neh. 4:17

"Those who carried materials did their work with one hand and held a weapon in the other." Nehemiah 4:17

 

["He who began a good work in you will carry it on to competion until the day of Christ Jesus." Philippians 1:6]

 

God, you have a plan for my life, and I am confident that you will bring it to completion as I surrender to you. I refuse to be distracted by the enemy and thrown off course by his wicked schemes. My eyes are on you, Sovereign Lord, to finish the good work you have started in me.

 

-Kristen Feola

Question: As you prepare for a tough project, what's the easiest step for you?
(A) Examining the problem
(B) Prayer & fasting
(C) Asking others for the help you need
(D) Starting the work
And which step is most difficult for you? I'd love to hear your comments, just leave them on this post.

 

Learn More about NIV Application Commentary: Ephesians Learn More

Learn more about Kristen Feola's Ultimate Guide to the Daniel Fast: 100+ Recipes plus 21 Daily Devotionals


Visit Kristen's blog at www.ultimatedanielfast.com

- Adam Forrest, Zondervan

 

(Images & some styling above are web-exclusive features not included in the text of The Ultimate Guide… Image by Phillip Medhurst (Photos by Harry Kossuth) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons. This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer's personal opinions are shared only for information purposes. To receive new Zondervan Blog posts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

Share

Re:Word Weekly – 2/10/2012

 

Re:Word is our weekly roundup of stories for disciples who read, write, and create.

Top Stories from the Week

1. Feast your eyes on Visual Theology – The Books of the Bible. You'll find a free PDF download of the infographic in Tim Challies's post. (@challies is author of The Next Story)

 

Untitled-1

Find and download other sizes.


2. The secret document that transformed China

"In 1978, the farmers in a small Chinese village called Xiaogang gathered in a mud hut to sign a secret contract. They thought it might get them executed. Instead, it wound up transforming China's economy in ways that are still reverberating today."

I hope Yen Jingchang is able to share more of his tale without endangering himself. His is the kind of story that makes me stop and cry out, Is there a biographer in the house? (via @brainpicker) 


3. "From Faith to Faithing"
Is following Jesus more like a noun (faith) or a verb (faithing)? Kara Powell explores how the faithing view is more in line with the Apostle Peter's example. (via @kpowellfyi. Powell is author of Sticky Faith: Everyday Ideas to Build Lasting Faith in Your Kids)


4. Sweet potato hash brown recipe
I didn't know fasting could taste this good… (via @kristenfeola, author of The Ultimate Guide to the Daniel Fast)

5. Bloggers: "Is perfectionism stalling your productivity?" 5 encouragements for the blogger perfectionist by Darren Rowse (@problogger). Most intriguing tip: "Realize that an incomplete post will probably attract more comments." What do you think, have you seen success with an "incomplete" post on your blog? Leave a comment on this Re:Word post.

6. Did you see the "Sling Baby" Doritos ad from the Superbowl? Creator Sean Gaffney wrote a Q&A about the experience on his blog. (Gaffney has worked on Veggie Tales and is the author of Larry Boy and the Emperor of Envy. He's on Twitter at @gaffneyinkwell.)   


7. What a nebula sounds like -
when it's slowed down 1.75 trillion times, anyway. "So you're telling me," says my coworker Rich Tatum, "that the crab nebula is like the porpoise of the universe?" (Link via planetarium educator @rickeyainsworth.)

- Adam Forrest, Zondervan

 

(Disclosure: Some Re:Word stories are by Zondervan authors. Some are not. All of the stories are useful, enriching, or just plain fascinating. This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer shares these personal opinions for information purposes only. To receive new blogposts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

Share

When the Answer to Prayer is Bigger than our Brains [Excerpt by Mark Batterson]

 

Learn More about The Circle Maker Learn More

(Excerpt from The Circle Maker: Praying Circles Around Your Biggest Dreams and Greatest Fears by Mark Batterson.)

One day, I was praying for God's provision when I felt a prompting to pray for a $2 million miracle. The first thing I had to do was decipher whether this prompting was just my own desire to be debt free or whether it was the Holy Spirit who dropped that promise into my heart. It's tough to discern between natural desires and holy desires, but I was about 90 percent sure it was the Holy Spirit who put that promise in my heart. I had no idea how God would do it, but I knew I needed to circle that promise in prayer.

I love the ending of the book of Daniel… In his final vision of the book, he asks the question that all of us want the answer to: "My lord, what will the outcome of all this be?"

Well, God always answers, but it's not always a straight answer. This certainly doesn't mean it's not an honest answer; it just means it's far too complicated, with infinite twists and turns, for our logical left brains to comprehend. …

 "Go your way, Daniel, because the words are rolled up and sealed until the time of the end." [See Daniel 12:1-13]

 

He's never early. He's never late. When the time comes … the prayer will be unsealed and the answer revealed.

I realize this specifically references the prophecies given to Daniel by the Holy Spirit, but I also believe there is a universal principle in this passage. Our prayers are prophecies, and God Almighty seals them until their designated time. He's never early. He's never late. When the time comes … the prayer will be unsealed and the answer revealed.

 

Natural World vs. Supernatural Prayers

At some point, our spoken words cease to exist because they are subject to the law of entropy. Our spoken words, aka sound waves, run into friction and run out of energy. 

PSM_V13_D058_Sound_waves_1

Our words fade from hearing, but God keeps our prayers.

Our prayers, however, are sealed forever. Our prayers never cease to exist because … the supernatural laws of prayer defy the natural laws of time and space [including the law of entropy].

 

What God Can Do with Four Words

While it's impossible to trace the pinball path of a single prayer, our prayers somehow exit our four dimensions of space-time in order to get to the God who exists outside of the four space-time dimensions He created when He said, "Let there be light." Our prayers don't dissipate over time; our prayers accumulate through eternity.

 

According to the Doppler Effect, our universe is still expanding. The significance is this: The four words that God spoke at the beginning of time, "Let there be light," are still creating galaxies at the edge of the universe. If God can do that with four words, what are you worried about? There is nothing He cannot do. After all, He created everything out of nothing.

 

His words never return void. Neither do your prayers when you pray the word of God and the will of God. The same God who hovered over the chaos at the beginning of time is hovering over your life, and you never know when His answer will reenter the atmosphere of your life. But you can know this: The Lord is watching over His word to perform it…

- Mark Batterson


A thought for the road: The final verse in the book of Daniel reads, "As for you, go your way till the end. You will rest, and then at the end of the days you will rise to receive your allotted inheritance." (Daniel 12:13)

What's one way you can choose to 'go your way till the end'?

 

 

Learn More about The Circle MakerLearn More

 

Learn more about The Circle Maker
Watch session one of The Circle Maker DVD Group Study

Follow Mark Batterson on Twitter (@MarkBatterson)

 -Adam Forrest, Zondervan

 

(Images & some styling above are web-exclusive features not included in the text of The Circle MakerImage attribution: Sound waves | Date = 1878 |Author = Unknown, Scientific American Monthly |Permission = {{PD-old}}, via Wikimedia Commons. This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer's personal opinions are shared only for information purposes. To receive new Zondervan Blog posts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

 

Share

Can We Trust the New Testament? News on Upcoming Debate + Recommended Reading

I’m excited for a debate happening October 1, called “Can We Trust the Text of the New Testament?”

The debate will feature Dr. Daniel B. Wallace and Dr. Bart D. Ehrman, who present cases ‘for’ and ‘against’ whether we can trust our New Testament manuscripts to tell us about Jesus and the early Church.

Since I can’t make it to the debate I will probably buy a DVD. Here’s why I’m excited: while I’m a professing Christian who trusts the New Testament, I only began to trust the Bible near the time I began to trust Christ. And I know plenty of people who trust neither. Some people I know are convinced by Dr. Ehrman’s arguments, or similar ones, so I’ll listen to the debate with one ear tuned to its value for apologetics. But I’m intrigued by these scholars’ points of view anyway; I expect Dr. Ehrman to give all the best evidence against trusting the New Testament, and I expect Dr. Wallace to have clear, excellent counter-arguments.

Below you’ll find event details, debater profiles, and a short list of recommended reading on whether we can trust the New Testament.

 

Attending the SMU Debate

WHEN October 1, 2011, 7pm CDT.
WHERE Dallas, TX, at Southern Methodist University’s McFarlin Memorial Auditorium.
WHAT A debate for general audiences, featuring cases ‘for’ and ‘against’ trusting the text of the New Testament.”

 

Learn more about the DVD Release

Can’t make it to Dallas in person? A DVD of the debate will become available for purchase. Details are forthcoming, so to stay up-to-date visit smudebate.com or find SMU Debate on Facebook.

 

Read More…

Share
 Scroll to top