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Zuko Explains New Testament Fasting

What does the Bible SAY about fasting?

Zuko explains: The Bible never presents fasting as a hunger strike to force God’s hand. It presents fasting as a voluntary setting aside of food in order to seek God with greater attentiveness, humility, and dependence.

1) Fasting is assumed, but performance is condemned

Jesus did not say “if you fast,” but “when you fast” and He immediately removed pride, display, and manipulation.

Matthew 6:16-18 — “When you fast… do not look gloomy… that your fasting may not be seen by others but by your Father who is in secret.”

2) After Pentecost, fasting continues (quietly and purposefully)

As we move from the practices of the Old Testament Judaism and work out what it means to follow a risen Christ with the new Church In Acts, fasting is paired with prayer and worship and shows up around major decisions and commissioning.

How is fasting used in the New Testament after Pentecost?

After Pentecost (Acts 2), fasting does not disappear — but it changes. It is no longer ritual, calendar-based, or national. It becomes quiet, voluntary, and purpose-driven, always paired with prayer and obedience.

A) Fasting for discernment and direction

When the early church needed clarity about God’s will, they fasted and listened.

Acts 13:2–3 — “While they were worshiping the Lord and fasting, the Holy Spirit said, ‘Set apart for me Barnabas and Saul…’ Then after fasting and praying they laid their hands on them and sent them off.”

Purpose: Seeking God’s direction, not forcing an answer.

B) Fasting when commissioning and sending

Fasting marked moments of obedience that carried cost and responsibility.

Acts 13:3 — “After fasting and praying they laid their hands on them and sent them off.”

Purpose: Submitting plans to God before acting.

C) Fasting in the appointment of leaders

The early church treated leadership as a spiritual responsibility, not an administrative task.

Acts 14:23 — “When they had appointed elders for them in every church, with prayer and fasting they committed them to the Lord in whom they had believed.”

Purpose: Humility and dependence when entrusting people with authority.

D) Fasting as devoted focus in prayer

Paul assumes times when believers temporarily set aside normal comforts to devote themselves to prayer.

1 Corinthians 7:5 — “Do not deprive one another… so that you may devote yourselves to prayer.”

Purpose: Undistracted prayer and spiritual focus.

E) Fasting as part of apostolic hardship and devotion

Paul describes seasons of hunger and lack as part of faithful ministry, not self-promotion.

2 Corinthians 6:5 — “In hardships… in sleepless nights, in hunger.”

2 Corinthians 11:27 — “In toil and hardship… often without food.”

Purpose: Costly obedience, not religious display.

F) What fasting is NOT after Pentecost

The New Testament is equally clear about what fasting must not become.

Colossians 2:20–23 — warns against self-made religion and “severity to the body” that looks spiritual but does not change the heart.

1 Timothy 4:1–5 — warns against turning abstinence from food into a required spiritual rule.

Summary: After Pentecost, fasting is never commanded, never scheduled, and never used to earn favour. It is always voluntary, prayer-filled, and responsive to God.

 

3) Fasting is linked to humility and seeking God

Fasting is often a bodily way of saying: “Lord, we are dependent on you.”

Ezra 8:21-23 — “I proclaimed a fast… that we might humble ourselves before our God…”

Joel 2:12 — “Return to me with all your heart, with fasting…”

4) God rejects fasting that replaces obedience and love

Fasting can become religious noise if it is not paired with repentance, mercy, and justice.

Isaiah 58:3-7 — “Is not this the fast that I choose: to loose the bonds of wickedness… to share your bread with the hungry?”

How can I OBEY what the Bible teaches about fasting?

Zuko explains: Obedience in fasting is not mainly about duration, diet, or toughness. It is about intention, secrecy, prayer, submission, and love.

1) Fast privately, not performatively

Matthew 6:17-18 — “Anoint your head and wash your face… that your fasting may not be seen by others…”

Practical obedience: Decide your fast with God, keep it simple, and remove the audience.

2) Pair fasting with prayer (always)

Daniel 9:3 — “I turned my face to the Lord God, seeking him by prayer… with fasting…”

Acts 13:2-3 — fasting is joined to worship, prayer, and listening.

Practical obedience: Replace at least one meal with prayer and Scripture (even 10-20 minutes).

3) Do not use fasting to compensate for disobedience

1 Samuel 15:22 — “To obey is better than sacrifice.”

Isaiah 58:6-7 — God wants justice and mercy, not religious cover.

Practical obedience: Before fasting, ask: “Is there anyone I need to forgive, reconcile with, or make things right with?”

4) Let fasting be a response of drawing near, not a lever to control outcomes

James 4:8 — “Draw near to God, and he will draw near to you.”

Practical obedience: Go into fasting with open hands: “Lord, your will be done.”

5) Keep it loving and sane

Colossians 2:20-23 warns about “severity to the body” that looks spiritual but does not change the heart.

1 Timothy 4:1-5 warns against making food rules into compulsory spirituality.

Practical obedience: Fasting is voluntary. Do not weaponize it. Do not bind others with it.

Who can I SHARE this with, and how?

Zuko explains: Fasting is not meant to be advertised, but its fruit is meant to bless others.

1) Share with believers who need discernment or breakthrough in obedience

Acts 13:2-3 — the church fasted when direction and calling were in view.

Acts 14:23 — fasting marked serious leadership and responsibility.

Share idea: “Do you want to set aside one meal this week to pray for wisdom together?”

2) Share gently with seekers (without pressure)

Colossians 4:6 — “Let your speech always be gracious…”

Share idea: “Christians sometimes fast, not to earn points, but to focus on prayer. If you ever want to try it, I can show you a simple way.”

3) Share the fruit, not the fast

Matthew 5:16 — “Let your light shine…”

Matthew 6:16-18 — keep the practice private, with the Father.

Share idea: Instead of saying “I fasted,” say “God helped me slow down and listen.”

Where this leaves you

Fasting is not a badge of spirituality. It is a quiet act of trust.

It is one way of saying with your body what your heart is learning to pray:

“Lord, I need you more than I need bread.”

If you want a simple starting step: choose one meal this week to skip, drink water, open your Bible, and pray through one passage (Matthew 6:16-18 is a great place to begin).

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Tags

  • Zuko
  • Zuko Explains
  • fasting
  • prayer
  • Spiritual disciplines
  • obedience
  • repentance
  • Humility
  • Discernment
  • Worship
  • Holiness
  • Self-control
  • Justice and mercy
  • Matthew 6
  • Acts 13
  • Acts 14
  • Isaiah 58

Comments

SOS Next Level TOC

  1. Facilitator Notes - Mormonism (LDS)
  2. Zuko Explains - The Penitential Psalms
  3. An example Imagination game
  4. Archaeology and the Bible — Evidence the Text Sits in Real History
  5. Authorship and Eyewitness Testimony: Who Wrote the New Testament — and When?
  6. Baptism in Jesus’ Name Only — What Does the Bible Actually Teach?
  7. Books of the Bible Explained: Genres and Chronological Order
  8. Buddhism - 5 strengths, also their 5 weaknesses
  9. Buddhism 2 Can Desire Be Removed — Or Is It Pointing Somewhere?
  10. Buddhism Explained — A Guided Journey Through Belief, Meaning, and Hope
  11. Buddhism: Is Enlightenment Enough — Or Do We Long to Be Known?
  12. Buddhism: Compassion Without a Giver — Where Does Love Come From?
  13. Buddhism: If Suffering Ends, What Happens to Love?
  14. Buddhism: If There Is No Self — Who Is Being Freed
  15. Can Desire and Suffering Be Escaped — Or Are They Pointing Somewhere?
  16. Can the Bible Be Trusted? Historical, Archaeological & Manuscript Evidence
  17. Can These Hopes Be Combined — Or Must One Be Chosen?
  18. Christadelphians - what does the Bible say about the Holy Spirit?
  19. Discovering Your Gifts in the Holy Spirit
  20. Does Buddhism Offer Hope — Or Only Escape?
  21. Does the World Need Escape or Rescue? Buddhism, Suffering, and the Christian Answer
  22. Escape or Redemption? Two Very Different Hopes
  23. Exploring Christadelphian Beliefs — A Self-Discovery Bible Study (SOS)
  24. Facilitator Notes - William Branham
  25. Facilitator Notes – Shincheonji
  26. Facilitator Notes — Jehovah’s Witnesses
  27. Further External Resources on Bible Archaeology
  28. Hinduism Explained — A Guided Journey Through Belief, Meaning, and Hope
  29. How the Canon Was Recognised (Not Decided)
  30. Icebreaker: Category 1 - Predictable Imagination
  31. Icebreaker: Category 2 - Moral Intuition
  32. Icebreaker: Category 3 - Longing and Meaning
  33. Infant Baptism vs Believer’s Baptism: What Does the Bible Actually Say?
  34. Is Satan Personal? A Bible-Only SOS Study
  35. Is the Self an Illusion — Or Something Meant to Last?
  36. Leaders of the Bible Simple Timeline
  37. Phase 2 — When the Gospel Is Challenged
  38. Prophets Of the Bible - Simple timeline
  39. Sikhism and Sufi Islam
  40. Sikhism Part 1: Who are the Sikhs? (Punjab, the Gurus, the community)
  41. Sikhism Part 2: One God, Many Words — What Do Sikhs Mean by “Waheguru”?
  42. Sikhism Part 3: Sin, Karma, and the Problem of the Heart
  43. Sikhism Part 4: Salvation, Grace, and Assurance
  44. Sikhism Part 5: Sikh Scripture Explained - The Guru Granth Sahib
  45. Sikhism Part 6: Jesus in Sikh thought vs Jesus in the Bible
  46. SOS Squared – Study, Obey, Share (Hermeneutics Part 3)
  47. SOS – Next Level (How to read the bible for all its worth Part 2)
  48. Speaking in Tongues — What the Bible Actually Teaches (SOS Study)
  49. The Book of Enoch: Genre, Authority, and How It Should Be Read
  50. What did Jesus Have against the Pharisees
  51. What Does It Mean to “Pray in the Spirit”?
  52. What Happens at the End? Extinction, Enlightenment, or Resurrection
  53. What Is Buddhism? Core Beliefs, Practices, and Everyday Life Explained
  54. What Is Hinduism?
  55. Who Am I, Really? Self, Identity, and Why It Matters
  56. Why Different Bibles Have Different Tables of Contents
  57. Zuko Explains - "Christianese" (A–Z Glossary of Big Words)
  58. Zuko Explains - Agur & Lemuel
  59. Zuko Explains - Christian Conflict Resolution (Matt 18)
  60. Zuko Explains - Doxology & Imprecatory
  61. Zuko Explains - Ecclesiastes
  62. Zuko Explains - Esther
  63. Zuko Explains - Ezekiel
  64. Zuko Explains - Hebrew Acrostic Stanzas
  65. Zuko Explains - ḥesed (חֶסֶד) and agápē (ἀγάπη)
  66. Zuko Explains - Hezekiah’s Men
  67. Zuko Explains - Isaiah - Life & Times
  68. Zuko Explains - Israel's Good & Bad Kings
  69. Zuko Explains - Jeremiah - Life & Times
  70. Zuko Explains - Jewish Festivals
  71. Zuko Explains - Job
  72. Zuko Explains - Lamentations
  73. Zuko Explains - Leaders in the Bible
  74. Zuko Explains - Leadership Quick Reference Tables
  75. Zuko Explains - Names & Titles of God (A–Z)
  76. Zuko Explains - Parables
  77. Zuko Explains - Paul & His Companions
  78. Zuko Explains - Prophet Daniel
  79. Zuko Explains - Prophets' Timeline
  80. Zuko Explains - Restoration of Lost Tribes Chart
  81. Zuko Explains - Song of Songs
  82. Zuko Explains - The Book of Acts
  83. Zuko Explains - The Old Testament Prophets (Big Picture)
  84. Zuko Explains - The Pharisees at a glance
  85. Zuko Explains - The Sabbath
  86. Zuko Explains - The Sadducees at a glance
  87. Zuko Explains - The Samaritan Letter
  88. Zuko Explains - The Samaritans at a Glance
  89. Zuko Explains - The Zealots at a glance
  90. Zuko Explains - What is Scripture?
  91. Zuko Explains - Word of Faith (WoF)
  92. Zuko Explains -The Psalms
  93. Zuko Explains -The Sons of Korah
  94. Zuko Explains Buddhism 1
  95. Zuko Explains Hermeneutics
  96. Zuko Explains New Testament Fasting
  97. Zuko Explains Sikhism - Launch Page
  98. Zuko Explains the Bible - SOS “Next Level” Resources
  99. Zuko Explains the Hindu Caste System
  100. Zuko Explains Wisdom Parallelism

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