Sanctify Ye A Fast.

Because of life circumstances, and the season I’m in, I’ve felt a bit off lately. Sluggish, emotional, frustrated, anxiety-ridden, dull, weighted in spirit…hungry. It started with a circumstance beyond my control -breaking my leg. That was followed by lack of exercise which was followed by sluggishness which was followed by depression which was followed by praying less and less fervently which was followed by anxiety which was followed by …well, you get the idea. 

Knowing I wasn’t feeling good physically, I stepped on the scale. It told the tale my ill-fitting clothes had been proclaiming for a while. I had gained weight. Even though my primary purpose for fasting isn’t to lose weight, the scale is a great diagnostic tool to keep me accountable. It told me the truth when I had been fooling myself into thinking I was only off my fasting lifestyle by a few meals, or a few days. 

When the reality of my situation hit me, I felt a familiar panic welling up inside. What if I can’t regain momentum? What if I can’t recover control, not just over my weight, but over my self? 

The Lord dropped into my spirit a scripture, and I knew it was the answer. Fasting IS the answer. But how can fasting be the answer when I can’t seem to find the mental discipline to fast regularly? 

Sanctify ye a fast, call a solemn assembly, gather the elders and all the inhabitants of the land into the house of the Lord your God, and cry unto the Lord, Alas for the day! for the day of the Lord is at hand, and as a destruction from the Almighty shall it come. (Joel 1:14-15)

The answer is to get serious again. When fasting becomes commonplace, it begins to feel unnecessary. We begin to allow it to take a backseat to other things. It becomes the “extra” discipline when we have time, or when we feel better, or when things slow down. If you’ve lived very long, you know those times rarely come. 

The Lord reminded me of what I already knew. I must make time for fasting. I must get a fresh determination to live a fasted lifestyle. The original reasons I started on this fasting journey haven’t changed. The need is even greater than before, and will continue to become greater until Jesus returns. 

The prophet Joel commanded the people of God, “Sanctify ye a fast.” The word SANCTIFY means to appoint, consecrate, purify, dedicate or hallow.

Not just any old fast will do. Not eating to prove that we can do without is a level of commitment, but being committed is only one element of our fasting journey. Commitment alone becomes stale over time. 

We must pray for a fresh zeal. We must remind ourselves of the spiritual warfare our consistent fasting is undergirding. We must sanctify our fast. What has become stale, must be brought to the forefront of our consciousness once again. We must remind ourselves why we are on this fasting journey. Fasting controls self. Self controls flesh. Flesh controls emotions. Emotions control actions. Actions control eternal destiny.

Bring your fasting journey up close once again so that you can see it. Look closely. Be honest about what you see. Has it become a bit unkempt? Pushed to the side like a pet once begged for, but now forgotten. Another task to check off the to do list? If this sounds familiar, it’s time to sanctify our fast.

HOW DO I SANCTIFY MY FAST?

1. Appoint a certain time to fast. One meal a day? One day a week?Ask the Lord to show you what He desires from you, and then appoint that fasting schedule “as unto the Lord.” Make it a sacred appointment once again. Tighten back up the fasting hours you have allowed to get lax.

2. Consecrate your fast. It’s not just going without eating. It’s a specific time set apart unto the Lord. It’s so that His will can be achieved, beginning in your life, then in your loved ones’ lives and ultimately flowing out into all the earth.

3. Purify your fast. Make it clean. Take inventory and purge your mind and life of things contrary to God’s word and will. Be mindful and honest about thoughts, feelings and behaviors that have crept in. Determine to focus your mind on holy purposes and pursuits. Also make a fresh commitment to clean up your eating habits during your eating windows. Junk in equals junk out. The cleaner you eat during your allowed time of eating, the easier and more rewarding fasting will be physically and emotionally.

4. Dedicate your fast unto the Lord. Make sure it continues to be the Lord’s Fast, and not yours for your own pleasure. Dedicate this time away from eating as belonging to God. You are willingly giving it to Him. How does He want you to fill that time? If we choose to fill up on worldly entertainment instead of food, is it truly a fast dedicated to the Lord?

5. Hallow your fast. Whether your fasting schedule is one meal a week or a twenty-one day water only fast, remind yourself it is a holy endeavor, and not to be taken lightly. Purpose to focus your fasting time to think on our Holy God, His Holy Word and His Holy Presence. Give yourself to meditating on passages of scripture, and then applying what you study. Find ways to be obedient to the Word you are consuming, so that it is relevant in your daily life.

MAKE A FRESH COMMITMENT.

Fasting is a spiritual discipline and a tool for a closer and more productive walk with God. Like any tool, however, it is only beneficial if it is used. Let’s pull it out from the dark corner where we’ve had it stored, dust it off and put it to use once again.

With Love & Prayer,

-Pat 

$21 That Changed My Life


“And Jesus sat over against the treasury, and beheld how the people cast money into the treasury: and many that were rich cast in much. And there came a certain poor widow, and she threw in two mites, which make a farthing. And he called unto him his disciples, and saith unto them, Verily I say unto you, That this poor widow hath cast more in, than all they which have cast into the treasury: For all they did cast in of their abundance; but she of her want did cast in all that she had, even all her living.” (Mark 12:41-44)

Our UPCI Tennessee Ladies Conference was in March of this year. I serve on the committee, and with that role comes various responsibilities to insure the inner workings of the conference go smoothly. One of those tasks is taking up the offering, and sorting the bills into similar stacks in order for it to be counted and bundled.

The committee members sat or stood around a large conference table where we each dug into our lime green offering buckets. There were all of the standard assortment of denominations. A few $100 bills, and then more of each as they lessened in monetary value.

I was going through the process of pulling a few bills out at a time, separating them by kind, turning them all to face the same direction and placing them in stacks. Bills are often rolled or folded together. If you’re fortunate enough to be the one of those working the offering (sarcasm intended), these bills slow the process because you must unfold or unroll them, and this takes an extra step in the already tedious process.

I do realize, because I’ve done it myself, many people fold or roll their bills in order to keep the amount of their offering private from those sitting closest to them. I’m a bit embarrassed to admit that I felt a moment of frustration when I reached down into my bucket, and pulled out a tightly coiled set of bills. It was going to add another fifteen seconds of unrolling, and then unrolling once or twice more to conquer my spring-coiled nemesis. Plus the added three seconds of additional flattening.

It always amazes me, though it shouldn’t, how the Holy Ghost can move into a natural situation, and turn it into a divine encounter. That’s exactly what happened here. I finished unrolling the offending bills, and laid them on the table, and began to see them in a different light. The amount was $21. However, something was niggling at the edge of my thoughts which suggested imminent shame of my earlier frustration. Specifically, the denominations of the bills. A $20 and a $1. 

This unknown to me lady had both bills in her purse. As the lime green offering bucket passed in front of her, she could have given one or the other. She had options. 

1. She could have given the smaller bill, and kept the larger for herself. It would have paid for an item from the vendor booths, her lunch or gas for her car. 

2. She could have given the larger bill, and kept the smaller one for herself. It would have paid for a candy bar from the vending machine, a bottle of water or it would have been a perfect small bill to reserve for a grand child to put in the Sunday School offering at home church the next day.

Many present that day likely had the same options, myself included. This dear lady acted on neither. Instead, she opted for a third choice. She rolled both bills tightly together to keep her giving private, and then she gave it all. 

It was as though God opened my understanding, and allowed me a window into this precious lady’s heart, and it broke me. It convicted me of feeling frustrated over mundane, yet necessary tasks. It softened my heart toward one unknown lady in a vast sea of feminine worshipers and givers. It inspired me to give more of my time and resources for the Kingdom even when no one will notice. It solidified my belief that one person, one word or one action, no matter how seemingly insignificant, can change one life, one mind and one world exponentially.

The poor widow in Mark 12 will forever be remembered for giving of her lack when everyone else was giving out of their abundance. In like manner, I hope this anonymous lady will be remembered for giving all when she could have held part back for herself.

Precious sister who I may never meet this side of eternity, your selfless giving broke me, convicted me, softened me, inspired me and changed me. May you and yours be blessed with God’s greatest blessings, and may they be more than you can contain in a lifetime. In Jesus’ name.

“And Jesus sat over against the treasury, and beheld how the people cast money into the treasury: and many that were rich cast in much. And there came a certain poor widow, and she threw in two mites, which make a farthing. And he called unto him his disciples, and saith unto them, Verily I say unto you, That this poor widow hath cast more in, than all they which have cast into the treasury: For all they did cast in of their abundance; but she of her want did cast in all that she had, even all her living.” (Mark 12:41-44)

“Give, and it shall be given unto you; good measure, pressed down, and shaken together, and running over, shall men give into your bosom. For with the same measure that ye mete withal it shall be measured to you again.” (Luke 6:38)