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Shedding Lard for The Lord: Religious leaders say they can't recall a time when fasting has been so widely practiced

BY LARRY B. STAMMER And MARGARET RAMIREZ
LOS ANGELES TIMES


    LOS ANGELES -- To feel good and look good, Americans spend millions each year on everything from tummy tucks to health club memberships.
    Through it all, the mantra is exercise and diet.
    Now, with the Christian penitential season of Lent fast approaching, millions of the faithful are preparing to go on a diet for God.
    The goal is not to lose weight or to indulge one's vanity but to practice a spiritual discipline -- one that believers say sharpens their awareness of God and God's purpose in their lives. It's called fasting.
    "We see in the natural sense those who want to fast just to get their weight down," said Sister Mary Colombiere of the Carmelite Sisters of the Most Sacred Heart, a Roman Catholic women's religious order in Alhambra.
    "There's a kind of supernatural fasting, too, so that we can become self-disciplined and rise above the natural to live the supernatural life."
    Lent began with this week's observance of Ash Wednesday for Western liturgical churches, including the Roman Catholic, Episcopal and Lutheran churches. Eastern Orthodox churches begin their 40-day "Great Lent" March 13, known as "Clean Monday," because believers abstain from eating meat, poultry, fish or dairy products.
    Fasting is a widespread religious phenomenon. Indeed, religious leaders say they can't recall a time in contemporary history when fasting has been so widely practiced.
    Last week, for example, members of the Bahai faith began fasting to take their mind away from the physical world and concentrate on spiritual awareness. While the Bahai have no fixed rituals or sacraments, all members are expected to participate in a 19-day fast before the feast of Naw-Ruz, which is the religion's New Year celebration. This year's fast ends March 21.
    Hindus, many of whom currently maintain a fast for Shiva, the Hindu deity of destruction, also see fasting as a key to focusing on the divine. The Hindi word for fasting, "upavasa," means "sitting near" the divinity.
    "Fasting has a way of neutralizing or minimizing chaos in the body," said Lina Gupta, associate professor of philosophy and religion at Glendale Community College and an authority on Hinduism. Instead of focusing on food, "Your whole body would assist you in going in that spiritual direction."
    Among Jews, 53 percent nationwide attend services on Rosh Hashanah or Yom Kippur, according to a Los Angeles Times poll conducted in 1998. Rabbi Harvey J. Fields of Wilshire Boulevard Temple in Los Angeles said he believes a growing number are participating in the traditional Yom Kippur fast.
    "There's a deeper sense that fasting has some real meaning if it's attached to the notion of giving up for a day all of those material things that claw at us, including our appetites," Fields said.
    Usually associated with churches that observe a liturgical calendar -- Jews on Yom Kippur and Muslims during their holy month of Ramadan, in addition to Christians at Lent -- fasting is coming into vogue among evangelical Protestants as well. Last year, for example, the National Association of Evangelicals called for 40 days of fasting and prayer by 30 million members of the association's member churches.
    In one large demonstration of fasting and prayer, 2 million Protestants from more than 40 countries last November joined in a worldwide 24-hour fast, according to Campus Crusade for Christ, which led the event.
    Opinions vary as to why the number of those who fast is growing among evangelical Protestants. Clearly there is a concern for the moral direction of the country, said Bill Bright, founder and president of Campus Crusade for Christ. Evangelicals are mindful of the scriptural injunction found in 2 Chronicles 7:14: "If my people who are called by my name humble themselves, pray, seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land." Rapturous experiences are reported by some who fast. Immersed in what they believe to be God's presence and overcome by a sense of well-being, they report a feeling of peace and unity that passes understanding.
    "Something wonderful happens," Bright said. Bright, 78, has fasted 40 days for each of the past six years, drinking only juice, along with vitamin and mineral supplements. He cautioned that those considering a fast begin slowly and first consult their physician.
    When he fasts, Bright said that he has a sense of entering into "protracted communion" with the God of the universe.
    "Witnessing doesn't do it. Reading the Bible doesn't do it. Prayer in general doesn't do it," said Bright. The experience, he said, is "spiritually revolutionary."
    Of course, Bright and other religious leaders caution that one's motive for fasting must be to seek God alone, not simply to have a spiritual high.
    Seeking God alone is a tradition and spiritual exercise many thousands of years old. Christian Scripture recounts that Jesus fasted 40 days in the wilderness to gird himself for his earthly ministry.
    "Our whole life is a walk toward our Lord, that union with God in eternity," said Colombiere of the Carmelite Sisters. "He is the first one that we seek and it is for him that we live."
    Fasting can mean more than giving up food, said Michael Mata, director of the Urban Leadership Institute in Los Angeles. He said "it has evolved to take on new nuances like fasting from television or going to the ball game. Giving up some activity and doing prayer or meditation, anything that helps center yourself to God."


©Copyright 2000, The Salt Lake Tribune

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