A Day of Prayer and Fasting - Radical

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A Day of Prayer and Fasting

During a time when fasting is not often a practice in the church, the reasons for fasting and praying can seem unclear. In this message on Isaiah 62, Pastor David Platt emphasizes the importance of fasting and longing for more of God. He highlights three reasons to fast and pray.

  1. Because We Hunger for God’s Glory to be Restored in His Church
  2. Because We Hunger for God’s Praise to Resound Among the Nations
  3. Because We Hunger for God’s Son to Return for His People

I’m David Platt, pastor of The Church at Brook Hills, and I wanted to give you just a little bit of information on why the podcast this week is a bit different on Sunday, May 16. Instead of having our normal worship gathering, where we preach a message and we walk through a text, we took this Sunday aside just to spend concentrated time in prayer and in praise. As a community of faith, we fasted on that particular Sunday. We are doing a lot in Birmingham as a faith family and other contexts around the world as a faith family. And we believe it’s really important for us to come aside and express our hunger for the glory of God in our lives, and in the church, and in all nations, and our dependence on Him—the reality that apart from Him we can do nothing.

So we spent this time in prayer and fasting on this day. And as a result, the podcast is going to be a little different. We’ve actually…In light of the fact that I didn’t preach a sermon this Sunday, we brought back something that I preached a couple of years ago from Isaiah, Isaiah chapter 62 on fasting and on why fasting is important and what the purpose of fasting is. And so as you listen to this podcast, it’s actually a message from a couple of years ago that we lived out on Sunday, May 16, as we as a church fasted together and prayed and sought the Lord and asked for Him to use us to make His glory known in all nations.

Fasting and Praying

With that as our prayer, I’d invite you if you have a Bible, and I hope you do, to open them with me to Isaiah chapter 62. Isaiah chapter 62. And you may not have a worship guide, but hopefully, you’ve got some notes that you received when you came in that will guide our time together tonight in God’s Word.

Last week during the end of our time together, I challenged this faith family, called this church to begin fasting and praying. We saw a picture in Exodus 33 of Moses, after all he had seen of the glory of God, crying out, “I want to see more glory!” We talked about how we engage the glory of God in the face of Christ. And I called us to begin fasting and praying. We set Tuesday of this last week as a day when we would begin to corporately fast together.

And we opened up this worship room from six to eight that morning, and at least a couple of hundred folks were here at different times throughout the morning, praying in different ways all across this room. And I just don’t think that was supposed to be a oneweek thing, so I want to call us to continue to do that. This worship room will be open again this Tuesday. I want to call us as a faith family to fast and to pray that God would show His glory, His power, His majesty, that He would pour out His Spirit and His fullness on us as His people.

The thing is, I realized though, after I’d challenged us in that way last Sunday that there’s a lot of people who have never fasted before, and a lot of people who may have fasted before but have never participated in a regular fast and they have a lot of questions about fasting. Why is it important to fast? How does this fasting thing work?

Luke 18 Encourages Biblical Fasting

The first time I can ever remember fasting was when my youth minister when I was in high school, challenged a small group of us to fast one day and he brought us together in the morning. We came with our water bottles and went out to a park there in town, and we sat around and we studied the Bible together and then we prayed together. When we split up to pray on our own, it was a powerful morning. The only problem is by 2:00 that afternoon, we were in the drive through at Burger King ordering some Whoppers, and youth minister leading the way, and what was that about? I thought we were going to fast and I’m eating a Whopper so…

What is fasting all about? What is the purpose of fasting? Why would you go a meal or two meals or three meals or longer without food? We know that, well in the Old Testament times, fasting was a very regular thing. In fact, a few chapters before the chapter we’re studying here in Isaiah 58, there’s a whole chapter on fasting, particularly as it relates to social justice and the justice of God. It was an Old Testament practice for sure, but not just a biblical Old Testament thing; it’s a Muslim thing. Muslims fast during Ramadan. You have different castes in Hinduism that fast. You’ve got a lot of people who fast for completely non-religious reasons.

I was on the website of Fasting Center International. I want you to check these guys out. They claim to supervise the world’s largest fasting clientele, with clients in 220 nations. I don’t know if you’re a part of their clientele. But they have tons of people from modest backgrounds to billionaires. And they say, “Fasting is the greatest of all healing modalities.” Okay, follow with me here. Fasting is a healing modality. “With more testimonials among our species’ greatest thinkers.” Which, by the way, we’re a species and so, “our species’ greatest thinkers and spiritual teachers. This is the greatest of all healing modalities.”

They offer a variety of reasons why you should fast and I wrote some of them down. Number one, you fast to remove unnecessary weight the natural way, plus learn how to keep it off for the rest of your life. So you don’t eat; you don’t gain weight. So that’s one idea.

Luke 18 Explains the Need to Fast

Number two, you fast to remove the (and I’m quoting here) “the five to ten pound inner toxic waste dump now polluting your cell tissue and organ system, including chemical toxins, heavy metals, metabolic waste, excessive cholesterol, and triglycerides in the bloodstream, arterial plaque, and intestinal parasites.” So if you want to get rid of the toxic waste dump then you can fast.

Third reason, fast “to elevate yourself out of the cloud of consciousness most people spend their entire life in and vault yourself into the stratosphere of human potential.” So if you’re interested in another stratosphere, you fast.

Then fourth, “fast to move yourself back toward your life’s birthright potential of optimal health, increasing your happiness and healing power, as you scientifically reset your body’s odometer and greatly enhance your quality of life.”

And I read that and I thought, “You know, maybe I should just preach that. You know, put the notes aside. Here’s four reasons you should fast. Number one, you can lose weight. Number two, you can vault into an entirely different stratosphere than you ever could have imagined. Number three, you can reset this Tuesday, your body’s odometer. And number four, you can finally get rid of the toxic waste dump that has been plaguing you all these years. So with that said, let’s do an invitation and move on from the evening.

The Importance for Christians to Fast

So there’s reasons people fast. And all that begs the question if there’s so many, quite frankly, pagan purposes for people fasting, then why would it be important for a Christian to fast? Is it important for a Christian to fast? Does Scripture even teach us to fast now? You go to the New Testament and you won’t find one command to fast. We’re never commanded to fast in the New Testament. Now does that mean that fasting is not important or not necessary? On the contrary, I think it is. I think it’s very important. I think when Jesus is teaching in the Sermon on the Mount, Matthew 5-7 and you get to chapter 6, He talks about praying and fasting and giving, all in the same area. But in each one of he says, “When you pray, do this. When you fast, do this. When you give, do this.”

Now of course we think, “Well, we’re supposed to pray.” And of course we think we’re supposed to give. I actually got a letter in the mail this last week from a pastor search team that was looking for recommendations for a pastor. And one of the requirements in their qualifications profile of a pastor was, “A potential pastor needs to be able to preach well on giving.” So we obviously expect people to give in the church and to pray in the church, but Jesus also put fasting in that category. Unfortunately no profiles that I’ve ever seen of a potential pastor say that he needs to be able to preach on fasting. But Jesus put it in the same realm. In fact, once Jesus died on the cross, rose from the grave, ascended into heaven, the early church picture in the book of Acts shows us them fasting.

Acts chapter 13, the whole mission movement to the Gentiles was birthed in fasting. It says, “While they were worshiping the Lord and fasting, the Holy Spirit said, ‘Set apart for me Barnabas and Saul for the work to which I have called them.’” So fasting is definitely there. So when you take a step back and you look at the whole of Scripture, Old Testament and New Testament together, what you’ll see is the commonality that unites the picture of fasting all across the board is a picture of God’s people, whenever they come to a place of deeper dependence or deeper desperation on God, you often find them fasting. In the Old Testament it’s even associated with mourning. When Nehemiah, chapter one, he saw the gates of Jerusalem had been burned down, its gates had been burned with fire, it says, “He mourned and he fasted and he prayed.” He called out to God. And he did it through fasting.

Luke 18 Calls for Worship through Fasting

Second Chronicles chapter 20. Moabites and Ammonites are about to take out the people of Israel. And Jehoshaphat is panicking and so he calls the people of God to fast—to seek the Lord. They’re at a point of desperation. And I think it’s the same thing in Acts chapter 13, when they are wanting to take the gospel to the nations but they don’t know how to do that. “How are we going to take the gospel to people that are ready to persecute us?” And they fast. They’re worshipping the Lord in fasting. A point of desperation. Longing for God.

And that is the central picture of fasting. It is saying to God, “More than my body wants food, my life wants you. My soul needs you. In a way that supersedes even the basic, daily necessity of food, my life longs for you.” And it’s in fasting we really come face-to-face with the question, church. Do we want God? Really? Do we really want God? Do we really want more of God? Do we want more of God in our lives? Do we want more of God in our families? In our marriages? Do we want more of God in our relationships? Do we want more of God in this church? Do we really want more of God in our city? If so then fasting is a central expression of us saying to God, “More than we want the basic, daily necessity of food, we long for you. We desire you. We crave you. We are hungry for You.” And I think that’s the question that God is bringing before us as The Church at Brook Hills at this moment in time. “Do you really want me? Do you really want more of who I am?” If so, then fast and pray.

And that leads us to Isaiah chapter 62. This is actually not a chapter about fasting, but it is a chapter about a longing for God in prayer. It’s one of the most incredible images in the Old Testament. It’s little known that this image of what praying is about… And I think it informs… The longing we’re going to see here informs our understanding of fasting. Whenever you fast, whether it is for a meal, or for two meals, or for a day, or for longer, inevitably—and some of you experienced this this last Tuesday—inevitably you will experience hunger pains, discomfort. You will want food. You will crave food.

The Strife of Fasting

I was sitting in a staff meeting this last Tuesday and a staff member who will remain nameless at this point, I was sitting there and I had taken some chap stick out of my pocket and I was just putting some chap stick on my lips. And he looked at me and he said, “Can I take your Chap Stick? Can I use your Chap Stick?” I said, “Sorry, dude. I don’t really do that. I’m not into the whole sharing Chap Stick thing.” He said, “No, I don’t want to use it. I want to eat it.”

Inevitably, when you’re fasting, you experience hunger pains. You experience desires for food. And the purpose of fasting is in those moments when you crave food, that you would pause and say to God, “God, more than I want food right now, I want you in my life. More than I want to eat, I want to feast on your Word and your greatness. I need you more than I even need food right now.” And it’s through that that God begins to expose the desires and the cravings in our lives that are not for Him. And they begin to come to the surface.

I want you to see the craving that is represented in Isaiah chapter 62 in the prophet here who is calling out for God. Start with me in Isaiah 62:1:

For Zion’s sake I will not keep silent, for Jerusalem’s sake I will not remain quiet, till her righteousness shines out like the dawn, her salvation like a blazing torch. The nations will see your righteousness, and all kings your glory; you will be called by a new name that the mouth of the LORD will bestow. You will be a crown of splendor in the LORD’s hand, a royal diadem in the hand of your God. No longer will they call you Deserted, or name your land Desolate. But you will be called Hephzibah, and your land Beulah; for the LORD will take delight in you, and your land will be married. As a young man marries a maiden, so will your sons marry you; as a bridegroom rejoices over his bride, so will your God rejoice over you (Is. 62:1-5).

Luke 18 Calls Out to God Endlessly

Now pay attention close. Get this imagery “I have posted watchmen on your walls, O Jerusalem; they will never be silent day or night.. You who call on the LORD, give yourselves no rest, and give him no rest till he establishes Jerusalem and makes her the praise of the earth” (Is. 62:6-7).

Ladies and gentlemen, I want us to be a church that gives God no rest because we are calling out to Him day and night. The watchman is consumed, never silent, day or night. This sounds like a description of a newborn son. Never silent, day or night. Giving himself no rest and giving his mother no rest. What consumes the prophet so much that he would be up day and night, that he would be longing, crying out? What is he so focused on that he wants… That doesn’t even allow him to sleep at night. And this picture of longing, I want us to use to answer the question of why we are fasting and praying as The Church at Brook Hills. And I want to give you three reasons why we are fasting and praying right now as this church.

Because We Hunger for God’s Glory to be Restored in His Church

Reason number one: We hunger for God’s glory to be restored in His church. This picture of “not a silent day or night” goes back, in verse six, goes back to verse one, “For Zion’s sake,” he said, “I will not keep silent, for Jerusalem’s sake I will not remain quiet.” This is the picture. Why? I can’t keep quiet because of Zion’s sake; Jerusalem’s sake.

Here’s the background of Isaiah chapter 62. This is a time, context here, where the people of God are experiencing the judgment and the discipline of God for their sin. And they are suffering in their sin as a result. And the picture of them is deserted or desolate. The Northern Kingdom of Israel was being overtaken by Assyria. Years later the Southern Kingdom would be overtaken by Babylon. And the prophet sees this picture. And he can’t remain silent because of the state of the people of God. The prophet has a holy dissatisfaction with the state of the people of God.

He sees where they are and he sees where they could be. And he’s saying, “Jerusalem is not meant for this. The City of God, the people of God, the place where God dwells is not meant for this. It’s not meant for desertion and desolation. The people of God are meant for righteousness that shines out like the dawn.” He is wholly dissatisfied with the state of the people of God. He sees where they are and where they could be.

Let me ask you a question tonight. Take this Old Testament context, bridge across through the New Testament into our lives today. Do you, Christian, do you have a holy dissatisfaction right now with the state of the people of God in the church today? Do you have a holy dissatisfaction? Do you see where we are and do you see where we could be? Do you see what we are intended for?

Luke 18 Rests in the Healing Power of Christ

Do you see the picture of the early church in Acts? One sermon. Thousands of people immediately are cut to the heart and repent and turn to Christ just like that. Next chapter, a lame man who has never walked is jumping up and down and praising God. Power. He’s been healed. Next chapter, thousands more are coming to faith in Christ. Next chapter, they’re being persecuted and they’re happy about it! They’re rejoicing because they’re being persecuted. Something powerful at work. Next chapter, the number of disciples is increasing rapidly. This picture that we saw in Acts 2 is happening.

The Lord is literally adding to their number daily those who are being saved. Day by day by day. People are coming to faith in Christ every single day! The number of disciples is increasing rapidly. Churches start getting planted all over the place, infiltrating the nations—all of Asia during that time. Churches sprouting up. The gospel spreading with power. Demon-possessed people are having demons delivered from them. It’s a picture of power.

Do we want that kind of picture in the church? Do we want to see the gospel spreading with power? Do we want to see people added to the church daily, people who we’d never expect turning from sin and turning to Christ. Do we want to see that? Do we long for the glory of God to be restored in His church? This is a huge question. Ladies and gentlemen, are we tired of meaningless programs devoid of Holy Spirit power? Are we tired of man-centered worship services, devoid of a Christ-centered Spirit?

Are we tired of relationships, marriages and families that are devoid of righteousness? Are we tired of activity, so much activity that is devoid of authenticity? Are we tired of sitting back and thanking Him like everything is perfect in our monotonous routine version of Christianity, when we are missing out on the power of God and what we could be? Do we long to see the glory of God restored in His Church? Do we long to see the holiness of God restored in His Church?

The Holiness of God

When we’re not covering up for sin and pretending like it’s not a problem in our lives, when we’re being honest with God about sin and seriously confronting sin in our lives and seriously experiencing the grace of God in our lives, we want that. If you don’t, don’t come next week. Just warning you, don’t come next week unless you want to see the holiness of God restored in this Church.

Do we want to see the justice of God restored in His Church today? Do we want to see the Church caring about poverty, and hunger, and disease, and Aids and sickness? Do we want to see the church beginning to care about the things God cares about? Do we want to see the power of God restored in His church? Do we want to see the Word of God restored in His Church? When we are no longer content with great stories and practical instructions and applications. We want to hear the Word. We want to stand…fall on our faces just to hear the Word being read.

Do we want to see the power of God’s Word restored in His Church? If we want any of these things, then fast and pray, Church. Fast and pray. And when you want a bagel or you crave a burger, stop and look to God and say, “More than I want food right now, I want your glory to be restored in your Church.” Do we want a God like that? Or are we content to sit in the watchtower, asleep? Are we content to go through life watching TV and surfing the internet and enjoying the pleasures of this world without longing for God’s glory to be restored in His Church?

God, make us a church that is consumed with this kind of longing, where we cannot sleep at night because we long for God’s glory to be restored in His Church. God wake us up!

Because We Hunger for God’s Praise to Resound Among the Nations

The second reason why we pray and fast. Number one, because we hunger for God’s glory to be restored in His Church. Second, because we hunger for God’s praise to resound among the nations. We hunger for God’s praise to resound among the nations. And you continue in verse one. He says, “I’m not going to keep silent. I’m not going to remain quiet until…” This is what he’s saying. Here’s when he’ll get silent. Here’s when he’ll be quiet. “Till her righteousness shines out like the dawn, her salvation like a blazing torch. The nations will see your righteousness, and all kings your glory.”

This is the same exact picture when you get down to verse seven, it talks about giving God no rest. It says there, look at it with me, “until,” same phrase. Until what? Until God “establishes Jerusalem and makes her the praise of the earth.” Now what’s that about? Does that mean that we’re calling out to God until people praise? The church? Until people praise; the people of God? No. Here’s what this is giving us a picture of. It’s what the whole Old Testament, New Testament are about. It’s about God calling out His people. This is from the very beginning. Genesis 12:1-3, when God called out Abraham to be the father of the people of Israel, He said, “I’m going to bless you. I’m going to pour out my blessing on you. And through you all the peoples, all the nations of the earth will be blessed.”

From the very beginning, God has chosen to bound up His reputation, His character, His renown with the state of His people. He displays His holiness through His people. He displays His majesty through His people. He displays His love through His people. He blesses them and they are a reflection of His character to the nations. That’s what the prophet’s crying out for here. “That her righteousness would shine out like the dawn, salvation like a blazing torch. The nations would see the righteousness of God in the people of God.” And so when the prophet can’t sleep day or night, the reason is not just because he is concerned about the Church. It’s because the nations need to see the glory of God, and they will only see the glory of God in the people of God. So the picture is the prophet praying for the Church for the sake of the nations.

Why we Pray and Fast Today

Let me translate that into why we pray and fast today. We fast and we pray for God’s glory to be restored in His Church in a way that will astonish the world. Don’t miss that. I’ll say it one more time. We fast and we pray for God’s glory to be restored in His church in a way that will astonish the world. We want Birmingham, Alabama to be astonished with the glory of Christ and that will happen when God restores His glory in His church. And so we pray for the church on behalf of the nations. We want salvation to go out from The Church at Brook Hills like a blazing torch in the city of Birmingham, Alabama. That’s what we’re praying for. That’s what we’re fasting for.

You’ve heard me talk about the Layman’s Prayer Awakening…is what it was called. It’s about…almost exactly 150 years ago—1857 and 58. What happened was a small group of men began praying together, just up in New England. One day they began to get together again, and again, and again. And before long there were people all across this one particular city, praying, seeking God, and asking God to pour out His Spirit in an unusual way. And God did. I want you to listen to what one historian said in describing what was going on during that time. Listen very closely.

Just imagine this. 150 years ago. It was called The Mighty Visitation. This historian said this: “Like a spiritual tornado, the Spirit of God swept through the land and New England became the center of the Great Awakening, resulting in great numbers finding salvation. [Check this out.] In some towns it was reported as being almost impossible to find anyone who had not been converted.”

Is that cool or what? “Pastor, I know I’m supposed to share the gospel in Birmingham. The problem is I can’t find anybody who hasn’t believed the gospel. They all love Jesus! Everybody in the town!”

Luke 18 Praises God’s Restoration

Like a great spiritual epidemic, tremendous conviction of sin swept through the land and thousands turned to Christ. Drunkards, as they stood at the saloon bars. Gamblers, as they sat at the card tables. Congregations, as they sat in churches. Even passengers on board incoming liners, came under the influence of this strange and wonderful moving of God, and kneeling in repentance wherever they were, they found pardon! And many places—dance halls, theaters, and gambling bins—were closed or emptied. New churches began to spring up anywhere. Family altars were restored and the spirit of prayer grew in intensity until anyone could cross the land and find a midday prayer meeting in almost any town. It was estimated that as many as 50,000 decisions were made in one week when this Gracious Visitation was at its height.”

God, do it again! Do we want to see God’s glory restored in His Church so that salvation goes out from The Church at Brook Hills like a blazing torch in Birmingham, Alabama? God, may it be so and don’t let the torch stop until it gets to the Bedouin people in the Middle East.

Do we want that? Then fast and pray this week. Fast and pray. And when you experience hunger pains or discomfort, pause, look to God and say, “More than I want food, I want your praise to resound in Birmingham and to resound among the nations.” This is why we fast and pray.

Because We Hunger for God’s Son to Return for His People

Third reason we fast and pray is because we hunger for God’s Son to return for His people. Now here’s where it gets really interesting. You come to the end of verse two and verse three in Isaiah 62 and you see promises for the people of God. And you get to verse four and it says, “No longer will they call you Deserted, or name your land Desolate. But you will be called Hephzibah, and your land Beulah; for the LORD will take delight in you, and your land will be married.”

Here’s the picture. Because of their sin and their judgment and their suffering, they were looked at by the nations as deserted and desolate; alone; isolated. The prophet is talking about a day when they will no longer be alone and deserted and desolate. They will be married. And that’s what Beulah literally means. It means “married.” In fact, you continue on in verse five: As a young man marries a maiden, so will your sons marry you; as a bridegroom (listen to this) rejoices over his bride, so will your God rejoice over you.

Here’s the picture. You’ve got a bride alone at the altar awaiting the bridegroom to come, looking for the bridegroom to come and to rejoice over them. And the bride can’t sleep. She wants her bridegroom.In fact that’s the whole picture of watchman here. When we look in the Old Testament, we see this picture of watchmen a few different times.

And Ezekiel, when you see this imagery of watchmen looking from a watchtower out over the city, watchmen are primarily playing the purpose of guards. They are looking out to look for enemies that are coming. When the enemy comes they are warning. So this imagery of watchmen is a picture of us warning each other against sin, warning each other against the adversary. That kind of picture. But that’s not the imagery that really dominates in Isaiah when it comes to watchmen.

Waiting on the Return of the Lord

In fact turn back with me over to Isaiah chapter 52, and let me show you where this imagery is used there. It gives a picture of what’s going on in Isaiah 62. Listen to what it says. This is really, really interesting. All of the Old Testament… Well, let’s read it in verse eight. Isaiah 52:8, “Listen! Your watchmen lift up their voices; together they shout for joy. When the LORD returns to Zion, they will see it with their own eyes. Burst into songs of joy together, you ruins of Jerusalem, for the LORD has comforted his people, he has redeemed Jerusalem. The LORD will lay bare his holy arm in the sight of all the nations, and all the ends of the earth will see the salvation of our God.”

Did you see what verse eight was saying? This is the picture we’ve got all throughout the Old Testament. The people of God are longing for the coming of the Kingdom of God. They’re longing for the Messiah. They’re longing for God to come and save His people. It’s what they’re longing for all throughout the Old Testament. And the watchman is not just the guard to look out for enemies. The watchman is looking out on the horizon, looking for a friend or ally who will come to help, who will come to take out these enemies from the rear. The watchman is on guard looking out, looking for help, looking for who’s going to come. It’s a picture of the Lord returns to Zion. They will see it with their own eyes. So the watchmen are on the wall, looking for when God is going to come to save His people. The bride looking for the Bridegroom.

Now, grab hold of that picture. Hold your place here and go with me to Matthew chapter 9. You’ve got to see this. Matthew chapter 9. First book in the New Testament. Matthew chapter 9. And I want you to look with me at what is probably the most important New Testament passage on the subject of fasting. This is where this whole picture starts to come together. You’ve got to see this. Matthew chapter 9. Look with me at verse 14 and 15. You see the deal was Jesus’ disciples were not fasting. That was a problem for some people. Listen to what happened. Verse 14, “Then John’s disciples came and asked him, ‘How is it that we and the Pharisees fast often, but your disciples do not fast?’ Jesus answered, ‘How can the guests of the bridegroom mourn while he is with them? The time will come when the bridegroom will be taken from them; then they will fast’” (Matt. 9:14-15).

Luke 18 Encourages Biblical Fasting

Don’t miss the picture here. Jesus says, “You fast for the coming of the Bridegroom. When the Bridegroom is here, you really don’t need to fast.” You don’t fast for the coming of the King when the King’s right in front of you. You enjoy the presence of the King. But then we’ve got this picture of when the Bridegroom will be taken from them, then they will fast. You see the Bridegroom would die on a cross and rise from the grave and ascend into heaven. He would be taken from them.

Jesus says, “Then they will fast.” Why will they fast then? Because they don’t have the Bridegroom? Well, in a sense we all know that yes, they have the Bridegroom. Yes, followers of Christ have the presence of Christ in us. We’re not like the Old Testament, longing for the coming of the King. The King has come. But at the same time, the King is not with us. The King is on His throne in Heaven. And the picture is, Jesus is saying, “They will fast for the coming of the King. They will long for the Bridegroom to return for His bride.” That’s when they’ll fast.

Now put this together with the picture of watchmen in Isaiah chapter 62, looking out over the horizon. And the reason in the New Testament, why we cannot keep silent day or night is because we are watchmen on the walls looking out over the horizon, and as the adversary is bombarding the Church, we’re a people who are fasting and praying and looking for the coming of the King. This is good news, ladies and gentlemen.

No matter how much the adversary bombards the Church in our day, no matter how much sin creeps into the Church, no matter how much false teaching creeps into the Church, no matter how many times you struggle with certain sins, week after week, some of you month after month, some of you struggling with sins year after year after year—the same things. Struggling with them, no matter how horrible the suffering and pain is that we go through.

Calling Out to God

Even when two-year-old son drowns in a pool, look out over the horizon! Ladies and gentlemen, there is a King who is coming! And fast and pray because we long for Him to come and deliver us from sin once and for all! To deliver us from suffering and pain! And He is coming. And we fast and we pray, calling out for Him to come and to come quickly. That’s the New Testament cry. It’s the very last chapter of the New Testament. Revelation chapter 22. Jesus says, “I am coming.” The New Testament cries out, “Come, Lord Jesus. Come quickly! We want you to come!”

This is why we fast according to the New Testament. We fast because we want the King to come back for His people. Because we long, yes. We know…we know His presence in one sense now. But we do not know Him as intimately as we could. We don’t know His power, and His mercy, and His majesty, and His grace as intimately as we could. And we want Him. And so we fast and we pray because we want Him to come to us.

This is the point where I’m most convicted in studying these texts. Could it be that one of the main reasons—if not the primary reason—why fasting is so not talked about in the Church today—at least the American Church—could it be the reason is because we have grown content with the absence of our King? We have good lives. We have nice homes and nice cars that we came to this building in tonight. We have good jobs. We have money and we have pleasures in this world and we enjoy the things of this world. We run after them in a rat-race day in and day out. And we enjoy those things to the point where we’re okay with the fact that Christ is not coming quickly.

We fast and we pray because nothing this world can offer us can compare with the coming of our King! And we long for Him and we desire Him more than the basic, daily necessity of food; more than the best food this world has to offer. We long for our King to come! That’s why we fast. We want His glory restored in this Church! We long, we hunger for the nations to see His greatness. And we want Him to come! So Church at Brook Hills, let’s be a people that don’t let God rest! Let’s call out to Him day and night. Day and night. Let’s fast like we are hungry for more of God.

Luke 18 Calls for Endless Praise of God

And so let’s not give Him any rest number one, from our praising. We will not give God rest from our praising. We will exalt your name, O God. You will never grow tired of the exaltation we will give to your name as your people. We will call out over, and over and over again your greatness, and your glory, and your beauty, and your majesty and your power. And we will ascribe to you the praise that is due you and you alone. You will never tire of our exaltation. You will not be able to go to sleep because we will be calling out our praises to you day in and day out.

We will not be able to sleep at night praising you. We will not give God rest from our praising. Second, from our confessing. Not only our praising. We will exalt His name, but our confessing. We will not grow weary of confessing our sin. We will be finished and done as a people of God with sinning and going on like it wasn’t that big of a deal. With sinning and thinking, “I’ll confess that later.” We will confess our sins constantly before you. And we will be confident that you are faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and you will cleanse us from all unrighteousness!

We want to experience the fullness of your grace. And so we will confess our sins boldly before you. We will not fear to be honest with you about our struggles and our sins and we will trust that you will cover our sins with your righteousness. You will give us power over those sins. And God, we will reflect your holiness. We will reflect your character to the nations. We will not let you tire, God, from our praising, and our confessing, and third, from our praying.

Luke 18 Prays for God to Listen to His People

You will not be able to rest because of our praying. We will pray day in and day out. Day in and day out. This is where we’ve really got to decide if we really want God. Luke 18:1-8; you might write it down and go back and look at it this week. Jesus teaches us to pray and never give up. He is talking about the coming of the King. And He says, “Pray and never give up.” God listens to those who cry out to Him day and night, day and night.

Listen to what Jonathan Edwards said in the middle of the Great awakening. Please listen closely. “It is very apparent,” Edwards said, “from the Word of God that God often tries the faith and patience of His people when they are crying out to Him for some great and important mercy. He tries their patience by withholding the mercy they seek for a season. Not only so, but at first He may cause an increase of dark appearances. And yet He, without fail, at last prospers those who continue urgently in prayer with all perseverance and will not let Him go until He blesses them.”

What he’s saying is there is biblical precedent for this. When God’s people began to call out for Him, He will often wait to see if they really want what they’re asking for. And maybe even at the beginning give dark appearances. Things seem to be not answering at all, to see if they really want what they ask of Him. And inevitably He will bless those who hold onto Him and say, “We’re not letting go until you bless us.” This is the picture of Jacob wrestling with God in the book of Genesis. “I will not let go of you, God, until you bless me.” Is that bold to say that to God? “I’m not going to let go of you until you bless me. I’m not going to stop calling out to you until you bless me.”

Honoring God through Prayers

God is honored in that kind of praying. And this is where we must decide if we really do have a fast food version of Christianity that says, “If we don’t get things our way, right away, then we will get bored and move on to something else next month. To the next program. To the next emphasis. To the next this or that.” Or are we willing to be a faith family who week in and week out, calls out to God?

And if He doesn’t answer this week or next week, and if He doesn’t answer next month, if He doesn’t answer in the next year, He will still find us on our faces, crying out and fasting and praying for Him to show His glory and resound His praise among the nations. And for Him to come back…and even if 50 years later, He still hasn’t come back, He will still find us on our faces calling out in hunger for Him. Will He find that kind of faith on the earth? Luke 18 asks us.

We are a “quick-fix” people. And we do not serve a “quick-fix” God. How much do we want Him? I pray that we want Him enough to say, “God, we will bombard your throne. We will come before you day and night. Day and night. And You will never be able to sleep from our voices praying to You. And we will pray and we will not give up.”

Luke 18 Prays for the Gospel to be Spread

Let’s give God no rest from our praising, our confessing, our praying and finally from our working. Please do not mistake this whole picture as saying that we’re going to fast and pray and just kind of sit passively by and hope that something good happens. On the contrary. We fast and pray and we work, especially when it comes to this coming of the Kingdom thing. Matthew 24:14, “And this gospel of the kingdom will be preached in the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end will come.” Catch that; Matthew 24:14. This gospel of the kingdom will be preached in all nations and then the end will come. Then the King will come. Then the Kingdom will come when the gospel is preached in all nations.

Now, that verse has really perplexed a lot of people. And a lot of scholars debate, “Well, Jesus is going to come. The Kingdom will come in its full consummation when this gospel is preached in all nations. How do we know when that’s happened?” I love what George Ladd says about this. He says,

“God alone, Who has told us that this gospel of the Kingdom should be preached in the whole world, God alone will know when that objective will be accomplished. But I do not need to know. I know only one thing: Christ has not yet returned. Therefore the task is not yet done. When it is done, Christ will come. Our responsibility is not to insist on defining the terms of our task. Our responsibility is to complete the task. So as long as Christ does not return, our work is not done. Let us then get busy and complete our mission.”

Fasting and Praying for God’s Mission

God, may it be so. We will fast and we will pray. We will not give you rest from our praising, our confessing, our praying and our working. And in the end, God, we will accomplish your mission. We will accomplish your mission because we want your glory, because we want your praise to resound among the nations, and because we want Your King to come. That’s why we go to the nations in 2008, Church at Brook Hills, because we want Jesus to come. We want Jesus’ glory to reign. That’s why we go. That’s why we work. That’s why we pray. That’s why we fast.

Do we really want God? Or are we content with the status quo; the business as usual; come, sing some songs and listen to a sermon and by the time we get to a restaurant this evening, we’ve completely forgotten about the glory of God. And by the time we get up to go to school or work in the morning, we have no zeal for His glory. Are we content with that? Or will we say as a church, “We want more. We want more of your glory. We want more of your majesty. We want more of your power. And you will find us on our faces, fasting and praying until you bless us. We won’t let go until it happens.

David Platt

David Platt serves as a pastor in metro Washington, D.C. He is the founder of Radical.

David received his Ph.D. from New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary and is the author of Don’t Hold Back, Radical, Follow Me, Counter Culture, Something Needs to Change, Before You Vote, as well as the multiple volumes of the Christ-Centered Exposition Commentary series.

Along with his wife and children, he lives in the Washington, D.C. metro area.

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