Fasting and prayer

What Fasting and Prayer Actually Do and How to Do Them Together

Fasting is not spiritual performance and it is not an outdated discipline. It is a practical way of creating space, sharpening attention, and turning repeated physical hunger into repeated prayer.

Fasting is one of the most misunderstood practices in the Christian life. It is often either avoided entirely or approached like a dramatic demonstration of commitment.

Neither approach gets it right. Properly understood, fasting is one of the most practical and honest spiritual disciplines available because it does something to prayer that is difficult to achieve any other way.

This page is a straightforward explanation of what fasting is, what it is not, why Jesus expected His followers to practice it, and how to combine it with prayer in a way that is genuine rather than performative.

What fasting actually is

Fasting is the deliberate, temporary abstention from food — or from something else that occupies a meaningful place in daily life — for the purpose of directing the attention created by that absence toward God.

The word deliberate matters. Skipping a meal because you are busy is not a fast. A fast is a chosen absence that creates space, and the point is to fill that space with prayer instead of the thing that was removed.

A fast without intentional prayer is not really spiritual focus. It is just going without.

Hunger becomes a repeated prompt throughout the day. Every time you notice it, you are given another chance to turn your attention back to God.

What fasting accomplishes

Physically, fasting creates a recurring signal that is hard to ignore. Spiritually, that signal can become a built-in reminder to pray again and again instead of letting prayer stay confined to one scheduled moment.

Fasting also exposes attachment. What is difficult to surrender, even temporarily, often reveals what has more control over your attention and comfort than you realized.

That exposure is not condemnation. It is honest information, and honest information is exactly what deeper prayer requires.

What Jesus said about fasting

In Matthew 6, Jesus says, “When you fast,” not “if you fast.” His focus is on the posture and method of fasting, not on whether His followers will ever do it.

He warns against making fasting visible and dramatic for the sake of other people. The practice is meant to be private, sincere, and directed toward the Father who sees what is done in secret.

That means fasting was not presented as an elite discipline for unusually serious Christians. It was treated as a normal part of a life of prayer.

How Scripture joins fasting and prayer

Throughout Scripture, fasting and prayer show up together in moments of seriousness — when people need guidance, mercy, protection, repentance, or clarity.

Ezra fasted and prayed before a dangerous journey. Nehemiah fasted and prayed when he heard about Jerusalem’s brokenness. The early church fasted and prayed before sending Paul and Barnabas, and that posture of worship and attentiveness became the setting in which direction came.

Fasting is not a formula for forcing an outcome. It is a way of placing yourself before God with unusual honesty and unusual attentiveness.

How fasting changes prayer in practice

1

Prayer becomes more urgent

Hunger creates a real sense of need, and that physical need often makes prayer less vague and more genuine.

2

Distractions are reduced

Meals take time, planning, and attention. A fast creates space that can be deliberately redirected into prayer and Scripture.

3

The seriousness becomes tangible

When you fast over a decision or burden, your body feels the weight of the matter, and that often sharpens the quality of your prayer.

4

Clarity often follows

Not always dramatic answers, but often a quieter, cleaner sense of what matters most and what direction to take next.

Different forms of fasting

The best kind of fast is the one that is honest, safe, and sustainable for your real situation, not the one that sounds most intense.

Complete fast

No food, water only, for a limited period, usually one day. This is the traditional form, but it is not appropriate for everyone.

Partial fast

A reduced diet for a set period, such as a Daniel-style fast. This is often better for longer stretches or for beginners.

Intermittent fast

Fasting during specific hours of the day, such as morning to evening. This is often the most accessible pattern for workdays and ordinary schedules.

Non-food fast

Stepping away from something else that occupies attention, like social media or entertainment. It is meaningful, though not identical to a food fast.

What to do on a fast day

1

Plan the prayer, not just the fast

Decide in advance how you will use the meal times or attention windows that open up. Without a prayer plan, fasting easily becomes mere deprivation.

2

Use hunger as a cue

Each time you feel hunger, turn it into a short prayer: “Lord, I need You more than I need comfort right now.”

3

Read Scripture with the prayer

Fasting is not only about emptying. It is also about filling the space with the word of God and attentive prayer.

4

Break the fast intentionally

End it with gratitude, not haste. Mark the close of the fast with awareness instead of snapping straight back into normal pace.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Making it public. Jesus directly warned against fasting for visibility or spiritual credibility.
  • Treating it like a transaction. Fasting does not pressure God into giving you what you want.
  • Abandoning the prayer. The fast matters less if the hunger is never redirected toward God.
  • Starting too aggressively. If you are new to fasting, begin smaller and wiser rather than choosing a form your body cannot handle well.

A prayer to begin a fast

Lord, I am beginning this fast as an act of deliberately choosing You over comfort. Not to earn anything, not to demonstrate something to anyone else, but because I want to be in a posture of dependence that my comfortable days do not always produce. I am bringing [name what you are fasting about — a decision, a person, a need, a request for clarity] to You with this fast. Let the hunger I feel today keep pointing me back to this. Search me in this. Show me what You see that I am missing. And give me the clarity, the guidance, the presence, or whatever it is I most need from this time with You. I trust You with today. In Jesus’ name, amen.

When you need others to fast and pray with you

Some of the strongest examples in Scripture are corporate, not solitary. Esther called for a shared fast before approaching the king, Joel called a community fast in crisis, and the church in Acts fasted together before major decisions.

If what you are carrying feels too large to hold alone, it is entirely biblical to ask trusted believers to join you in prayer and fasting.

And if you need sustained support from others right now, you can share a serious prayer need with people who will stand with you in faith. If you want to support someone else in a similar season, you can also pray over real requests from people who need urgent intercession.

Take one real step today

Choose one day this week for a partial fast. Skip one meal, turn that time into prayer, and let the hunger become a prompt to return your attention to God.

“When you fast… your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you.” — Matthew 6:17-18

Start small, but start deliberately. And if you need encouragement that God still meets people in serious seasons of prayer, read testimonies of answered prayer that strengthen faith for the hard things.

Begin with one honest fast

You do not need to start with something dramatic. One meal, one clear intention, and one day of attentive prayer is enough to begin learning what fasting and prayer can do together.