Thank you @waterbrookmultnomah @prhaudio for the books #PRHAudioPartner I mostly read on my Kindle but listened to the final chapter. I recommend the audiobook—the author’s narration enhances his intercultural insights.
Fasting is more than a trend—it’s a transformative spiritual practice. This guide reclaims its biblical purpose, showing how fasting deepens prayer, renews faith, and even benefits the body. Blending personal experience, Scripture, and science, it offers practical wisdom for both beginners and seasoned practitioners. With a daily guide included, rediscover the life-changing power of fasting.
Seven years ago, when I was picking up my couch from a Kijiji ad (basically Canada’s version of Craigslist), the guy selling it was a personal trainer in the middle of a fast. He was quite chatty and started telling us—well, mostly my dad, since I had to bring him along to actually carry the couch, haha—about all the discomfort he was experiencing. Then he said, “A lot of people don’t understand fasting. It’s not for physical health; it’s a deeply spiritual connection of body and soul.”
Now, I wasn’t new to fasting. My parents have been avid fasters my whole life, and I grew up participating in New Year’s Daniel fasts with my church. But fasting was always taught as a purely spiritual practice, while most people I knew were actually only doing it for physical benefits. That conversation with the personal trainer was the first time I heard someone articulate the connection.
Fast forward to the present: When I lived in Maine as a worship pastor, I regularly fasted from Saturday evening through Sunday lunch in preparation of church. It wasn’t really for any deep reason—it was just a convenient time. Sunday mornings were packed with worship practice and prep, so it was easy to skip breakfast. And if I had a Saturday night event, I’d eat; if not, I’d fast while prepping for church.
Now, I fast from Sunday evening through Monday supper with my entire church staff. On Mondays at lunch, we gather in the prayer chapel to pray over all the ministries. Again, it’s easy because everyone around me is fasting—no one’s sitting in the lunchroom eating while I’m trying to resist hunger. Plus, the time I’d usually spend eating is now filled with corporate prayer.
Reward Sibanda’s book reassured me of three things:
1. No reason for fasting is bad—fasting, whether spiritual or not, has a deep soul impact.
2. Fasting for physical reasons isn’t just okay; it’s good.
3. Fasting as a discipline and routine is valuable.
But none of these things fully encompass biblical fasting.
Reward explains, in a logical and clear way, that fasting’s physicality is what draws out deep spiritual growth. It’s meant to be difficult—not something we try to make as easy as possible—because that very difficulty refines both body and soul.
I also DEEPLY appreciated the Zimbabwean perspective the author brought to the table. A couple of days after finishing the book, I asked my intern—who’s from Zambia—if he wanted to eat with me in the staff café. He said, “No, I’m ministering tomorrow, so I’m fasting today.” I was surprised and asked, “Is that really what ministers do where you’re from? I just read that in a book on fasting, but honestly, I thought it might’ve been exaggerated. Do pastors in most parts of Africa actually always fast before speaking?” His response? “Yes, it’s unimaginable not to. You have to be ready to hear from the Lord.”
If that wasn’t conviction, I don’t know what is.
If there’s anything I took away from this book, it’s this: We take fasting way too lightly in North America, and God is calling us back to a place where we are eagerly uncomfortable in pursuit of His voice. This book will show you how.
Why I read: I fast weekly with my church staff, and several of us did an extended fast in January, skipping meals daily. I primarily read it during that time. Plus, when I saw John Mark Comer recommend it, that sealed the deal—I downloaded the eARC that same day!
Perfect for you if you like:
Working through struggles with fasting
Both Biblical and scientific insights
Global perspectives
Holistic and thorough step by step guides
Similar:
Celebration of Discipline by Richard Foster
How to Pray by Pete Greig
Fasting by Jentezen Franklin