January 6 - 26, 2025

As a church family, we will begin 2024 with an intentional time of seeking God through prayer and fasting, and giving God first priority.  2 Chronicles 7:14 encourages us that forgiveness, healing and strength are available as we wait upon God.
January Invitations: Throughout this church-wide initiative, we have created some extra times to pray together as a congregation in addition to Sunday morning services:
January 6: Day 1 & Fasting Commitment
January 15: Midweek Prayers 7pm Ladner
January 16: Midweek Prayer at 6:30pm Richmond
January 22: Midweek Prayer at noon Ladner
January 23: Midweek Prayer at 6:30pm Richmond
January 26: Night of Prayer and Worship, Testimonies, & Baptisms 6pm Richmond

"If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and I will forgive their sin and will heal their land.  Now my eyes will be open and my ears attentive to the prayers offered in this place."

 - 2 Chronicles 7:14-15

Prayer & Fasting Resources

Why Fast?

Fasting prepares you for the works God has ordained for you to do.

Wesley Duewel, a twentieth-century writer, said, “You and I have no more right to omit fasting because we feel no special emotional prompting than we have a right to omit prayer, Bible reading, or assembling with God’s children for lack of some special emotional prompting. Fasting is just as biblical and normal a part of a spiritual walk of obedience with God as are these others.”
Some of the most encouraging words that we can read as we prepare to enter into this season are found in Acts 13:2, which reads, “While they were worshiping the Lord and fasting, the Holy Spirit said…” We are encouraged and invigorated to know that our time of dedicating ourselves to the Lord in this way will result in us actually hearing from Him!

In the Bible, fasting has to do with food, and God's people fast for a number of reasons. Following are seven circumstances in the Bible in which believers sought God through this discipline.

1. To prepare for ministry. Jesus spent forty days and nights in the wilderness fasting and praying before He began God’s work on this earth. He needed time alone to prepare for what His Father had called Him to do (Matthew 4:1-17; Mark 1:12-13; Luke 4:1-14).

2. To seek God’s wisdom. Paul and Barnabas prayed and fasted for the elders of the churches before committing them to the Lord for His service (Acts 14:23).

3. To show grief. Nehemiah mourned, fasted, and prayed when he learned Jerusalem’s walls had been broken down, leaving the Israelites vulnerable and disgraced (Nehemiah 1:1-4).

4. To seek deliverance or protection. Ezra declared a corporate fast and prayed for a safe journey for the Israelites as they made the nine-hundred-mile trek to Jerusalem from Babylon (Ezra 8:21-23).

5. To repent. After Jonah pronounced judgment against the city of Nineveh, the king covered himself with sackcloth and sat in the dust. He then ordered the people to fast and pray. Jonah 3:10 says, “When God saw what they did and how they turned from their evil ways, He relented and did not bring on them the destruction He had threatened.”

6. To gain victory. After losing forty thousand men in battle in two days, the Israelites cried out to God for help. Judges 20:26 says all the people went up to Bethel and “sat weeping before the Lord.” They also “fasted that day until evening.” The next day the Lord gave them victory over the Benjamites.

7. To worship God. Luke 2 tells the story of an eighty-four-year-old prophetess named Anna. Verse 37 says, “She never left the temple but worshiped night and day, fasting and praying.” Anna was devoted to God, and fasting was one expression of her love for Him.

©2023 Kristen Feola | Faith Gateway


Fasting Options

Option 1 - Fasting Until 6pm
This will be a commitment toward fasting for a significant portion of your day, incorporating only 1 meal into your schedule.
Or, due to medical and other considerations, it may be necessary to participate by altering your diet for the duration of the fast.

Option 2 -The Daniel Fast
This commitment is to eat only fruits, veggies, and whole grains for the duration of 21 days. See more information in the resource "How to Fast".

Option 3 - All Meals
This will be a commitment toward fasting from all food except for water, juice and other broths for the duration of the 21 days of the fast.

Option 4 - Varied Weeks
This will be a commitment you make by alternating from the above options.

*While we do believe biblical fasting is focused primarily on food, we acknowledge with great care that because of past struggles, a fast from food may not be beneficial for some of you, either because of medical conditions or a difficult season of disordered eating. In that case, we encourage you to consider abstaining from something else not connected to food during these 21 days. A helpful and beneficial fast will be to abstain from anything you tend to depend on for comfort or coping with difficult emotions. Examples would be television/media, alcohol, retail spending, or other entertainment and creature comforts. Rather than participating in that thing, a fast encourages spending the time you’d normally allot to that thing going to God in prayer instead, and seeking him for comfort instead.