Season 3 · Episode 18
FASTING DAY 17 - The Reformers Take on Fasting
COACH: Church Origins and Church History courtesy of the That’s Jesus Channel
February 4, 202612m 33s
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Show Notes
Title: FASTING DAY 17: The Reformers – Why Luther Hated Mandatory Fasting
Description: By the 1500s, the Catholic Church taught that fasting was required to avoid sin and earn merit, a claiming Martin Luther rejected as "godless" and "tyrannical." In Day 17 of our history series, we trace the Protestant Reformation's complex battle over fasting. We see how leaders like Luther and Calvin fought to shift the practice from a mandatory law for salvation to a voluntary discipline for prayer and repentance [Source 8: 55-56].
The story takes a surprising turn with John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, who swung the pendulum back toward strict discipline. We examine why Wesley refused to ordain any minister who didn't fast every Wednesday and Friday, believing it was essential for spiritual power [Source 8: 57]. We also look at the "Via Media" (middle way) of the Anglican Church, which kept fasting days but removed the idea that they earned God's favor [Source 8: 57].
This episode helps you understand why your 21-day fast is voluntary and why that distinction matters for your soul. It challenges us to check our motives: are we trying to earn God's love through hunger, or are we simply clearing the way to seek His face? Join us to learn the freedom of biblical fasting [Source 8: 58].
Keywords: Martin Luther, John Calvin, John Wesley, Protestant Reformation, mandatory fasting, works righteousness, spiritual disciplines, history of fasting, voluntary fasting, Methodist history.
Hashtags: #ChurchHistory #Christianity #COACH #DeepDive #Reformation #MartinLuther #JohnWesley #FastingHistory