Prayer and Fasting
Why do Copts fast so often?
Copts fast often because fasting is a normal Christian discipline for repentance, prayer, self-control, mercy, and watchfulness. Food is good. The body is good. The problem is disordered desire. Fasting teaches the body and soul to remember that human beings live by God, not by appetite alone.
Christ fasted. He also taught His disciples how to fast. The Church keeps fasting as part of discipleship because the spiritual life must become concrete in the body, the table, the home, and the calendar.
When you fast, anoint your head and wash your face.
Fasting Forms The Whole Person
Fasting joins the body to prayer. The plate changes so the heart can change. Coptic fasting commonly includes abstaining from animal products for appointed seasons, and also abstaining from food and drink for part of the day according to strength, health, age, and pastoral guidance.
This is why Coptic fasting can look vegan from the outside, but its purpose is different. It is ascetic and liturgical. The fast belongs with prayer, repentance, confession, mercy, almsgiving, and obedience to Christ.
Children, beginners, pregnant or nursing mothers, the elderly, people with medical needs, and anyone with eating-disorder concerns need guidance. A gentle beginning can be serious when it is blessed and kept with humility.
The Weekly And Yearly Rhythm
The Coptic fasting calendar teaches the faithful to remember salvation with time itself. Wednesday fasting remembers the betrayal of Christ. Friday fasting remembers His crucifixion. The annual fasts prepare the Church for the Lord's feasts, apostolic mission, repentance, and love for the saints.
| Fast or season | What it teaches | | --- | --- | | Wednesdays and Fridays | Weekly remembrance of betrayal and crucifixion. | | Jonah's Fast or Nineveh's Fast | Repentance, mercy, and preparation before Great Lent. | | Great Lent | A long school of repentance leading to Holy Week and the Resurrection Feast. | | Apostles' Fast | Prayer, self-denial, and mission after Pentecost. | | Fast of St. Mary | Love for the Theotokos, purity, and renewed devotion to Christ. | | Nativity Fast | Preparation for the Incarnation and the Feast of the Nativity. | | Paramoun fasts | Immediate preparation before major feasts such as the Nativity and Theophany. |
The calendar is therefore a teacher. It returns the body, the family table, and the parish to the saving work of Christ again and again.
Prayer, Mercy, And Repentance
This kind does not go out except by prayer and fasting.
A good fast should make a person more repentant, more merciful, more attentive, and more generous. If fasting produces pride, anger, comparison, or obsession with ingredients, the person needs guidance and a return to the purpose of the fast.
Fasting In A Sacramental Life
Fasting is connected to the Church's sacramental life. The faithful often prepare for Communion with prayer, repentance, confession when needed, reconciliation with others, and bodily watchfulness. The fast does not earn Communion. It helps the person approach the mystery with attention rather than casualness.
This is why fasting is never only a private wellness practice. It belongs to the Church's worship, especially around the Liturgy, feasts, and penitential seasons. The body learns to wait, the heart learns to ask for mercy, and the whole person is reminded that receiving Christ calls for a life turned toward Christ.
- Fasting, Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States. Catechetical lecture on the purpose, order, and spiritual discipline of fasting.
- How Does One Begin Fasting?, Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States Q&A. Pastoral answer on beginning fasting, length of abstinence, and foods commonly avoided.
- Fasting, Mighty Arrows Magazine, SUSCopts. Parish-level teaching on fasting as prayer, repentance, and self-control.
- Coptic Fasts and Feasts, Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States. Diocesan calendar resource for annual feasts and fasts.
- Annual Fasts, Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States Q&A. Pastoral answer listing major annual fasts including Great Lent, Nativity Fast, Apostles Fast, St. Mary's Fast, and Jonah's Fast.
- Wednesday and Friday Fasting, Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States Q&A. Pastoral answer on degrees of fasting, Wednesday and Friday practice, and Jonah's Fast.
- Fish During Some Fasts, Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States Q&A. Pastoral answer on why fish is allowed in some fasts and not others.
Confession: The sacrament of repentance in which a person confesses sins before God in the presence of the priest and receives absolution and guidance.
Holy Communion: The faithful receiving the true Body and Blood of Christ in the Eucharist, after baptismal life, repentance, confession, fasting, reconciliation, and pastoral preparation.
Mysteries: The Orthodox name for the sacraments, calling attention to God's grace given through visible rites such as Baptism, Chrismation, Confession, and the Eucharist.
