What Neuroscience Tells Us about Lenten Disciplines
This Lent, fasting is for a cause. Chris Seay, for example, published A Place at the Table, a 40-day diet in solidarity with the poor. Blood:Water Mission is promoting its Forty Days of Water which began on Ash Wednesday.
I've eaten a solidarity diet, and—for someone like me who likes bread and red meat—it is a painful lesson on the suffering that roughly a billion people experience. But I'm afraid that by making the Lenten discipline of fasting about a cause, we are caving in to our cultural distaste for self-denial.
Modern Christians, along with our culture, dislike the idea of exerting control over our bodies, simply for denial's sake. The popular book Eat, Pray, Love wouldn't have sold so well if it had been titled Fast, Pray, Serve. As a result of our culture's unease regarding abstaining from things our bodies desire, we must justify fasting by doing it for a good cause. But as we relearn to fast, we should remember that these disciplines are very much about us and our own personal faith, not only about solidarity with a cause.
Neuroscience sheds light on how fasting and other spiritual disciplines work by training our subconscious mental processes. We think of ourselves as entirely the activity of our conscious thoughts. In reality, our brain has thousands of sub-conscious processes going on all the time. These processes are often pushing and pulling different ideas, concerns, or cravings into our consciousness. What this means is your conscious self is far less in control over who you are and what you do than you realize. "We are not the ones driving the boat of our behavior," says neuroscientist David Eagleman. "Who we are runs well below the surface of our conscious access."
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Matt Ward
I don't think Seay or Blood:Water are "making the Lenten discipline of fasting about a cause" in their efforts. I'm participating in Blood:Water's 40 Days campaign, and it's been clear in stating that Lent isn't about giving something up; it's about creating space for growth and solidarity, and the ability to listen. It's been about opening individuals up to a cognizant rescue from their everyday patterns, much in what the author said. The campaign has promoted a spiritual journey in the devotional guide for each day that wasn't centered on the promotion of a cause, but on the development of the participant in the midst of the act in solidarity with the poor. I agree with the author, that "Fasting and all other spiritual disciplines are not simply reminders of other more important things," but so does the campaign with Blood:Water. I think the article makes a mistake in highlighting those groups connecting the self-discipline to a outward service as flawed and further promotes apathy