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WHY A FAST FOR THE DORMTION ?
--Deacon Robert Kuchta


It would be a great understatement to say that much has been written about the Feast of the Dormition of the Theotokos. Yet very little has been written about the fast that precedes it.

Every Orthodox Christ is aware and generally knows the reason behind the fasts for Pascha and Christmas. But while they may know of the Dormition Fast, few follow it, and more than a few question why it is there, neither knowing its purpose. First, given the pervasive misunderstanding of the purpose of fasting itself, a refresher on its purpose is always a good idea. There is a perception that we should fast when we want something, as though the act of fasting somehow appeases God, and seeing us “suffer” gets Him to grant our request. Nothing can be further from the truth. It is not our fasting which pleases God, it is the fruits of our fast (provided we fast in the proper mind set and do not merely DIET) that please Him. We fast, not to get what we want, but to prepare ourselves to receive what God wants to give us. The purpose of fasting is to bring us more in line with another Mary, the sister of Lazarus, and away from their sister Martha, who in the famous passage was “anxious and troubled about many things”. Fasting is intended to bring us to the realization of “the one thing needful.” It is to help us put God first and our own desires second, if not last. As such it serves to prepare us to be instruments of God’s will, as with Moses in his flight from Egypt and on Mt. Sinai, as well as our Lord’s fast in the wilderness. Fasting turns us away from ourselves and toward God. In essence it helps us become like the Theotokos, and obedient servant of God, who hear His word and kept it better than anyone else has or could.

So why do we fast before the Dormition? In a close-knit family, word that its matriarch is on her deathbed brings normal life to a halt. Otherwise important things (parties, TV, luxuries, personal desires) become unimportant; life comes to revolve around the dying matriarch. It is the same with the Orthodox family; word that our matriarch is on her deathbed, could not (or at least should not) have any different effect from the one just mentioned. The Church, through the Paraklesis Service, gives us the opportunity to come to the deathbed and eulogize and entreat the woman who bore God, the vessel of our salvation and our chief advocate at His divine throne. And, as in an earthly family, daily routines and the indulgence in personal wants should come to a halt, fasting, in its full sense (abstaining from food and desires) accomplishes this. Less time in leisure or other pursuits leaves more time for prayer and reflection on the one who gave us Christ, and became the first and greatest embodying Christ’s retort to the woman who stated that Mary was blessed because she bore Him: Blessed rather are those who hear His word and keep it. Mary did this better than anyone. As. Fr. Thomas Hopko has stated: She heard the word of God and kept it so well, that she of all women in history was chosen not only to hear His Word but give birth to it (Him)., So while we fast in contemplation of her life, we are simultaneously preparing ourselves to live a life in imitation of her. This is the purpose of the Dormition Fast.

When the assumption of thine undefiled boy was being prepared, the apostles gazed on thy bed, viewing thee with trembling. Some contemplated thy body and were dazzled, but Peter cried out to thee in tears, saying, “I see thee clearly, O Virgin, stretched out, O life of all, and I am astonished. O thou undefiled one, in whom the bliss of future life dwelt, beseech thy Son and God to preserve thy people unimpaired”

--Sticheron after the Gospel, Orthros.

Deacon Robert Kuchta served very briefly at the Greek Church of the Annunciation, York, Pennsylvania, beginning his service in the fall of 2014 until contracting metastatic pancreatic cancer during Nativitytide 2015 and reposing a few weeks later This meditation on the Dormation was the only one he was able offer to this community.

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Thank you, Father Deacon Thomas, for sharing such a well written and profound meditation on the Dormition fast. It's posting is very timely and, also, a tribute to the intellect and spiritual insight of Deacon Robert.


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