Because I believe in a good God, I believe in fasting as one of the primary ways we come to express our full trust and dependence on Him — that fasting is a way of leaning into the goodness of God. There is a long-established link between fasting and miracles. Fasting has been part of my personal practice for many years now. I have written workbooks and fasting guides, all in hopes of helping others on their journey. I have personally fasted for breakthrough and power.
But when God began to speak to my heart about fasting for miracles, it took me to a new level. I believe that when Jesus said in Matthew 17:21, “Some things only happen by prayer and fasting,” He meant it. Jesus Himself made the relationship between prayer and fasting explicit. He was teaching us that sometimes we must exercise more than faith to see our miracle. Believing is powerful, and prayer is powerful, but sometimes we must pray, fast, and expect our miracle.
Instead of thinking of miracles as distant, abstract, occasional events that happen for special people in special places, what if you could begin to really live a life of miracles — of actually seeing the supernatural become an everyday occurrence?
Join the conversation as a VIP Member