Fasting Rules.
The fasting rules, found for the
most part in the Typikon (mainly Chapters 32 and 33), and repeated in
appropriate places of the Menaion and Triodion, are dependent on the Church's
cycle of feasts and fasts. In general, with a few exceptions, all Wednesdays
and Fridays (Mondays also, in some monasteries) are kept as days of fasting,
with no meat, eggs, dairy products, fish, wine or oil to be eaten. This
includes, as well, the four canonical fasting periods (Great Lent, the
Apostles' Fast, the Nativity Fast and the Dormition Fast), and certain other
days, including the Eve of Theophany, the Beheading of St. John the Baptist,
and the elevation of the Cross. It must be noted, however, that there are many
local variations in the allowances of wine and oil (and sometimes fish), such
as on patronal feast days of a parish or monastery, or when the feast of a
great Saint (or Saints) is celebrated which has particular local or national
significance.
While most Orthodox Christians are
perhaps aware of the rules of fasting for Great Lent, Wednesdays and Fridays,
the rules for the other fasting periods are less known. During the Dormition
Fast, wine and oil are allowed only on Saturdays and Sundays (and sometimes on
a few feast days and vigils). During the Apostles' Fast and the Nativity Fast,
the general rules are as follows (from Chapter 33 of the Typikon):
It should be noted that in the Fast
of the Holy Apostles and of the Nativity of Christ, on Tuesday and Thursday we
do not eat fish, but only oil and wine. On Monday, Wednesday and Friday we eat
neither oil nor wine.... On Saturday and Sunday we eat fish. If there occur on
Tuesday or Thursday a Saint who has a Doxology, we eat fish; if on Monday, the
same; but if on Wednesday or Friday, we allow only oil and wine.... If it be a
Saint who has a Vigil on Wednesday or Friday, or the Saint whose temple it is,
we allow oil and wine and fish.... But from the 20th of December until the
25th, even if it be Saturday or Sunday, we do not allow fish.
In another place the Typikon
prescribes that if the Eve of Theophany or the Eve of the Nativity fall on
Saturday or Sunday, wine and oil are permitted.
The
rule of xerophagy is relaxed on the following days:
On Saturdays and Sundays in Great Lent, with the exception of
Holy Saturday, two main meals may be taken in the usual way, around
mid-day and in the evening, with wine and olive oil. Meat, animal products
and fish are not allowed.
On the Feast of the Annunciation (March 25) and Palm Sunday
fish is permitted as well as wine and oil, but meat and animal products
are not allowed.
Wine and oil are permitted on the following days, if they fall
on a weekday in the Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth or Sixth Weeks: First and
Second Finding of the Head of St. John the Baptist (Feb. 24), Holy Forty
Martyrs of Sebaste (Mar. 9), Forefeast of the Annunciation (Mar. 24), Synaxis
of the Archangel Gabriel (Mar. 26), Holy Greatmartyr George (April 23),
Holy Apostle and Evangelist Mark (April 25), as well as the Patronal Feast
of a Church or Monastery.
Wine and oil are also allowed on Wednesday and Thursday of the
Fifth Week, because of the Vigil for the Great Canon. Wine is allowed —
and, according to some authorities, oil as well — on Friday in the same
week, because of the Vigil for the Akathist Hymn.
It has always been held that these rules
of fasting should be relaxed in the case of anyone elderly or in poor health.
Personal facts also need to be taken into account, as, for example, the
situation of an isolated Orthodox living in the same household as non-Orthodox,
or one obliged to take meals in a factory or school lunchroom. In cases of
uncertainty, however, one should always seek the advice of his or her spiritual
father.
At all times, however, it is
essential to bear in mind that you are not under law but under grace (Rom. 6:14),
and that the letter kills, but the Spirit gives life (2 Cor. 3:6). The fasting
rules, while they do need to be taken seriously, are not to be interpreted with
the strict legalism of the Pharisees of Holy Scripture, for the kingdom of God
is not food and drink, but righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit
(Rom. 14:17).