Although we obviously should keep all of the Church’s traditional laws of fast and abstinence, we should do more
St. Basil the Great, Doctor of the Church, austerely ate only bread and herbs, along with plain water. Butler’s Lives of the Saints, article: St. Basil the Great.
St. Gregory Nazianzen, Doctor of the Church, austerely ate only bread, herbs, and salt, along with plain water. Butler’s Lives of the Saints, article: St. Gregory Nazianzen.
than that, for three reasons:
Fasting and abstinence give us much-needed practice in “saying no” to our passions; those penances help us to fight gluttony and strengthen the virtue of temperance in us;
Fasting and abstinence atone for our sins and for the sins of others; and
Fasting and abstinence strengthen our will for the good and against evil, in all aspects of the spiritual life.
In mortifying our palate, it is generally better to perform these penances in private and unknown to others. Our Lord exhorts us that our penances should be discreet (and, ideally, in private). Here are His words:
When you fast, be not as the hypocrites, sad. For they disfigure their faces, that they may appear unto men to fast.
Quoted from St. Matthew’s Gospel, 6:16. St. Thomas Aquinas explains that Our Lord does not forbid fasting in public but that we should not seek attention from others for fasting. Concerning Our Lord’s words: “That thou appear not to men to fast.”, St. Thomas comments:
He does not forbid simply to be seen [when fasting], but to want to be seen; as though He were to say, ‘Do not wish to receive praise or favor from men for fasting.’
St. Thomas Aquinas, Lecture on St. Matthew’s Gospel, ch.6, v.16 (emphasis and bracketed words added).
Thus, we should not do our penances in order to be seen by men, and the best occasions to perform those penances are when we are eating and drinking alone.
Because we must eat and drink for our health and life, we cannot simply abstain from all food and drink. We must both eat for nutrition and also do penance. The ideal foods and drinks to deny ourselves are those which we do not consume for nutrition but rather which we consume merely for pleasure, viz., sweets and junk food. Our doctors typically recommend that we consume less of these anyway.
Therefore, we should deny ourselves these foods and drinks when we are alone and consume only those which our bodies need for nutrition.
Further, eating and drinking for pleasure when we are alone presents a special risk. It is often a sign of a man’s alcohol abuse when he habitually drinks alone because he wants to drink alcohol more often or in larger quantities than his friends and family would condone. He would be embarrassed if they saw him drink so often or so much. Similarly, there is an increased risk of gluttony if a person eats and drinks sweets or junk food alone in order to avoid the embarrassment of people seeing how often or in what large quantities he eats and drinks them. Resolving not to indulge in such pleasures alone helps avoid such risks.
Does the above explanation show that we should never eat and drink sweets and junk food?
Everyone should be as generous with God as possible. It might be God’s will that some persons always abstain from sweets and junk food (although that issue is not the topic of the present article).
But abstaining from sweets and junk food in social situations (i.e., eating and drinking with other people) has three circumstances which are not present when eating alone:
- There is a fittingness to consuming sweets and junk food on high feasts (e.g., at Easter banquets)
It is popularly related that St. Francis of Assisi once declared to his brothers that on Christmas,
It is my wish that even the walls should eat meat on such a day; and if they cannot, they should be smeared with meat on the outside.
and on special, important social occasions, (e.g., at wedding banquets). This food lifts our spirits and makes us feel like we are celebrating the important day. This is why the Catholic Church never makes Sundays and High Feasts days of fasting.
- It can be an act of charity and friendship to join others in merriment or in their celebrations, as Our Lord describes concerning the man who found his sheep which was lost:
What man of you that hath a hundred sheep: and if he shall lose one of them, doth he not leave the ninety-nine in the desert, and go after that which was lost, until he find it? And when he hath found it, lay it upon his shoulders, rejoicing: And coming home, call together his friends and neighbors, saying to them: Rejoice with me, because I have found my sheep that was lost?
Luke 15:4-6.
- It is natural and human for friends to enjoy eating a meal together or a treat together. Doing this fosters and expresses their mutual friendship. We understand this natural, social good (sharing a meal) so well that Our Lord uses it to help us understand intimate friendship with Him. Here are His words:
Behold, I stand at the gate, and knock. If any man shall hear my voice, and open to me the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me.
Apoc. 3:20.
These social reasons for consuming sweets and junk food are absent when consuming them alone.
Conclusion
We need to do more penance than we do, especially to better mortify our palates and all of our passions. One of the best ways to do this is to abstain from sweets and junk foods when we are alone. Let us do this generously!