Fasting is a serious matter. Spiritual purification, abstinence, prayer. It seems that there is no room for jokes here. However, if you look closely at monastic culture, folk anecdotes, and even old monastery jokes, you will find that a smile is a frequent guest even during the strictest fasting. Humor helps to relieve tension, prevents from sinking into depression, and reminds us that it is important to maintain a human face even in the most serious business. In this article, we have gathered the funniest, warmest, and most recognizable jokes about fasting — those that monks might tell each other over a meal if they were allowed to laugh out loud.
The holy fathers often said that melancholy is one of the most dangerous sins, especially during fasting. When the stomach growls and the soul is longing, it is very easy to fall into melancholy. It is here that humor becomes a saving anchor. Monks knew that if they do not laugh at their weaknesses, they will start to control you. Therefore, there were always \"culinary jokes\" in monasteries — stories about how Brother Ivan mixed salt with sugar, how Father Nikodim tried to bake a fasting pie, and it turned out to be \"something,\" and how the abbot, tasting the fasting meal, said: \"Tasty, but I want more.\"
Of course, it was not laughter for laughter's sake. It was a good, forgiving laughter at one's own weakness. And it is this kind of humor that we are collecting today.
The most popular topic of monastic jokes is, of course, food. More precisely, what replaces it during fasting. Without meat, milk, and eggs, culinary experiments turn into an actual adventure.
\"When a fasting person says: 'I ate a cutlet,' he means a cabbage one. But he is still happy.\"
\"Recipe for a fasting pie: take flour, water, salt, add hope that it will be tasty, and bake.\"
\"Fasting soup is when vegetables float in a pot, and you try to guess which of them is meat. But there is none.\"
\"A monk complains to the abbot: 'Father, I have been eating fasting food for a week, and it seems to me that I have become like this soup — transparent and tasteless.' The abbot replies: 'Bear with it, my son. But you will shine like the prosphoras in the altar'.\"
Substitutions are a separate genre of monastic humor. Monks know very well that soy milk is not milk, and nut cheese is not cheese. But they pretend that it is almost the same. And this game of self-deception gives rise to many funny situations.
\"If you add a little vanilla to oat milk, it becomes almost like the real thing. Almost.\"
\"Tofu is not meat. But if you sauté it well with garlic, it starts to behave like meat. And even smell almost like meat. Almost.\"
\"A monk sits at the table, tastes a fasting salad, and says: 'Father, are you sure this is not meat?' The abbot answers seriously: 'I am sure. If it were meat, it would not smile like that'.\"
\"When you are fasting and you very much want milk, it seems that even tap water can become milk if you think about a cow.\"
The abbot in a monastery is not only a spiritual guide but also the main \"humor manager.\" His answers to the culinary complaints of the brotherhood often become catchphrases.
\"Father, may I have a piece of fish? I really want it.\" — \"Ask God. He knows what is better for you. And if He sends fish, it means you are ready. If not — it means you are not yet ready for it.\"
\"Brother Ivan complains: 'Father, I am tired of porridge!' The abbot: 'You are tired of porridge, but the holy fathers were tired of milk in the desert. And they survived.' \"
\"A brother asks: 'Father, can I eat an apple during fasting?' The abbot: 'You can, but do not overdo it. Or they will say that this monk has eaten apples and become proud.'\"
Of course, monks understand that fasting is not just about abstaining from milk. It is about abstaining from malice, judgment, and empty words. And here humor becomes even more subtle, because it is aimed at our own hypocrisy.
\"I can refrain from eating meat, but I condemn everyone who eats it. And I seem to be praying, but in my thoughts, I have already quarreled with everyone. And so the whole fasting.\"
\"How to understand that you are not just fasting, but really fasting? When, instead of eating an extra piece, you say: 'Lord, forgive me for this thought.' And at the same time, you feel hungry.\"
\"Monks joke: 'Fasting is when you do not eat meat, but at the same time, you mentally eat everyone who annoys you.' This is the most common mistake of beginners.\"
In every monastery, there are legends about unsuccessful fasting dishes. These stories are passed from mouth to mouth and become part of local folklore.
\"Once Brother Nikodim decided to bake a fasting cake. He replaced butter with apple puree, eggs with flaxseed, and sugar with fructose. It turned out to be something indistinguishable. But it was edible. Almost. The abbot, tasting it, said: 'I do not know what it is, but it is definitely fasting. Because it cannot be tasty.'\"
\"A monk asked the cook for the recipe for a fasting salad. The cook thought for a moment and said: 'Replace the meat with tofu, eggs with peas, and sausage with carrots. It will be almost salad. If you close your eyes.'\"
\"Once Brother Alexei decided to make a fasting mayonnaise. He tried all the recipes: on soy milk, on oat milk, on aquafaba. In the end, he got something that resembled glue more than a sauce. But he ate it so that it would not go to waste.\"
Today, jokes about fasting have gone beyond the walls of monasteries. On the internet, you can find thousands of memes that accurately describe the feelings of a fasting person. And in each such joke, there is a share of truth and much love.
\"Fasting is when you look at pizza and think: 'This is a sin.' And then add: 'But what a sweet sin!'\"
\"I am fasting. I look at recipes for fasting dishes. They look beautiful, but I know they are tasteless. But I will try. And if it does not work out, I will fast further.\"
\"The most difficult thing about fasting is not to eat meat. And the easiest thing is to eat everything else, but with a sense of guilt.\"
Jokes about fasting are a way to admit that we are all imperfect. That we try, but sometimes we fail. That we want to be better, but we love to eat. Joking about fasting is not blasphemy, but honesty. It is an acknowledgment that we are people, with our weaknesses and desires. And if we can laugh at ourselves, it means we have not lost a sense of reality. And a sense of reality is what helps us not to take ourselves too seriously and not to fall into melancholy.
So, fasting is not only a time of strictness, but also a time of a smile. Because even the holy fathers knew: when the stomach is empty, the soul should be full of light. And if this light is warm, good humor, then fasting becomes joyful. Enjoy your meal (in a metaphorical sense)!\
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