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The Fast: The Nature of Acts of Worship, Why Fast, Kinds of Fasting, People Exempted From Fasting, Acts Which Nullify the Fast, Recommended Acts And Permissible Acts -- By Dr. Ja`far Sheikh Idris
EsinIslam
Ramadan
By Dr. Ja`far
Sheikh Idris
The
Nature of Acts of Worship
Why Fast
Kinds of Fasting
People Exempted From Fasting
Acts Which Nullify the Fast
Recommended Acts
Permissible Acts
The Fast:
The Nature of Acts of Worship
God created
us so we may worship Him. To help us achieve this
purpose, He instilled the worship of Him in our very
nature and made it the essence of our humanity, so
much so that we can be really human only if we worship
Him; otherwise, we live an alienated life. He then
taught us, through the medium of human messengers, how
best to serve Him.
Worship is
essentially a state of the heart, but the relationship
between our bodies and our minds is so strong that the
state of the one is bound to have an effect on the
state of the other.
God, who
created us and who knows best the nature of this
relationship, explained to us not only how to worship
Him in our hearts but also how to deal with our bodies
in ways which accord well with and enhance the mental
state of worship. Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon
him), whom God set as an example for us to follow in
worshipping Him, said, "Pray as you see me praying"
(recorded by al-Bukhari) and also, "Take your
pilgrimage rituals from me" (recorded by Muslim)."
Hence the insistence of our scholars on the importance
of the external actions, an insistence which might
seem at first sight to be an undue emphasis on
formalities that do not make any real difference to
the essence of worship. People who thus belittle the
external aspect of worship do not pay enough attention
to the importance of that strong mutual relationship
between our bodies and our minds. Of course, these
external acts only have value if they are accompanied
and driven by a sincere feeling of worship in the
heart; otherwise they become hollow movements that
even a hypocrite can perform. But anyone who has
performed them with a sincere feeling of submission
and gratitude to God knows their great value. He knows
their value because he experiences in his heart the
difference they make therein. Our feelings of love and
fear of God, of gratitude and submission to Him
naturally precede our coming to pray to Him (standing,
kneeling, prostrating, and reciting the Qur'an), our
coming to fast (depriving ourselves of food, drink and
sex during the specified times), and our coming to
perform the rituals of pilgrimage. Every sincere
worshipper can speak of how feelings of gratitude and
submission to God were intensified and enhanced after
the performance of the external acts of worship.
Divine
messages give us guidance not only about how to
worship God but also about when and where to do so.
The Quran states, "And your Lord creates whatsoever He
wills and chooses" (26:68). The chosen or preferred
creation includes not only the living and the
inanimate, but times and places as well. Since we have
been created to serve God, then every legitimate act
of ours, even sexual intercourse with our wives, can
be an act of worship; but there are certain acts which
have been especially prescribed by God as acts of
worship. These acts are the life force and nourishment
of our faith; without them faith fades and finally
dies away. It is for these special acts that God
specified the forms, times and places He knows to be
most appropriate for them.
The Fast:
Why Fast
Fasting is
one of these special acts just referred to; it is, in
fact, one of the five important acts of worship called
the pillars of Islam. The other four are the
profession of faith - there is no god (worthy of
worship) except Allah (the one true God) and Muhammad
is His Messenger, - the five daily prayers, the
payment of the poor due (zakat) and the pilgrimage
(hajj). These different acts of worship are to the
soul as food is to the body. All kinds of food, like
proteins, fats and carbohydrates, serve to make the
body healthy, but each one contributes to one's health
in a special way, and plays a role that cannot be
fully played by the others in achieving that purpose.
Similarly, all the acts of worship help to keep our
souls sound and healthy by instilling taqwa [in
general, it means 'God consciousness,' 'God
awareness,' 'fear of God,' and so on] in them, but
each has a special role to play in this process, and
people who perform these experience in their hearts
the special character of the feelings they engender.
When we fast
- the Islamic way - we abstain from food, drink, and
sexual intercourse from dawn to sunset. We do this for
the sake of God and in obedience to Him. We thus make
a clear statement that our real submission is to God
and not to the temptations of our bodies however
strong they may be. And for this God gives us a
special reward. The Prophet (peace be on him) stated,
"In paradise there are eight gates among which is a
gate called al-Rayyan which only those who fast will
enter." (Recorded by al-Bukhari and Muslim). And every
good deed will be rewarded ten-fold save for fasting
which Allah stated, "Is done only for my sake and I
shall reward it." (Recorded by al-Bukhari and Muslim.)
Fasting is
good not only for our souls but also for our bodies.
It helps to make us healthier. Furthermore, abstention
from food and drink for a number of days increases
will power and weakens the sexual desire. Therefore,
it is especially recommended for young men who are not
able to marry.
The Fast:
Kinds of Fasting
Fasting, like
the other special acts of worship, is one of two
kinds: one obligatory and the other recommended. The
form of the fasting is the same; it is only the days
of fasting which differ. Fasting is always during
daytime. It starts from dawn and ends at sunset.
During this period of the day one abstains completely
from eating, drinking and sexual intercourse.
But this by
itself is not sufficient. One also has to abstain from
all kinds of sins, like foul language, backbiting,
drinking, lying, prohibited listening, and dealing in
unlawful items like drugs, wine and pork.
The fasting
which is a pillar of Islam is a fasting of every day
of the lunar month of Ramadan, the ninth month of the
lunar Islamic calendar. Why this month in particular?
Because it is a special month. It is, in fact, the
best of all of the months of the year and one of its
nights, the night of Qadr, is the best of all nights
of the year. It is for this reason that the Quran was
sent down on that night. Thus when God urged the
faithful to fast during the month of Ramadan, He
endeared it to them by reminding them that it was the
month in which the Quran was sent down, as a guidance
to people, a Book that contains clear evidence of the
truth of that guidance, and a criterion of
discrimination between truth and falsehood. [this is a
paraphrase of the Quranic verse 2:185]
The Fast:
People Exempted From Fasting
The fasting
of Ramadan is obligatory on all adult and sane
Muslims, except those for whom it is too difficult or
harmful to do so. They include the following
categories of people:
a) Persons
traveling and the ill whose illness can be made worse
by fasting. It is not recommended for such people to
fast but if they do so, it will be accepted from them.
If they choose to heed the recommendation and not
fast, they must fast an equal number of days after
Ramadan to make up for the days they missed.
b)
Menstruating women and women with post-partum bleeding
are not allowed to fast and it will not be considered
valid if they do. But they also must make up for the
days in which they did not fast.
c) Pregnant
and nursing women, if they fear that fasting can be
harmful to their children or to themselves, need not
fast. If they don’t fast, they must make up for the
days on which they break the fast. In addition, they
must feed a poor person for every day that they broke
their fast if they broke it because they feared only
for the health of their children.
d) People who
are not capable of fasting, either due to old age or
incurable diseases, are not to fast. It is enough for
them to feed one poor person for each of the days in
which they fail to fast. The more people they feed the
better.
Acts Which
Nullify the Fast
Most
important among the acts which nullify the fast are
the following:
a) Sexual
intercourse during the daytime breaks the fast and is
a grave sin. Anyone who performs this act must atone
for it by freeing a slave, if he can afford to do so;
otherwise, he should fast two consecutive months, if
he can. If not, then he must feed sixty poor persons
if he is able to.
b)
Intentionally eating or drinking also breaks the fast.
If this act is done unintentionally, though, it does
not harm the fast
c) The
appearance of menstrual or post-partum bleeding
immediately breaks the fast. Once this happens, even
if it is just a few minutes before sunset, the fast is
nullified and the day must be made up at a later date.
d)
Ejaculation, if it comes as a result of an intentional
act, breaks the fast.
e) Deliberate
vomiting also breaks the fast.
f) The
injection of blood or any other nourishing liquid into
the body nullifies the fast.
g) Apostasy
from Islam obviously breaks the fast. If a fasting
Muslim says or does something which is judged to be a
violation of his faith, he thereby nullifies his fast
and has therefore to make up the day or days of his
apostasy, if he happens to repent and return to the
faith.
Recommended Acts
The fasting
Muslim is recommended to follow the sunnah of the
Prophet (his customs and manners) in doing the
following acts:
(a) Eating
before the break of dawn is recommended act. This
makes fasting easier and is, therefore, recommended to
be as late as possible, such a just before the call
for the dawn prayer.
(b) It is
also recommended to break the fast immediately after
sunset.
(c) Also one
should be more active in doing all kinds of good
deeds, foremost of which is the performing of the five
daily prayers at their proper times in congregation
with other Muslims and the giving of the poor-due (zakat).
Besides the obligatory prayers and zakat, one should
try as much as one can to do more of the
non-obligatory but recommended prayers, specially the
tarawih prayers during the evening, on the night of
Qadr in particular, and being more generous in helping
the poor and in all ways of promoting the cause of
Islam. One should also spend more time reciting the
Quran and pondering over the meanings of its verses,
and turn as often as possible to God, asking Him to
bestow His peace and blessings on the Prophet as well
as asking for one's forgiveness and the forgiveness of
his brother Muslims.
(d) One also
should not answer back anyone who insults him but
should only respond, "I am fasting."
(e) It is
also recommended to offer specific supplications at
the time of breaking the fast. It has been reported
that the Prophet (peace be on him) said, "O Lord, it
is for you that I have offered my fasting and it is
with provision from you that I am breaking the fast.
Accept (this fast) from me therefore, you are the
All-Hearing, the All-Knowing." OR the person may say,
as the Prophet also said, "Thirst has gone, the
arteries are moist and the reward is sure, if God
will." (Recorded by al-Daraqutni.)
(f) To break
the fast with some fresh dates if available, otherwise
with any available sweet fruits like grapes, is
considered a recommended act. "The Prophet's sunnah
was to eat, wear and ride whatever was available in
his land, of whatever Allah made permissible.
Therefore, anyone who uses what is available in his
land would be following the sunnah." [Ibn Taimiya]
(g) One
should try to invite others, especially the poor, for
the meal that one breaks the fast.
(h) Finally,
it is encouraged to spend the last ten days of Ramadan
in seclusion in a mosque. This practice is called
i`tikaf, a state of complete devotion to worship.
Persons in this state are not allowed to leave the
mosque except for personal necessities. Similarly,
they are not allowed to have sex with their spouses
Permissible Acts
There are a
number of acts that do not harm or affect the fast
whatsoever. These are called permissible acts. Below
are some examples.
(a) It is
permissible to wear perfume while fasting. But women
are not allowed to do so if they intend to go out in
public. In fact, that act is neither permissible
during Ramadan nor at other times.
(b) There is
no harm in brushing one's teeth with a siwak or a
brush. It is best, however, to avoid toothpaste while
fasting because if you swallow any of it, even
inadvertently, you will have broken your fast.
(c)
Absentminded eating or drinking does not break the
fast; in fact the Prophet (peace be upon him)
described it as "a provision which God has brought
upon you."
(d) It is
also permissible to kiss your spouse, if you can
control yourself and not allow this to lead you to
further, prohibited acts.
Ramadan Team
©
EsinIslam.Com
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