Eighteen Reasons For Fasting
Source: Jamiatul Ulama South Africa
O ye who believe! Fasting is ordained for you, even as it was ordained
for those before you, that ye may guard yourself (against evil)”
Qur’an: Chapter 2, Verse 183).
Ramadan is a month of fasting and prayers for the Muslims. The fast
consists of total abstinence from food and drink from dawn to dusk.
There is, however, a greater significance to fasts than mere abstinence
from eating and drinking. The real objective of fasts is to inculcate
in man the spirit of abstinence from sins and of cultivation of virtue.
Thus the Qur’an declares that the fasts have been prescrib?ed
with a view to developing piety in man, as is clear from the verse
quoted at the top of this page.
How are the many facets of piety sought to be cultivated through the fasts?
1. The prime consideration in undertaking fast, as in any act of
devotion, is to seek NEARNESS TO GOD and beseech HIS PLEASURE and
FORGIVENESS. This itself generates a spirit of piety in man.
2. The wilful creation of the stringent conditions of hunger and thirst
for one’s own self, simply in obedience to the Divine Order,
measures the FAITH of man in God and helps to strengthen it by putting
it to a severe test.
3. Fasting enhances through creation of artificial non-availability,
the value of the bounties of God, which man is apt to take for granted
in the midst of plentiful availability, and thus inculcates in man a
spirit of GRATITUDE and consequent DEVOTION to GOD. Nothing else can
bring home to man the worth of God’s bounties than a glass of
water and a square meal after a day-long fast. This also reminds man
that the real joy in enjoying God’s bounties lies in MODERATION
and RESTRAINT and not in OVER INDULGENCE.
4. Fasting makes us deeply conscious of the pangs of hunger and
discomfort suffered by the less fortunate among our brethren, who may
have to put up with such stringent conditions all through their lives -
it thus enkindles in man a spirit of SACRIFICE leading to CHARITY
towards his suffering brethren.
5. Fasting affords man an unfailing training in ENDURANCE - i.e. a
SPIRIT OF. ACCEPTANCE of the inevitable, which could well prepare him
to put up with the unchangeable situations in life in the same spirit
of RESIGNATION as cultivated during the fasts.
6. Fasting develops COURAGE, FORTITUDE and a FIGHTING SPIRIT IN man to
surmount the heavy odds in life with a cool and tranquil mind. It
sharpens his, power of CONCENTRATION to overcome obstacles, through a
vigorous exercise all through the month, leading to a steeling of his
WILL POWER and RESOLVE, which could help him in trying situations in
actual life. It is seen that many an undesirable habit which is found
hard to leave, is more easily left off during the days of fasting.
7. Fasting teaches man RELIANCE on God and CONFIDENCE in HIM in facing
the bitter situations in life with the comforting thought that these
too, ordained by Him, could well be surmounted through His assistance
alone, even as the rigorous state of fasting for a complete month. For,
fasting develops the quality of PATIENCE in man, with the realisation
that, as the days of fasting, though seeming unending do have a
successful and, so are all the bitter situations in life. It therefore
infuses a spirit of GOOD CHEER, (driving away BITTERNESS and DESPAIR)
in his attitude towards life and in his demeanour towards others.
8. Through quick alternation of the state of plenty and of scarcity,
fasting seeks to inculcate in man the right type of attitude in
different situations in life- of GRATITUDE and THANKSGIVING in plenty
and of PATIENCE and FORBEARANCE in difficulty.
9. Fasting is meant to CONQUER ANGER, not to augment it, and to develop
SELF-CONTROL in man; for the vigorous effort of wilfully putting up
with a continued state of hunger and thirst can well be extended to
conquer other infirmities of human character that lead man into error
and sin.
10. Fasting inculcates a spirit of TOLERANCE in man to face unpleasant
conditions and situations without making his fellow-being the victim of
his wrath on account of his adverse conditions, such as deprivation of
his basic needs of life, which constitutes the common cause of
dissension among men.
11. Fasting MELLOWS a man and enhances his character, giving jolt to
the human instincts of ‘PRIDE, HAUGHTINESS, ENVY and AMBITION,
for when fasting, a man’s energies are too sapped to follow these
instincts which are the chief causes of discord and conflict among men.
12. Fasting exposes the weakness of man in the event of his being
deprived of but two of the bounties of God - those of food and drink;
it thus infuses in him a spirit of MEEKNESS and SUBMISSION, generating
HUMILITY and PRAYER in an otherwise arrogant man.
13. Fasting breathes the spirit of FORGIVENESS in man towards his
subordinates, as he himself seeks God’s FORGIVENESS through fasts
and prayers.
14. Fasting affords lessons in PUNCTUALITY through man’s strict
adherence to various time-schedules in the observance of fasts and
offering of prayers.
15. Fasting can be made to effect ECONOMY in an individual’s life, which can be extended to wider spheres.
16. Fasting enforces in man rigid DISCIPLINE - mental, spiritual and
physical - a trait of character which forms an essential ingredient to
success in human life.
17. Fasting provides LEISURE, that could he gainfully employed in
devotional or intellectual pursuits. The month-long duration of fasts
creates a proper climate for the SPIRITUAL REFORMATION in man, infusing
in him a spirit pf enthusiasm and zest to turn over a new leaf - an
opportunity provided every year.
18. On the physical side, fasting cleanses the human system of the
accumulated impurities of uninterrupted eating throughout the year. It
prepares the body for toughness and hardihood to face disease or
conditions of scarcity. The rigid abstinence that the fast provides,
regulates man’s HEALTH, sharpens has INTELLECT, gives spurt to
his SPIRITUALLY and enhances the qualities of his HEART. With the
cleansing of the human body, it paves the way for its easy and
effective rebuilding through meals at the end of the day or after the
month is over.