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Fasting for Winning the Pleasure of God

Patience in Adversity
Scenes of the Day of Judgement
God’s Control Over People’s Hearts

In the Name of God, the Beneficent, the Merciful

Believers, fasting is decreed for you as it was decreed for those before you, so that you may remain God-fearing, Fast a certain number of-days. But whoever of you is ill, or on a journey, shall fast instead the same number of days later on. Those who find fasting a strife too hard to bear may compensate for it by the feeding of a needy person. He who does good of his own account does himself good thereby; for to fast is to do yourselves good, if you, but know it.
(The Cow, “Al-Baqarah:” 2:183-4)

By Adil Salahi

Fasting is a manifestation of man’s determined will and his relationship with his Lord which is based on total obedience and submission to him. It is also a demonstration of man’s deliberate disregard of all his physical needs. He willingly forgoes these needs in order to achieve his aim of winning the pleasure of Allah and earning his reward. These are necessary elements in the training of the believer so that they are able to bear the pressures and hardships of the way they have chosen.
We may add also that fasting has numerous advantages for health which continue to be discovered as time passes. It goes without saying that Allah takes into consideration the physical constitution of man before He lays down his duties for him. Allah realizes that man requires help and motivation in order to respond to duty and fulfil it, regardless of its benefits. It takes time for man to get used to a certain duty and to be convinced of its wisdom. Hence, the decree of fasting starts with the address made to the believers which reminds them of their essential quality, that is, they believe in Allah. They are then told that fasting has always been a duty required of the believers in all religions. Its principal aim is their education and training so that their hearts acquire a high standard of sensitivity and purity and that the fear of Allah is well established in them: “Believers, fasting is decreed for you as it was decreed for those before you, so that you may remain God-fearing.”
To fear Allah, then, is the great aim of fasting which looms large before our eyes. As the believers fulfil this duty, in total obedience to Allah and in pursuit of His pleasure, they feel the quality of fearing Allah to be a life within them. This is indeed the quality which guards their hearts against spoiling their fasting by indulging in sin, even if it is of the type which only passes through the mind. Those who are addressed by the Qur’an are fully aware of the value Allah attaches to this quality of fearing Allah and being conscious of Him. Its acquirement is something for which they yearn. Fasting is a tool with which it is achieved, or we may say, a way which leads to it. Hence, the Qur’an raises it before them as a noble objective which they try to achieve through fasting.
They are then told that fasting is prescribed only for a certain number of days. It is not to be practised every day in their lives. Exempted from it, however, are the ill until they have recovered, and the travellers until they have settled: ” Fast a certain number of days. But whoever of you is ill, or on a journey, shall fast instead the same number of days later on.”
Taken at its face value, the statement concerning the exemption of the ill and the travellers is general, unrestricted. Hence any illness or journey is a good reason for exemption from fasting, provided that compensation is made when the case which justifies the exemption no longer obtains. This is my understanding of this general, unqualified Qur’anic statement. Moreover, it is more in line with the Islamic concept of relieving the strain and causing no hardship. The exemption is not related to the severity of the illness or the hardship of the journey; it is related to sickness and travelling generally. The purpose of the exemption is that it is Allah’s wish to make things easy, not hard, for man. We cannot claim to have full knowledge of the divine wisdom behind relating this exemption to sickness and travelling generally. There may be some considerations known to Allah and unknown to man in these two cases. There may be some hardships which may not immediately appear to us or we may tend to overlook. Since Allah has not attached this exemption to any particular reason, we refrain from making any judgement concerning it. We obey any statement Allah has made, even if its wisdom does not appear immediately to us. What is certain is that there is a wisdom behind it, although we may not necessarily recognize it. We must not forget that Islam is a religion laid down by Allah, not man-made. Allah knows best that this religion achieves a perfect balance between the relaxation of certain duties and strict adherence to duty. A certain exemption or concession may serve a certain interest which cannot be served otherwise. Indeed, this must be the case. Hence, the Prophet has ordered Muslims to make use of the concessions and exemptions Allah has allowed them.
Appearances in matters of worship are irrelevant, unless worship is based on fearing Allah. If this quality is present, no one would try to evade a duty or utilize a concession except when he is fully satisfied that making use of it is preferable, in obedience to Allah, in the particular case in which he finds himself. A strict application of the rules which govern acts of worship generally or a tendency to restrict the exemptions which have not been qualified originally may cause some people to refrain from using them when they need them. Moreover, it has little effect in checking those who want to be evasive. It is far better to handle matters in whatever way Allah has made clear to us. He has far more wisdom than us and He knows best the interests, immediate and not so immediate, served by all His rules which lay down duties or relax them.
As for the exemption from fasting in cases of illness, it appears to me that the exemption applies to every case which may be reasonably described as illness, regardless of its nature or intensity. It is compulsory for anyone who makes use of this exemption to compensate for the days of Ramadan which he does not fast because of illness or travelling. Each day is compensated for by fasting one day at any time during the year. The weightier opinion is that there is no need to fast on consecutive days when one fasts in compensation for the days he did not in Ramadan.

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