Fasting - Its Virtues and Principles
Fasting - Its Virtues and Principles
Excerpt from Imam al-Ghazali's (d. 1111 CE/ 505 AH) Book of Forty Principles from the Foundations of
Religion:
Translated by: Khalil Abu Asmaa (Christopher Moore)
[ After discussing the Prayer and Zakah, Imam al-Ghazali goes on to say:]
Every good deed is ten times its likeness, up to seven hundred times, except for fasting, for
verily it is for Me, and I will reward it. [al-Bukhari and Muslim]
He (peace and blessings be upon him) also said:
For everything there is a door, and the door of worship is fasting. [lbn al-Mubarak]
Fasting has been singled out with these amazing qualities for two main reasons:
1. Its essence is that it is a personal abstinence, and such is a hidden action that no one but God can
see, unlike the prayer, the zakah, or other (acts of worship).
2. It is a grief for, and subdual of, the enemy of God. Shaytan is the enemy, and the enemy cannot gain
strength except through the medium of the passions. Hunger breaks all the passions that are the tool of
Shaytan. For this reason, the Prophet (peace be upon him) said:
Verily Shaytan runs in the Son of Adam like blood. Therefore, constrain the passageways
of Shaytan with hunger. [al-Bukhari and Muslim, except after "Therefore"]
Such is the secret of his statement (peace be upon him):
When Ramadan comes the doors of Paradise are opened, the doors of the Fire are shut,
the shaytans are restrained, and a caller calls: 'Oh seeker of good, come forward! Oh
seeker of evil, back off!' [al-Tirmidhi, and al-Hakim said it was sound]
Know that fasting, in addition to its rank, has three levels, and in addition to its secrets, has three levels
as well.
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Fasting - Its Virtues and Principles - Imam Ghazali (from al-Arba' in fi Usul al-Din)
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Fasting - Its Virtues and Principles - Imam Ghazali (from al-Arba' in fi Usul al-Din)
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