The
Blessed Month: Extended Fasting Is Prohibited And Does Not
Add More Value
Islamic Perspectives - Muslim JournalsArab News
& Information - By Adil Salahi
It is well known in Islamic worship that when we have
fulfilled a duty as it is required of us, we may
voluntarily add more of the same duty. When we have
offered the five daily prayers, we may volunteer to
pray even more. We may pray what the Prophet (peace be
upon him) has recommended us before or after each one
of the five obligatory prayers. This is known as
sunnah. We may also volunteer more than that,
especially at night, and we may choose to make our
prayer long, reciting long passages from the Qur’an in
each rak’ah. We do this because we hope to be rewarded
generously by God.
Pilgrimage is made obligatory to every Muslim once in
his lifetime. After having done the obligatory
pilgrimage, one may volunteer to do the pilgrimage
again. Every time, he receives the reward of being
forgiven all his past sins. Similarly, when one has
paid the amount of zakat he is required to pay, having
calculated it according to the required percentage,
one may voluntarily pay more in charity, giving the
poor or the needy or other beneficiaries of zakat,
when the need arises.
All this is approved by the Prophet, in verbal
statements and in practical examples. The Prophet used
to do more of worship than what was required. He used
to pray for long hours at night, give in charity as
much as he could and add more of other types of
worship. He refers to voluntary worship in a Hadith
which mentions that a bedouin asked him once what
obligatory worship he must do, enquiring about all
types of worship, one by one. In answer to his
question about prayer, the Prophet said that the
obligatory part was “the five daily prayers, unless
you wish to do more voluntarily.†With regard to
fasting, the Prophet answered that the obligatory part
was “the month of Ramadan, unless you wish to do more
voluntarily.†When the man finished his questioning,
asking about all aspects of worship, he said to the
Prophet: “By Him who sent you with the message of
truth, I shall volunteer nothing. I will confine
myself to what is obligatory.†When the man had gone,
the Prophet said that “he shall prosper if he keeps
his word.â€
It is clear from this Hadith that the principle of
voluntary worship is both acceptable and applicable to
all types of Islamic worship. As far as voluntary
fasting is concerned, the Prophet has recommended us
to fast voluntarily six days a year, starting from
Shawwal. This is perhaps the minimum. He also
recommended fasting three days in the middle of every
lunar month, and he has told us that if we want to
fast more, we may fast on Mondays and Thursdays of
every week. He added that the best and most complete
method of voluntary fasting was that done by Prophet
David, who fasted on alternate days throughout the
year.
All this voluntary fasting is made in terms of
quantity. We may fast a small or large number of days,
beginning always at dawn and finishing always at
sunset. The question arises about a voluntary increase
in the quality of fasting, which may take the form of
extending one’s fast beyond sunset, right into the
second day, and perhaps continuing into a third day
without a break. This is termed as “extended fasting.â€
It is authentically reported that the Prophet used to
do this. Hence, it was not surprising that some of his
companions wanted to do the same. Similarly, devout
people may wish to do this as an act of self-denial in
pursuit of God’s pleasure. It is important to know
what Islam says with regard to this type of extended
fasting.
An authentic Hadith reported by Anas quotes the
Prophet as saying: “Do not practice extended fasting.â€
They said: “But you do so.†He said: “I am not like
any of you. I am given food and drink.†Al-Bukhari
relates this Hadith in several versions, with
different chains of reporters, which makes it highly
authentic. For our purposes, it is useful to quote one
or two other versions. Abu Saeed Al-Khudri, a
companion of the Prophet, reports that he heard the
Prophet saying: “Do not resort to extended fasting. If
any of you want to extend his fast, he may do so until
dawn.†They said: “But you, Messenger of God, do
extend your fast.†He said: “I am unlike you. I spend
my night being fed and given drink.†Another version
reported by Ayesha states that God’s messenger has
prohibited extended fasting as a gesture of compassion
toward his followers. When they mentioned that he
himself used to extend his fast, he answered: “I am
unlike you. I am given food and drink by my Lord.â€
It is absolutely clear from all these versions that
extended fasting which means that a person continues
his fast through the night into the second day is met
with disapproval by the Prophet. The fact that he did
so is acceptable as a special privilege to him only.
How he was given food and drink, and at what time, are
matters that have not been defined clearly in these
Hadiths. Scholars suggest that this may have been
during the night, when a person who is fasting may eat
and drink. What he used to be given must have been
something to help him overcome the feelings of hunger
and thirst and to give him physical strength so that
he could continue fasting. It could not have been food
and drink of the type we eat and drink. Otherwise, he
would not be extending his fast.
The reasons for the Prophet’s disapproval of extended
fasting is that it is much too hard for anyone. The
point which is emphasized in fasting is voluntary
abstention from satisfying the most essential natural
needs of one’s body. It is not meant as an exercise in
affliction. To extend fasting for another day is to
afflict oneself with something that God does not
require of us. Hence, the Prophet wanted to make that
absolutely clear, pointing out that in his own special
case, extended fasting was not an affliction of the
same sort, because he was given something to help him
overcome the effects of such a long fast.
The question is whether extended fasting is strongly
discouraged on the basis of these Hadiths or it is
forbidden. Some scholars are of the opinion that it is
strongly discouraged or reprehensible, while the
overwhelming majority maintain that it is forbidden.
This is clearly stated by Ibn Hazm and the Thahiri
school of thought. In the other schools of thought the
view that it is prohibited is the stronger one,
especially in the cases of the Shafie and the Maliki
schools. According to Imam Ahmad, the founder of the
Hanbali school of thought, it is permissible to extend
fasting till dawn, but not into the following day.
Scholars have different opinions about whether
continuing one’s fast till dawn constitutes a form of
the extended fasting of which the quoted Hadiths
speak.
It is perhaps more accurate to say that at sunset
fasting is finished. Whether one eats and drinks or
not is immaterial; he is no longer fasting. This means
that to abstain from eating is no more than tormenting
oneself, which is forbidden in Islam. Even when
fasting is extended till dawn, which is not prohibited
according to the above quoted Hadith, it applies only
to a person who can bear it without difficulty. If he
finds it difficult, then it is prohibited in his case.
Those scholars who argue that extended fasting is only
discouraged rely in some of their arguments on a
Hadith which tells us that the companions of the
Prophet did not respond very quickly to the Prophet’s
disapproval of extended fasting. Therefore, he bid
them extend their fast with him fasting the first and
second days. Then the moon of Shawwal was sighted. The
Prophet said to them: “Had it been delayed, I would
have caused you to continue fasting.†Abu Hurairah,
the reporter of this Hadith, mentions that the Prophet
has intended as a punishment to them for their slow
response. Those scholars argue that had it been
forbidden to extend fasting into the second day, the
Prophet would not have bid his companions to do it. It
is clear, however, that he did so as a punishment.
Hence, it must not be taken as approval. If you punish
your child for something naughty he does, your
punishment does not mean that you approve of his
action, even when the punishment takes the form of
allowing him to indulge in that naughty thing until he
suffers its consequences.
In short, extended fasting is prohibited and does not
add to one’s worship of fasting, since at sunset
fasting is over, whether one eats and drinks or not.
This is based on the Prophet’s Hadith: “When the night
comes down from this end and the day departs from that
end, a fasting person has finished his fast.â€
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