Ramadan Day 6 – Fasting Is More Than Just Being Hungry.

Ramadan Day 6 – Fasting Is More Than Just Being Hungry

Ramadan is a sacred month gifted to the Ummah as a time of purification, discipline, and spiritual elevation. Every day of fasting is not merely a ritual but a journey — a journey from the desires of the body to the obedience of the soul. On this 6th day of Ramadan, we reflect on a profound reality:

Fasting is more than just being hungry.

If hunger alone defined fasting, then anyone deprived of food would attain the spiritual ranks of the fasting believers. But Allah ﷻ designed fasting as a comprehensive act of worship that reforms character, controls desires, and nurtures Taqwa (God-consciousness).

Let us begin from the Qur’an, then Hadith, and finally the rulings and wisdom from Fiqh.


📖 Fasting in the Light of the Qur’an

Allah ﷻ states:

“O you who believe! Fasting has been prescribed upon you as it was prescribed upon those before you, so that you may attain Taqwa.”
(Surah Al-Baqarah 2:183)

This verse defines the objective of fasting — Taqwa, not hunger.

✅ What is Taqwa?

Taqwa means:

  • Consciousness of Allah

  • Fear of displeasing Him

  • Self-restraint from sins

  • Obedience in public and private

When a fasting person refuses halal food for Allah’s sake, he trains himself to refuse haram in all aspects of life.


Allah further says:

“Fasting is for a limited number of days…” (2:184)

This reminds us that Ramadan is a training period — a spiritual boot camp preparing believers for the entire year.


Another powerful verse:

“Eat and drink until the white thread of dawn becomes distinct from the black thread of night, then complete the fast until sunset.”
(Surah Al-Baqarah 2:187)

This verse defines the legal boundaries of fasting — when to start and end — but the Qur’an repeatedly emphasizes that the inner spirit matters as much as the outer act.


🕌 Fasting in the Light of Hadith

The Prophet ﷺ explained that fasting is not confined to abstaining from food.


1️⃣ Fasting That Reaches Allah

The Messenger of Allah ﷺ said:

“Whoever does not give up false speech and acting upon it, Allah has no need of him leaving his food and drink.”
(Bukhari)

This Hadith establishes a crucial principle:

👉 If a person fasts but lies, backbites, abuses, or cheats — the spiritual reward of fasting is lost.

Hunger without character reform is empty.


2️⃣ Many Get Nothing But Hunger

The Prophet ﷺ warned:

“Many who fast get nothing from their fast except hunger and thirst.”
(Ibn Majah)

This Hadith directly explains our topic.

A person may:

  • Stay hungry

  • Stay thirsty

  • Feel tired

Yet gain no reward — because the fast was not protected from sins.


3️⃣ Fasting Is a Shield

The Prophet ﷺ said:

“Fasting is a shield.” (Bukhari & Muslim)

A shield protects from harm.

Fasting shields from:

  • Hellfire

  • Sins

  • Desires

  • Shaytan’s whispers

But a shield works only when held firmly — meaning when one controls the tongue, eyes, ears, and heart.


4️⃣ The Special Reward of Fasting

Allah says in Hadith Qudsi:

“Fasting is for Me, and I alone will reward it.” (Bukhari)

Why is fasting singled out?

Because it is the most sincere act:

  • Prayer is visible

  • Charity is visible

  • Hajj is visible

But fasting is hidden — only Allah knows if you truly abstained.

Thus, fasting builds Ikhlas (sincerity), not just endurance.


⚖️ Fasting in the Light of Fiqh

Islamic jurisprudence (Fiqh) explains both the legal and spiritual dimensions of fasting.


1️⃣ Legal Definition of Fasting

In Fiqh, fasting means:

To abstain from food, drink, and marital relations from true dawn (Fajr) until sunset with the intention (Niyyah).

If these conditions are met, the fast is legally valid.

But validity ≠ acceptance.


2️⃣ Levels of Fasting (According to Scholars)

Classical scholars like Imam Al-Ghazali and others described three levels:

🥉 1. Fast of the Common People

  • Abstaining from food and drink only.

🥈 2. Fast of the Special

  • Protecting eyes, tongue, ears, hands, and feet from sin.

🥇 3. Fast of the Elite

  • Fasting of the heart from worldly thoughts.

  • Complete focus on Allah.

Thus, hunger is only the lowest level.


3️⃣ Sins That Damage the Fast’s Reward

Though they may not legally break the fast, they destroy its spirit:

  • Lying

  • Backbiting (Gheebah)

  • Slandering

  • Abusive speech

  • Watching haram

  • Listening to indecency

  • Cheating or fraud

Scholars say:

Such acts are like termites eating the reward of fasting.


4️⃣ Acts That Elevate the Fast

Fiqh and Hadith encourage:

  • Recitation of Qur’an

  • Charity (Sadaqah)

  • Feeding the poor

  • Taraweeh prayer

  • Dhikr and Istighfar

  • Controlling anger

These nourish the soul just as food nourishes the body.


🌙 The Spiritual Wisdom Behind Hunger

Why did Allah include hunger at all?

Because hunger softens the heart.


1️⃣ Hunger Breaks Pride

A wealthy person who never felt hunger now experiences:

  • Weakness

  • Need

  • Dependence

This humbles the ego.


2️⃣ Hunger Creates Empathy

When you feel thirst:

  • You remember the poor

  • You feel compassion

  • You give charity

Thus fasting builds social justice.


3️⃣ Hunger Weakens Desires

When the stomach is full:

  • Desires increase

  • Laziness grows

When empty:

  • Soul becomes alert

  • Worship becomes easier

The Prophet ﷺ advised fasting even outside Ramadan to control desires.


🧠 Psychological & Moral Training

Modern psychology also acknowledges benefits aligned with Islamic wisdom:

  • Self-control development

  • Delayed gratification

  • Emotional regulation

  • Discipline building

Ramadan is a 30-day training system for life reform.


❤️ The Fast of the Limbs

True fasting involves every body part:

👁️ Eyes

Avoid haram sights.

👂 Ears

Avoid gossip, music, indecency.

👅 Tongue

Avoid lies, arguments, insults.

🤲 Hands

Avoid injustice.

🦶 Feet

Avoid sinful places.

💓 Heart

Avoid envy, hatred, arrogance.

Only then does fasting become holistic worship.


🌟 Signs Your Fast Is Accepted

Scholars mention signs:

  • Increased patience

  • Softened heart

  • Love for Qur’an

  • Decrease in sins

  • Increase in charity

  • Night prayer consistency

If Ramadan ends and no change occurs, one must reflect deeply.


📿 Ramadan: A Character Reform School

Ramadan trains believers to:

  • Control anger

  • Forgive others

  • Speak gently

  • Help the needy

  • Strengthen family ties

Thus fasting reforms society, not just individuals.


🏁 Conclusion

On this 6th day of Ramadan, let us engrave this truth in our hearts:

Fasting is more than just being hungry.

Hunger is the outer shell.

Inside it lies:

  • Taqwa

  • Sincerity

  • Discipline

  • Patience

  • Compassion

  • Obedience

If we fast from food but not from sin, we gain exhaustion.

If we fast from both — we gain elevation.

May Allah make our fasts not just physically valid but spiritually accepted.

Ameen.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *