by Dony Peter
Today, is the end of Ramadan, the holy month of fasting for
Muslim brethren all over the world. I have always been amazed
by the steadfast observance of fasting, that these brethren
undertake especially under the strenuous requirements of abstaining
from even drinking water from daybreak to the sighting of
the moon at dusk, while going about their normal daily tasks.
However, what I would like to discuss does
not only concern Muslims, but also others from various faiths,
where fasting is a norm (and this accounts for most of the
religions, and is seen as a means of purifying oneself).
While fasting basically implies abstaining
from eating, the spirit of the fast requires abstinence from
vices and worldly pleasures. This abstinence is however only
limited to the period of the fast. Most of the time, we do
see people around us who wait for the period of fasting to
finish so that they can get back to their normal routine.
This has in turn given rise to the notion (at least in the
minds..) that these people are justified for the rest of the
year or until the next fast in committing vices as long as
this fast is dutifully adhered to.
It is as though the fast justifies our actions
henceforth, otherwise how else do you explain people who end
up worse than before when they completely abstained from the
so called vices.
As in the case of the Rio de Janeiro carnival
that is held 3 days prior to the Roman Catholic Lenten season,
it is actually a one last ditch at indulging oneself before
the fast begins.
Aren't fasts supposed to purify us, such that
our lives become holier? But today, most of us are taking
these rituals as some kind of a short-term break that gives
us some leeway for a longer period of indulgence. Its your
religious passport to one more (technically 11 months) of
hassle-free indulgence.
Fasts are good, provided they are adhered
to in its spirit. They must not be seen as a means to an end,
but instead be enjoyed as another opportunity to better oneself
as a continuing process. Otherwise these very fasts may actually
become more deadly vices than we can imagine.
To fast or to fast in the spirit, that's a
question?
About the Author
The Author is a young man decided to make a change in the
way things are perceived. Visit me at canwe.blogspot.com
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