First ten days of Dhu al-Hiyya in the Islamic calendar
The days when fasting is forbidden Although fasting is
considered a pious act in Islam, there are times when fasting is forbidden: Eid
ul-Adha and 3 days after Mohammed, because he said: "You do not fast in
these days, these are days to eat and drink, and remembering Allah,
"reported by Abu Hurairah Umrah Package December 2017. Eid ul-Fitr For Shia Muslims, the day of
Ashura, the 10th of Muharram in the Hijri calendar. It also bans Friday to a
single and fast only on Fridays, as Amr al-Ashari said he had heard that
Muhammad "Truly, Friday is an Eid (feast) so, so do not fast on it unless
to fast the day before or after her. "
All the fasting days
of the years are also forbidden, Muhammad said: "There is no reward for
fasting for the one who fasts perpetually."
Fasting in other religions Lent in Christianity, the Yom
Kippur, Tisha B'Av, fasting of Esther, Tzom Gedalia the seventeenth of Tammuz,
and the Ten of Tevet, all in Judaism, are also times of fasting.
However, fasting
practices are different from one another. Orthodox fasting during certain
fasting seasons of the Christians of the year, which include not only the best
known of the Great Lent, but also fasts every Wednesday and Friday (except
special holidays), along with long periods of fasting before Christmas
(Nativity fasting), after Easter (fasting Apostles) and early August (fasting
Dormition). The members of The Church of Jesus Christ of the Last Days
(Mormons) generally fast during the 24 hours of the first Sunday of every
month. Like Muslims, they abstain from drinking and eating everything unless
they are children or are physically unable to fast. Fasting is also a feature
of ascetic traditions in religions such as Hinduism and Buddhism. Mahayana
traditions that follow the Net Sutra of Brahma may recommend that the fasting
lay "during the six days of fasting every month and the three months of
fasting every year" [Brahma's Red Sutra, the lower 30 precept]. Members of
the Bahá'í Faith observe a Nineteen Day fast from sunrise to sunset during
March of each year.
Comments
Post a Comment