Fast in History
Since the dawn of history, man did not find any
means better than fast to ascend above yielding to his desires and worldly wishes, attain
spiritual upliftment, return to spirituality, and renounce contemptible habits to which he
became addicted and which led him to perdition. Divinely revealed creeds, non-Muslim
societies and former nations have been familiar with the fast. Ancient Egyptians, Greeks,
Romans, Chinese and other nations knew and practised fast for various reasons. Many still
do even today. The Greeks came to know about fast and its merits from ancient Egyptians.
They used to fast immediately before engaging in a war. The Romans emulated the Greeks not
only in mythology, but also in observing the fast, especially when they were attacked, in
order to gain victory.
They believed that fast strengthened them and taught them patience and
perseverance, two prerequisites required to win the battle against internal temptations
and external dangers. Ancient Chinese, too, incorporated fast into their doctrines and
prescribed it for those who were passing through periods of trials and tribulations. For
centuries Hindus and Buddhists have been observing a somehow more rigid form of fast. Jews
and Christians observe certain types of fast. Moses, peace be upon him, observed the fast
for forty days at Mount Sinai; see Exodus 24:18. During that period, he was granted the
heavy responsibilities embedded in the Ten Commandments. He was commanded in the Torah to
fast the tenth day of the seventh month and the ninth of the eighth.
Jews used to (and some still do) fast during times of grief and mourning and
when exposed to danger. They were also accustomed to fast one day as an act of
atonement and whenever they believed that God was angry with them. Nowadays,
they fast one week to commemorate the destruction of Jerusalem at the hands of
Nebuchadnezzar 11(605-562 B.C.) son of Nabopolassar, founder of the Chaldean or
Neo-Babylonian empire, on March 16, 597 B.C. They observe fast on other days
too. Jesus of Nazareth (6 B.C.-30 A.D.), peace be upon him and his virgin mother
Mary daughter of Imran (Amram), was reported to have observed the fast on the
day of atonement. He and his disciples fasted the forty days observed by Moses
before him; see Matthew 4:2. This set the precedence for the pre-Easter fast
among some Christians. Other Christian theologians started other types of fast
during which they do not eat meat, fish, or eggs
Name and Derivation
Allah Almighty has said, Surely the number of
months with Allah is twelve in Allahs ordinance since the day He created the heavens
and the earth, of these four are sacred; that is the right reckoning; therefore, do not be
unjust to your own selves regarding them (Holy Quran, 9:36)." These are the
lunar months upon the reckoning of which does a Muslim in the east of the earth or the
west rely; chronologically arranged, they are as follows: 1) Muharram, 2) Safar, 3)
Rabi I, 4) Rabi II, 5) Jumada I, 6) Jumada II, 7) Rajab, 8) Shaban, 9)
the month of Ramadhan, 10) Shawwal, 11) Thul-Qida, and 12) Thul-Hijja. According to
astronomy, the lunar calendar cannot be less than 29 days, nor can it be more than 30. It
may once be 29 days and another 30, and its average is 29 days and 12 hours and five
minutes. The beginning of each lunar month is recognised by the sighting of the new moon,
the crescent.
The Almighty says, They ask you concerning the new moons. Say:
They are times appointed for the benefit of men, and for the pilgrimage" (Holy
Quran, 2:189).
In this verse, the Almighty has explained to us how to calculate and
determine time by mentioning the word ahilla, which is the plural of the Arabic
singular hilal, crescent, when it becomes visible to the naked eye. These crescents
set the time for people and help them determine when the pilgrimage is to be performed.
Fast of the Month of Ramadhan
The lunar calendar of Islam brings the fast of the
month of Ramadhan eleven days earlier every year. Thus, in a cycle of about thirty-three
years, it passes through all the seasons successively. Fast was first prescribed on the
second of Shaban in the second year of Hijrah (the migration of Prophet Muhammad,
peace and blessings of Allah be upon him and his progeny, from Mecca to Medina,
corresponding to 622 A.D.).
On p. 59, of al-Saduqs Amali (or Majalis), the faqih
mentor and author quotes Jafer ibn Ali ibn al-Hassan ibn All ibn Abdullah ibn
al-Mughirah al-Kufi as saying that his grandfather al-Hassan ibn Ali quotes his
grandfather Abdullah ibn al-Mughirab quoting Ismaeel ibn Abu Ziyad quoting Abu
Abdullah Imam Jafer ibn Muhammad al-Sadiq (as) (Acronyms for Alahis Salam, peace
be upon him) citing his forefathers, peace be upon all of them, saying that the Messenger
of Allah (pbuh) (These are acronyms that stand for "peace be upon him". Once
asked his companions, "Shall I tell you about something which, if you do it, will
distance you from Satan as much as the distance between the east and the west?" They
said, "O yes! Please do so," whereupon he (pbuh) said, "It is fast. It
darkens his [Satans] face, while charity breaks his back and the love for
Allahs sake and assisting others in doing good deeds cut off his tail and seeking
Allahs forgiveness splits his spine. For everything there is a nicat (purification),
and the zakat of the bodies is fast."
Because the reader will come across the name of Imam Jafer
al-Sadiq (as) quite often in this book, we ought to stop here for a moment to
introduce this great personality to those who may not be familiar with him. Needless to
say, the Imam (as) is very well known to Muslims following the Shia Jaferi
Ithna-Asheri School of Muslim Law; after all, they derive their fiqh from him and
regard him as highly as, say, Hanafis regard Imam Abu Haneefah al-Numan, or as the
Hanbalis regard Imam Ahmed ibn Hanbal. But those who are not Shias are justified in
wondering how Imam al-Sadiq (as) knew the forthcoming information; so, let us introduce
them to one of the most knowledgeable men who ever lived on earth:
His full name is Abu Abdullah Jafer ibn Imam Muhammad al-Baqir
ibn Imam Ali al-Azgher Zaynul-Abidin ibn Imam Hussein ibn Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib, of
the clan of Banu Hashim, of the tribe of Quraysh, peace and blessings of Allah be upon all
of them and many, many salutations. He was born in the sacred precincts of Medina on the
17th of Rabee al-Awwal of 83 A.H., and he died at the age of 65 after being poisoned
by the Abbaside caliph Abu Jafer al-Mansur and was buried at Baqee, Medina.
His mother was a relative of the first caliph Abu Bakr: she was Umm Farwa Fatima daughter
of Abdel-Rahman son of Abu Bakr.
His father was Abu Jafer Imam Muhammad ibn All al-Baqir (as) (57
- 114 A.H.), grandson of Imam Husain (as). If you wish to realise the greatness of Imam
al-Sadiq (as), you will see his praise not only by Sunnis but also by non-Muslims as well,
especially since his contributions to his contemporary intellectual revolution were
invaluable and quite diverse. Not only was he a theologian, he was also a mathematician, a
botanist, and alchemist, a scientist, and a man of letters. To quote what Shias say
about him may be out of place here. Probably the best compliment the Imam (as) received
was from one of his world famous students: Imam Abu Haneefah al-Numan, founder of
the major Sunni sect, the Hanafis, who was one of tens of thousands of scholars who prided
himself in being Abu Abdullahs students.
Abu Haneefah said verbatim: "Lawlal sanatan, Ia halaka
al-Numan," which means, Had it not been for those couple of years,
al-Numan would have perished," a reference to two years which he spent in
Baghdad as a student of Imam al-Sadiq (as) during al-Mansurs caliphate. In his Musnad
Abu Haneefah, Abul-Qasim al-Baghghar quotes al-Hasan ibn Ziyad as saying, "Abu
Haneefah was asked once in my presence, Who is the most outstanding faqih you have
ever seen? and he answered by saying, Jafer ibn Muhammad. When-al Mansur
brought him [from Medina to Baghdad], he sent for me and said, O Abu Haneefah!
People are enchanted by Jafer ibn Muhammad, so you should prepare some of your most
difficult questions for him. I prepared forty questions for him, then his
[alSadiqs] father was brought from Heera. I visited him, greeted him, and sat at his
place of meeting. Then he turned to him and said, O Abu Abdullah! This is Abu
Haneefah. Yes, I know him, he responded.
Then he turned to me and said, Ask Abu Abdullah some of your
questions, so I kept asking him, and he answered all my questions, telling me our
answers to them as well as those of the people of Medina, till I finished asking him all
the forty questions which I had prepared. He fully answered all of them." Then
Abu Haneefah said, "Is not one who best knows peoples different views the most
knowledgeable among them?"
Where did Imam al-Sadiq (as) get his knowledge from? Let us answer this
question not from the Shia but from the Sunni viewpoint in order to satisfy the
curiosity of, and perhaps convince, some sceptical readers of this book. On p. 221, Vol.
2, of the original Arabic text of al-Bukharis Sahih, the author makes a
reference to one particular saheefa, a parchment type scroll, which was being
written by Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (as) during the revelation of the Holy Quran,
i.e., during more than two decades, reaching in the end a total length of seventy yards.
As he was writing it, Imam Au (as) used to tie its pieces, one at a time, to his
swords scabbard as a protective measure.
This signifies how much he esteemed it. It consisted of ahadith of
the Holy Prophet (pbuh), be they his own or those which he narrated about the Almighty and
which he learned from archangel Gabriel (as), i.e. Qudsi ahadith. Al-Bukhari on the
said page quotes al-Amash quoting Ibrahim al-Tameemi quoting his father quoting Imam
All (as) as saying that all they (AM and his family) had were "The Book of Allah and
this saheefa from the Prophet (pbuh)." On p. 36, Vol. 1, of al-Bukharis Solili,
the author quotes al-Sahib quoting Abu Juhayfa asking Ali (as), "Do you have any
book?" All (as) said, "The Book of Allah, (what we have learned from) some
knowledge bestowed upon a Muslim, and this saheefa." "What is written in
this saheefa?" asked Abu Juhayfa. Ali (as) said, "It contains reason,
[injunctions such as] the freeing of captives, and that no Muslim should kill another
Muslim." On p. 143 of Basair atDarajat, Imam Jafer al-Sadiq (as) is
quoted as saying, "We have the saheefa; it is dictated by the Messenger of
Allah (pbuh) and hand-written by Ali (as); nothing permissible or prohibitive except that
it is recorded in it, and nothing people need, nor any issue, except that it contains it,
even the penalty for slightly scratching ones cheek."
Other references to this saheefa exist on pages 67 and 69, Vol.
4, and on p. 144, Vol. 8, of al-Bukharis Sahih, as well as on p. 115, Vol. 4,
of Muslims Sahih. Another name for this saheefa is al-jamia, the
book which includes or contains all knowledge. In Arabic, a university is call jamia, a
place where knowledge and those who learn it gather, a gathering place of knowledge and
scholarship. If you are fortunate enough to be in possession of a copy of Usul al-Kafi by
Muhammad ibm Yaqub al-Kulayni published in 1990 by Dar al-Taaruf of Beirut,
Lebanon, read pp. 294-298 of its first volume to learn numerous details about not only
this saheefa but also about Fatimas Mushaf, the copy of the Holy Quran
kept by Fatima (as) daughter of the Messenger of Allah (pbuh) many years before Othman ibn
Affan asked Imam Ali ibn Abu Talib (as) to help compile the text of the Holy
Quran. There are other references to this "university of knowledge," but
we think this much suffices to let the reader know that the section of this book dealing
with the rewards one receives from reciting a particular chapter of the Holy Quran
is derived from me of the most ancient, if not the very most ancient, books written n the
history of Islam.
Fast of the month of Ramadhan is the fourth pillar of Islam. The Arabic
word shahr is used for a month due to its being mushtahr, well-known or
famous, that is, the knowledge thereof reaches all people, as we are told by Imam Ibn
Manzoor, author of Lisan al-Arab on p. 432, Vol. 4. Such knowledge can be attained
by sighting its crescent. As to the reasofl why it has been called the month of Ramadhan,
it is due to the fact that the Arabs gave the names of the months according to the times
during which they occurred, and to the fact that it so happened that the month of Ramadhan
coincided with the parching days of the summer.
Its root word ramd as the same author tells us on pp. 160-161,
Vol. 7, of the same lexicon, means to burn due to excessive sun-heat reflected on the
desert sands. The rainda is the buffing rock. This is why it was called the month
of Ramadhan. One may say in Arabic that a mans feet were burnt due to the heat, so
he became nimad. It is also said that it was called the month of Ramadhan because
people become tired due to their suffering from the combination of hunger and thirst
during a very hot month. Arab linguists say that to make something armad is to
squeeze it between two soft rocks then to pound it. A person fasting, by analogy, pounds
his own nature between two rocks: hunger and thirst.
According to one of his numero.us traditions, Prophet Muhomammd (pbuh)
is quoted saying, The month of Ramadhan was named so because it tends to ramad the
sins, that is, burn them." The righteous at the dawn of Islam used to call it al-midmar,
meaning that it emaciates the souls and bodies and helps them get rid of the excesses
of evils and sins whereby the souls and bodies were laden. During the life-time of the
Prophet (pbuh), the blessed month of Ramadhan used to be called al-marzooq, the one
full of sustenance, due to the abundance of the blessings of Allah whereby His servants
are sustained during it.
In a letter he sent to Jarrah al-Madayini, Muhammad ibn Yaqub
cites Imam Abu Abdullah al-Sadiq (as) saying, "Fast is not only to abstain from
eating and drinking." Then the Imam (as) quoted Mary (as) mother of Christ (as), as
the Holy Quran tells us, saying that she had vowed a fast for the Most Merciful One.
The Imam (as) continued to say, "When you fast, you should safeguard your tongues,
lower your gaze, and you should neither dispute with nor envy one another." This is
recorded on p. 351, Vol. 94, of Bihar al-Anwar.
The Imam (as) is also quoted in the same and following page of the said
reference saying, "When you fast, let your hearing and vision abstain with you from
anything unlawful, against everything ugly, and leave hypocrisy aside, and do not harm
those who serve you. Rather, adorn yourself with the dignity of the fast, and do not make
your fasting day any different from the day when you do not fast."
The Niyyat (intention) to Fast
When the crescent is sighted in your area or country, a niyyat, that is, a silent
declaration of intention, should be made to fast during this sacred month to attain
nearness to Allah (wajib qurbatan do-Allah). Just like the five daily prayers, the nijyat
of fast is obligatory and mental, and so is the case of every deed according to Islam.
Significance of the Month of Ramadhan and its fast
On p. 64, Vol. 2, of Safeenat al-Rinw, the Messenger of Allah (pbuh) is quoted
saying that Allah Almighty has charged a group of His angels with the task of supplicating
for those who observe the fast. On the same page of the same reference, Imam Jafer
al-Sadiq (as) is quoted saying that if a person fasts during a hot day, and he suffers
from thirst, Allah will assign a thousand angels to wipe his face and convey to him glad
tidings, and when he breaks his fast, Allah, the most Exalted, the most Glorified,
addresses him with these words, "How sweet your smell and soul are! O My angels! Bear
witness that I have forgiven him."
On page 96 of Thawab al-Amal wa Iqal al-Amal, and
also on page 48 of his book Al-Amali (or pp. 29-32 of old editions), Shaikh Abu
Jafer Muhammad ibn Ali ibn al-Husain ibn Babawayh al-Qummi al-Saduq (306-381 A.H)
quotes Muhammad Ibn Ibrahim al-Maathi saying that Ahmed ibn Jaylawayh al-Jurjani
alMuthakkar] quotes Abu Ishaq Ibrahim ibn Bilal quoting Abu Muhammad quoting Abu Abdullah
Muhammad ibn Kiram quoting Abmed ibn Abdullah quoting Sufyan ibn Ayeenah quoting
Muawiya ibn Abu Ishaq quoting Saeed ibn Jubayr saying,
"I asked Ibn Abbas once about the reward of one who fasts during
the month of Ramadhan knowing its greatness. He said: O Ibn Jubayr! Get ready to
listen to what your ears have never heard before, nor your heart has ever experienced, nor
your soul has ever reckoned regarding that about which you have inquired! What you are
seeking is the knowledge of the first generations and the last! So I left him and
prepared myself to meet him again. I returned to him at early daybreak.
Having said the fair prayers (together), I reminded him of he tradition
which I had sought, so he turned his face to me and aid, Listen carefully to what I
am going to tell you. I have heard the Aessenger of Allah (pbuh) saying: Had you
ever come to know about your rewards during the month of Ramadhan, you would surely have
thanked the Almighty a great deal more (than you usually do).
When the first night is over, Allah, the Almighty and the Exalted one
forgives the sins committed by all members of my nation, the ones committed in secrecy and
the ones committed in public, and He elevates your status two thousand degrees and builds
you fifty towns in Paradise.
On the next day, He rewards you for every step you take luring that day
with the rewards of one who adored Him for a full rear and the reward of one of His
prophets, and He will reward you is though you had performed the fast for a full year.
On the third day, the Exalted and Dear One grants you a dome in
Paradise for ach hair on your body, a dome of a white pearl on top of which are twelve
thousand light houses and at the bottom of which are twelve thousand houses in each one of
which there are one thousand beds and on each bed of which there is a nymph (hur) with
large lovely eyes, each served by one thousand servants the head-covering of each me of
them is better than this world and everything in it.
On the fifth day, He builds you in Paradise a million (In Arabic, the
word "million" does not exist; instead, Arabs use "a thousand
thousands") cities in each one of which here are seventy thousand houses, inside each
one of which there are, seventy thousand tables, and on each table there are seventy
thousand bowls, and in each bowl there are sixty thousand types of food each one of which
is different from the other.
On the sixth day, He will grant you in the Abode of Peace a hundred
thousand towns in each one of which there are a hundred thousand rooms, in each room there
are a hundred thousand beds of gold the length of each is a thousand yards, and on each
bed is a hur wife with large lovely eyes whose hair has thirty thousand locks
braided with pearls and sapphires, and each lock is carried by a hundred concubines.
On the seventh day, the Almighty grants you in the Garden of Bliss the
rewards of forty thousand martyrs and forty thousand sideeqs.
On the eighth day, Allah Almighty grants you the rewards of the good
deeds of sixty thousand worshippers and sixty thousand ascetics.
On the ninth day, Allah, the Exalted One, gives you what is equal to
what He gives a thousand scholars and a thousand devotees and a thousand warriors fighting
for Allah in a foreign land.
On the tenth day, He gives you the fulfilment of seventy thousand of
your worldly wishes and orders the sun, the moon, the stars, the animals, the birds, the
casts, every rock and every rain-drop, everything wet and everything my, all fish in the
oceans and all leaves on the trees, to pray for your forgiveness.
On the eleventh day, the Exalted and Mighty One grants m the rewards
whereby He rewards one who performs the pilgrimage and umra four times and
one who performs the pilgrimage with His prophets and the umra with every siddeeq
or Martyr.
On the twelfth Day, He takes upon replace your as with good deeds, then
He multiplies your good deeds many times rid gives you the rewards of each of your good
deeds a million times.
On the thirteenth day, Allah Almighty grants you what He grants the
devotees of Mecca and Medina and bestows upon you an intercession of each and every stone
and raindrop between Mecca and Medina.
In the fourteenth day, He treats you as though you had met and followed
in the footsteps of Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, David and Solomon [peace be upon all of
them], and as though you had worshiped the Almighty Allah in the company of His prophets
for hundred years.
On the fifteenth day, He fulfils ten of your worldly wishes and those
of the hereafter and grants you what He granted Job (as), then He orders the angels who
bear the Arsh to say for your forgiveness and grants you on the Day of Resurrection
lights: ten on your right, ten on your left, ten before you and ten behind you.
On the sixteenth day, the Almighty grants you sixty outfits to wear as
soon as you abandon your grave and a she-camel ride, and He will send a cloud to
overshadow you to protect you froom the heat of that Day.
On the seventeenth day, the Almighty llah says: I have forgiven
them and their parents and exempted em from having to undergo the hardships of the Day of
Resurrection.
On the eighteenth day, the Praised and Exalted One orders Gabriel,
Michael and Israil as well as the angels who bear the Arsh all archangels to seek
forgiveness for the nation of Muhammad (pbuh) till the next year, and He will also grant
you on the Day of resurrection whatever rewards He grants to those who participated the
Battle of Badr].
On the nineteenth day, all angels in the heavens and on earth will have
already sought permission of their Lord to visit your graves and to bring you every day a
present and a drink (as long as you remain in the barzakh).
So, if you complete your fast for twenty full days, the Almighty Allah
sends you seventy thousand angels to protect you from every accursed devil, and He will
have granted you for each day of your fast your rewards as though you fasted a hundred
years, and He will set a ditch between you and hell and grant you the rewards of all those
who recited the Torah, the Gospel, the Psalms and the Holy Quran, and will write for
you for each feather on Gabriel the reward of a full year and will grant you the rewards
of those who glorify Him at the Arsh and Kursi and will marry you to a thousand
nymphs for each of the verses of the Quran.
On the twenty-first day, the Almighty expands your grave a thousand
parasangs and lifts the darkness and loneliness of your graves and makes your graves look
like the graves of the martyrs and your faces like the face of Joseph son of Jacob (as).
On the twenty-second day, the Almighty dispatches the angel of death as
He dispatches him to His prophets to remove your worldly worries and the torment of the
hereafter.
On the twenty-third day, you will pass on the Straight Path in the
company of the prophets, the first to follow the prophets, and the martyrs, as if you had
fed each orphan and clothed everyone who needed to be clothed.
On the twenty-fourth day, you will not leave this life before each one
of you sees the place reserved for him/her in Paradise and is given the rewards of a
thousand sick and a thousand who go back to their creed and will grant you the rewards of
one who freed a thousand captives from the descendants of Ishmael (as).
On the twenty-fifth day, Allah will have built you under His Arsh
a thousand green domes on top of each one of which is a tent of light. The Almighty and
Exalted One will then say: O followers of Muhammad! I am your Lord and you are My
servants! Enjoy the shade of My Arsh in these domes and eat and drink with
enjoyment, for there will be no fear on you, nor will you grieve.
O nation of Muhammad! By My Dignity and Greatness! I shall dispatch you
to Paradise in a way which will amaze the first generations and the last, and I shall
crown each one of you with a thousand light crowns, and I shall provide for each one of
you a she-camel whose reins are made of light, and in it are a thousand gold rings, in
each is an angel looking after it, in the hand of each angel is a light rod so that he may
enter Paradise without a reckoning. And on the twenty-sixth day, Allah will look at
you with compassion and will forgive all your sins except those of shedding innocent blood
or robbing peoples wealth, and He will grant you every day a thousand barriers
against backbiting, lying and slandering.
On the twenty-seventh day, He will consider you as though you had aided
every believing man and woman and clothed seventy thousand naked persons and equipped a
thousand soldiers to camp in a foreign land to defend Islam, and as if you have recited
every book Allah has revealed to His prophets.
On the twenty-eighth day, Allah will have built you in Paradise a
hundred thousand light cities and granted you in the garden of bliss a hundred thousand
silver mansions and a hundred thousand cities in each one of which there are a thousand
rooms, and granted you in the garden of greatness a hundred thousand pulpits of musk
inside each one of which there is a thousand saffron houses in each one of which there are
a thousand beds of pearls and sapphires and on each bed a wife of the hurts with
large lovely eyes. So if you complete your fast fill the twenty-ninth day, the Almighty
Allah will grant you a million quarters, inside each quarter is a white dome underneath
which is a white camphor bed on which there are a thousand mattresses of green silk on
each one of which there is a hurt decorated with seventy thousand ornaments and
crowned with eighty thousand locks each one of which is decorated with diamonds and
sapphires.
So if you finish thirty complete days of fast, the Almighty will have
granted you for each day the rewards of a thousand martyrs and a thousand foremost
believers in His Prophets, and He will have assigned for you the rewards of fifty years of
adoration, and He will have decreed a clearance for you from hell and a passage on the
Straight Path and a security against the torment. One of the gates of Paradise is called
al-Rayyan, and it shall never be opened before the Day of Resurrection. It will be opened
for those among the nation of Muhammad (pbuh) who performed the fast. Ridwan, custodian of
Paradise, will call out saying: O followers of Muhammad! Come to the al-Rayyan
gate! So he will let my nation enter Paradise through that gate. Therefore, if one
is not forgiven during the month of Ramadhan, in which month can he be forgiven? There is
neither will nor strength except from Allah; Allah suffices us, and what a great Helper He
is!"
This lengthy tradition is also recorded on pp. 183-185, Vol. 8, of Bihar
al-Anwar.
On page 92 of his book Thowob al-Amol wo Iqab
alAmol, in a chapter dealing with the glory of the month of Ramadhan and the
rewards for its fast, Shaikh Abu Jafer Muhammad ibn Ali ibn alHusain ibn Babawayh
al-Qummi al-Saduq relies on the authority of Jabir who quotes Imam Abu Jafer
al-Baqir, peace be upon him, and also inAl-Misbah, where Jabir ibn Yazid quotes
Imam Abu Jafer, peace be upon him, saying the following to Jabir ibn Abdullah
alAnsari, oone of the greatest sahbai (companions of the Holy Prophet, pbuh),
"O Jabir! This is the month of Ramadhan; whoever fasts during its
day, and spends a portion of its night saying prayers and abstaining from eating anything
unlawful, safeguarding his modesty against anything unlawful, and withholding his tongue
against saying anything unlawful, will leave his sins behind him as the month
leaves." Jabir said, "O Messenger of Allah! What a beautiful hadith this
is!" The Messenger of Allah (pbuh) whereupon said, "And what difficult terms
these are!" The Prophet, peace and blessings be upon him, his progeny and companions,
is also quoted saying, "Whoever fasts during the month of Ramadhan out of firm belief
and a sincere desire to please Allah will have all his past and future sins
forgiven." He (pbuh) is also quoted saying, The gates of Paradise are opened on
the first night of the month of Ramadhan, and they remain open till the last night of
it." He (pbuh) is also quoted saying that the Almighty has entrusted seven angels to
keep each demon fettered till the end of the month of Ramadhan.
On the same page of the same reference, Muhammad ibn alHassan is quoted
saying that al-Husain ibn al-Hassan ibn Saeed has quoted al-Husain ibn Auwan
quoting Amr ibn Shimr citing Jabir who in turn cites Imam Abu Jafer al-Baqir
(as) saying that whenever the month of Ramadhan approached, the Messenger of Allah (pbuh)
used to come out to the public, face the Qibla and supplicate thus:
O Allah! I invoke You to let this crescent be the harbinger of security
and conviction, safety and peace, crowned health, vast sustenance, prevention against all
ailments, recitation of the Holy Ouran, and help in performing the prayers and
upholding the fast! O Lord! Safeguard us for the month of Ramadhan, safeguard it for us,
and safeguard it from us till the month is over and You have forgiven us!
Then he (pbuh) would face the public and address them thus:
"O Muslim multitudes! When the crescent of the month of Ramadhan appears, the demons
among the devils are chained, and the gates of the heavens and Paradise are opened, and so
are the gates of His Mercy, while the gates of hell are closed. Pleas are answered and the
Almighty releases at the time of iftar a number of residents of hell. In every
night, a caller calls: Is there anyone who has a plea? Is there anyone who seeks
forgiveness? O Almighty Allah! Reward everyone who spends in Your way, and grant perdition
to everyone who withholds. And when the month of Shawwal approaches, the believers are
called upon to receive their rewards, for that will be their day to receive their
rewards".
On page 94 of the reference cited above, Muhammad ibn Musa ibn
al-Mutawakldi is quoted saying that Abdullah ibn Jafer al1-limyari has said that
Ahmed ibn Muhammad ibn Eisa has said that al-Hassan ibn Mahboob al-Zarrad has said that
Abu Ayyub has quoted Abul-Ward citing Imam Abu Jafer al-Baqir, peace be upon him,
saying that the Messenger of Allah (pbuh) delivered a sermon on the last Friday of the
month of Shaban. In it, he praised Allah then said, O people! You have been
shadowed by a month one night of which is better than a thousand months; it is the month
of Ramadhan during which Allah has enjoined you to fast and equalled the rewards for
voluntary prayers during its nights with the rewards due to those who volunteered to say
optional prayers for seventy years in other months. He also equalled the rewards of the
good deeds of those who do good deeds during it with those who perform one of the
obligations enjoined by the Almighty (in other months). And whoever performs one of the
enjoined obligations during it will be rewarded as though he had performed seventy other
obligations in other months. It is the month of perseverance, and the reward of
perseverance is Paradise. It is the month of consolation, the one wherein Allah increases
the sustenance of the believers... Allah will decrease the hardship of the reckoning of
whoever decreases the hardship of his slave during it.
It is a month the beginning of which is mercy, the middle of which is
forgiveness, and the end of which is acceptance and emancipation from the fire. You cannot
by any means take lightly during it four merits with two of which you please Allah, and
two others you cannot do without. The two merits whereby you please Allah are: you testify
that There is no god except Allah and that I, Muhammad, is the Messenger of Allah; as for
the two merits which you cannot do without, these are: you plead to Allah to fulfill your
worldly needs and grant you Paradise, and that you plead to Allah during it for your
health and well-being, and you seek refuge with Him against the fire."
On pp. 56-57 of al-Saduqs Amali, Sad ibn
Abdullah is quoted saying that Ahmed ibn Muhammad ibn Eisa ibn Saeed quotes Eadal
citing Yousuf ibn Umayrah quoting Ubaydullah ibn Abdullah quoting individuals
who heard Abu Jafer, peace be upon him, saying that when the month of Ramadhan was
about to approach, that is, on the twenty-seventh of Shaban, the Messenger of Allah
(pbuh) told Bilal to call upon people to assemble. People assembled, so he (pbuh) ascended
the pulpit, praised the Almighty then said, "O people! The month (of Ramadhan) has
approached, and it is the master of all months wherein one night is better than a thousand
months. During it, the gates of hell are closed and those of Paradise are kept open.
Whoever lives through it and is not forgiven will be distanced from the mercy of Allah,
and whoever during it does not receive Allahs forgiveness while his parents are
living will surely be further away from receiving Allahs mercy. And whoever hears my
name and fails to send blessings unto me will (likewise) be distanced from Allahs
mercy."