Spiritual Fasting
Cross-source consensus on Spiritual Fasting from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Uses
Benefits
Risks & contraindications
Where it comes from
Other
Highlighted claims
- A spiritual fast is usually longer, quieter, and oriented toward inner practices such as rest, reflection, journaling, meditation, or prayer. — Fasting, Metabolic Resilience, and Spiritual Practice
- Dry fasting is described as advanced, and the transcript lacks detailed safety guidance for dehydration, medical conditions, pregnancy, heat, or athletics. — Fasting, Metabolic Resilience, and Spiritual Practice
- Ramadan fasting is presented as having physical, behavioral, and spiritual levels. — Fasting, Metabolic Resilience, and Spiritual Practice
- Ramadan is treated as a major communal example of spiritual fasting involving daylight abstinence from food and water, with exceptions for some conditions. — Fasting, Metabolic Resilience, and Spiritual Practice
- Spiritual fasting is presented as potentially heightening awareness, sensory perception, and emotional access. — Fasting, Metabolic Resilience, and Spiritual Practice
- Fasting communities are described as making fasting emotionally easier and more meaningful. — Fasting, Metabolic Resilience, and Spiritual Practice