It
is related by Hazrat Abu hurairah (R.A.) that (once) the Apostle of
Allah (Sallallaho alaiho wasallam) was sitting to one side in the mosque
that a man came in and offered his Namaz (Prayer). Afterwards, he came
to the holy Prophet (SAW) and paid his respects to him. The Holy Prophet
(SAW) returned the salutation and remarked: "Go and offer the Namaz
(Prayer) again. You have not said it properly." He went back and said
the prayers again and returned to the Holy Prophet (SAW), and paid his
respects.
The
Holy Prophet (SAW), returning the salutation, once again remarked: "Go
and offer the Namaz (Prayer) again. You have not said it properly".
After offering Namaz (Prayer) for the third (and the fourth) time, the
man said to the Holy Prophet (SAW): "Sir, tell me how to offer Namaz
(Prayer)". The Holy Prophet (SAW) replied: "When you decide to offer
Namaz (Prayer), first perform Wadhu throughly and well, then turn to
Qibla, then begin the Namaz (Prayer), after uttering Takbir-i-Tahrima.
After it recite some part of the Holy Qur’aan which you know by heart
and can recite easily. (In other Traditions relating to the same
incident it is stated that the Apostle of Allah (SAW) told the
questioner, specifically, to recite Surah-i-Fateha and whatever he
liked, in addition to it).
Then
after the recital, perform Ruku till you are still and at ease in Ruku.
Then, arise from Ruku till you stand erect. Then, perform the Sajadah
till you are still and at ease in Sajadah. Then arise till you sit up
comfortably. (According to another narrator, the Holy Prophet (SAW),
instead of it, said: "Then arise till you stand erect). Then, do like
that throughout the Namaz (Prayer) (i.e., in every Ruku, Sujud, Qauma
and Jalsa in a calm and collected manner)." (Bukhari and Muslim)
The
incident mentioned above related to Hadhrat Khallad bin Rafay (RA), the
brother of the well-known Sahabi, Hadhrat Rifa’ah bin Rafay (RA).
According to Nassai, he had offered up two Raka’ah of Namaz (Prayer) in
the Holy Prophet’s (SAW) mosque but some other commentators suggest that
these Raka’ah were of Tahiyyat-ul-Masjid which Hadhrat Khallad (RA),
had said rather hurriedly, and upon it, he was reproached by the Holy
Prophet (SAW) and told to offer them up again.
It
shows that the Holy Prophet (SAW) did not plainly tell Hadhrat Khallad
bin Rafay (RA), at the first time, what was wrong with his Namaz
(Prayer) and how it was to be said correctly but at the third or fourth
time, and, then, at his own request. It was, probably, for the simple
reason that a lesson imparted in such a manner suffices for a lifetime
and gets talked about among others as well.
The
paractical teaching imparted in the above Tradition is that Namaz
(Prayer) should be offered up in a calm and composed manner and if it is
offered hurriedly and wiithout making the necessary pauses and carrying
out the various acts properly it be as good as unsaid.
Namaz (Prayer) of Holy Prophet (SAW)
Hadhrat
Ayeshah (RA) narrated that the Apostle of Allah (SAW) commenced his
Namaz (Prayer) with Takbir and the recital with Al-Hamdu-Lilaahi Rabbil
‘Alameen, and while performing Ruku he neither raised his head upward
nor bent it downwards but kept it in the middle position (i.e., in line
with the waist) and when he from Rukuh he did not go into Sajadah till
he had stood erect, and when he raised the head from Sajadah he did not
perform the second Sajadah until he had sat upright and he recited
At-Tahiyyatu after every two Rak’ah and at that time, he flattened the
left foot under him and kept the right foot in the upright postion and
he forbade Uqbatish Shaitan (sitting like the Devil), and he, also,
forbade that a man sat (in Sajadah) with his forearms (i.e., parts of
arms between elbow and wrist) placed on the ground like the animals, and
he brought the Namaz (Prayer) to an end by saying Assalmu ‘alaikum wa
rahmatullah." ----Muslim
Namaz
(Prayer) is a worship of a very high order. For it such forms and
postures of Qayam, Qaood, Ruku and Sujood have been prescribed as
constitute the finest marks and expressions of adoration and humbleness,
and all the unbecoming manners of holding the body that are indicative
of vanity, awkwardness or indifference, or bear a resemblance with the
lowly creatures have been, particularly, forbidden. The Holy Prophet
(SAW) has, accordingly, ordered us not to sit in Sajadah with forearms
spread on the ground as the dogs and wolves do or in the manner which,
in this Tradition, has been described as Uqbatish Shaitan , and, in
another, as Aq’aa-al-kalb.
Commentators
have differed in their explanation of the two terms. In our humble
view, however, they denote sitting on the heels with the feet held
upright on the toes and since this posture gives the impression of haste
and exaggerated self-es-teem and only the knees touch the ground and it
is the way dogs and wolves and other wild animals, generally, sit, the
Holy Prophet (SAW) took special care to forbid against sitting like that
in Namaz (Prayer).
Special prayers and formulas of Allah-remembrance
The
inner feelling of earnestness and deep devotion that runs through the
prayer-formulas through which the revere and adore the Lord during the
various parts or acts of Namaz (Prayer) like Qayam, Ruku and Sujood, and
the entreaties he made in them, form the essence of Namaz (Prayer). The
sayings we are now going to discuss should be read from that point of
view and the endeavour should be to produce the same emotional and
spiritual state of feeling because it is the characteristic legacy of
the Holy Prophet (SAW).
Hadhrat
Ayeshah (RA) related to us that ‘when the Apostle of Allah (SAW) began
(to offer up) Namaz (Prayer) he first glorified the Lord in these words:
Subhaanakal-laa-humma wabihamdika wa tabarakasmuka wa ta’ala jadduka wa
laa-ilaaha ghiruka (O Allah, with Thy glorification and Thy praise;
blessed is Thy Name; and there is no Allah save thee). Tirmidhi, and Abu
Dawood.
Hadhrat
Ibn-Taimiyah (RA) writes in Muntaqa about Hadhrat Abu Bakr (RA), on the
authority of Hadhrat Sunnan-i-Saeed bin Mansur (RA), and about Hazrat
Omer (RA) on the authority of Sahih Muslim, and about Hadhrat Osman (RA)
and Hadhrat Abdullah bin Masud (RA), on the authority of Qutni, that
they began their Namaz (Prayer) with Subhaanakallahumma wa bihamdika...
and, then, goes on to observe that it appears from it that the Holy
Prophet (SAW), usually, recited this short prayer after Takbir in Namaz
(Prayer). It, therefore, enjoys preference over all the other prayers of
adoration mentioned in the traditions with relation to the commencement
of the service though there is no harm in reciting the other proven
hymns, as for instance, the one occurring in the next Tradition related
on the authority of Hadhrat Ali (RA).
Hadhrat
Ali (R.A.) related that "when the Apostle of Allah (SAW) stood up to
offer Namaz (Prayer) he recited the following prayer after Takbir:
Waj-jahtu
Waj-hil-lazi fataras samawati wal-arz hanifan wa maana
minal-mushrikeena in-nasalaati wa nusuki wa mahya-yawa ma-matillahii
rabbil ‘Aalimeena Laa Shareeka Lauhu Wa bizaalika omirtu wa ana minal
muslimeena allahumma antal maliku laa ilaaha anta anta rabbi wa ana
abduka azlamtu mafsi wa-’ataraftu bizanbi faghfirli zunubi jamee’an
in-nahu laayaghfiruzzunuba illa anta wahdin li-absaril akhlaq laa yahdi
liahsaniha illa anta was-rif’ annisaiyyi-aha laa yahsnifu
‘an-nisajyyi-aha illa anta, labbaika wa sa’adaika was-sharru laisa
ilaika anabika wa ilaika tabarkta wa ta’a-laita astghfiruka wa
atoobuilaika
(I
have turned away from every direction and set the Creator of the
heavens and the earth, and I am not of those who associate anyone with
Him in allegiance. My worship, and my every religious act, and my life
and my death are for Allah alone, the Lord of the Worlds. To this I have
been commanded and I am of those who obey. O Allah Thou art the
Sovereign and Master. No one is worthy of obedience save Thee. Thou art
my Lord and Owner, and I am Thy slave. I have wronged my soul, and
ruined myself, and I confess my inquities. O Lord! Forgive me my sins;
no one can forgive sins expect Thee. And remove all bad manners and
deplorable morals from my side, and take them away from me. This, too,
no one aside of Thee can do. I am in THY presence the service and Thy
victory. Here I am, O Lord! All the good things, and every kind of piety
and virtue are in Thy hands, and evil has no access towards Thee. Thou
art the Blessed, the Most High, then art my only hope and my face is
turned towards Thee. I beg The forgiveness and unto the do I turn
penitent).
This
prayer the holy Prophet (SAW) recited after Takbir and before the
commencement (of recitation from the Holy Qur’aan. Then, as he perform
the Ruku’, (after completing the recital), he used to say: Allahumma
laka rak’atu wa bika aamantu wa laka aslamtu khash’a laka sam’anini wa
basari wa mukhkhi wa’azmi wa ‘asbi (O Allah! I am bowed low before Thee
and I have believed in Thee and placed myself I Thy charge. My earns,
and my eyes, and my marrow and my bones, and my muscles, and my nerves
are all bent in submission to Thee).
Later,
as the Holy Prophet (SAW) raised his head from Rukuo’ and stood erect,
he said: "Allahhumma rabbana lakal-hamdu mila-a-as- samawaati wal-arzi
wa ma bainahuma wa mila-a ma shiata min shaiyyan b’adu" (O Allah! Praise
is for Thee alone, such boundless praise as my cover the extensiveness
of the heavens and the earth and fill all the empty space between them).
After it when the Holy Prophet (SAW) performed Sajadah, he used to say
(placing his forehead on the ground): Allahumma laka sajad-tu wa bika
aamantu wa laka aslamtu sajada waj-hiyyallazi khalaqa-hu wa sawwar-tuhwa
shaq-qa sam-’ahu wa basarahu tabarak-allahu ahsanul khaliqeen (O Allah!
I am prostrating myself for Thy sake, and in Thy presence, amd I have
believe in Thee, and I have placed myself in Thy charge. My face is
carrying out genuflexion before the Creator who created it, and gave it
its shape, and its ear, and its eyes out of nothing. \Blessed, indeed,
is the Best of Creators).
In
the end, between Attahyyaatu (Also known as Tashahhud) and
Salutation,he would pray: Allahummaghfirli ma qaddamtu wa ma akhkhartu
wa ma anta a’alamu bihi minni antalmuqqdimu wa ant-al muwakhkhartu la
ilaaha illa anta (O Allah! Forgive me all the sins I have committed
earlier or later, and secretly or openly) and whatever in equity I have
been guilty of, and of which Thou art better informed than me.
"Thou it is who raises to higher rank and reduces to lower position. Verily, there is no deity save Thee)."--Muslim
From
the narratives relating to the Namaz (Prayer) of the Holy Prophet (SAW)
is it clear that it was not the Prophet’s (SAW) regular practice to
recite in Namaz (Prayer) the prayers mentioned by Hadhrat Ali (RA) in
the above report. Perhaps, he did so occasionally, and most probably,in
Tahajjud. Infact, Imam Muslim (RA) has quoted this Tradition in
connection with the traditions appertaining Tahajjud.
Many
other prayers were, also, recited by the Holy Prophet (SAW) in Namaz
(Prayer), particularly in Tahajjud which will be taken up at the
approbate time. These possess a special significance and are charged
with rare feeling. The Imam can read them in Fardh Namaz (Prayer) as
well if he is satisfied that it will not go hard with the Muqtadis, and
as far as supererogatory services are concerned, there is no reason why
one should not avail oneself of this marvellous bequest in them.
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