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Each prescribed prayer time points to a mighty revolution, is a sign
to the Master’s tremendous activity, and a token of the universal Divine
bounties. And so this matter is a result of perfect wisdom.
Fifth point:·We are created weak, yet everything involves, affects, and
saddens us. We have no power, yet are afflicted by calamities and enemies. We are
extremely poor, yet have many needs. We are indolent and incapable, yet the burden
of life is very heavy. Being human, we are connected with the rest of the world,
yet what we love and are familiar with disappears, and the resulting grief causes
us pain. Our mentality and senses inspire us toward glorious objectives and eternal
gains, but we are unable, impatient, powerless, and have only a short lifetime.
Given all of this, several things become quite clear:
The fajr prayer is essential, for we must present a petition before the
day’s activities begin. Through prayer and supplication, we must beseech the Court
of an All‑Powerful One of Majesty, an All‑Compassionate One of Grace, for success
and help. Such support is necessary to bear and endure the troubles and burdens
waiting for us.
The zuhr prayer is essential, for this is when the day starts to move
forward to complete its course. People take a break from their activities. The spirit
needs a pause from the heedlessness and insensibility caused by hard work, and Divine
bounties are fully manifest. Praying at this time is good, necessary, agreeable,
and proper. This prayer gives relief from the pressures of daily life and heedlessness.
We stand humbly in the presence of the Real Bestower of blessings, express gratitude,
and pray for His help. We bow to demonstrate helplessness before His Glory and Might,
and prostrate to proclaim our wonder, love, and humility before His everlasting
Perfection and matchless Grace.
The ‘asr prayer resembles and recalls the sad season of autumn, the mournful
state of old age, and the distressing period at the end of time. The day’s tasks
are brought toward completion, and the Divine bounties received that day (e.g.,
health, safety, and good service in His way) have accumulated to form a great total.
It is also the time when the sun fades away, proving that everything is impermanent.
We, who long for eternity, are created for it and show reverence for favors received,
also are saddened by separations. So we stand up, perform wudu’ (ablution),
and pray.
Thus praying ‘asr·is an exalted duty, an appropriate service, a reasonable
way of paying a debt of gratitude, and an agreeable pleasure. We acquire peace of
mind and find true consolation and ease of spirit by supplicating at the Eternal
Court of the Everlasting, the Eternally Self‑Subsistent One, and seeking refuge
in His infinite Mercy, offering thanks and praise for His endless bounties, bowing
humbly before His Lordship’s Might and Glory, and prostrating humbly before His
Eternal Divinity.
Evening reminds us of winter’s beginning, the sad farewells of summer and autumn
creatures, and our sorrowful separation from loved ones through death. The sun’s
lamp is extinguished, and Earth’s inhabitants will emigrate to the other world following
this one’s destruction. It is also a severe warning for those who adore transient,
ephemeral beloveds, each of whom will die.
By its nature, the human spirit longs for an Eternal Beauty. During this prayer,
it turns toward the Eternal Being, Who creates and frames everything, Who commands
huge heavenly bodies. At this time, the human spirit refuses to rely on anything
finite and cries Allahu akbar (God is the Greatest). Then, in His presence,
we say al‑hamdu lillah·(all praise be to God) to praise Him in the awareness
of His faultless Perfection, matchless Beauty and Grace, and infinite Mercy.
Afterwards, by declaring: You alone do we worship, and from You alone do We
seek help (1:5), we offer our worship of, and seek help from, His unassisted
Lordship, unpartnered Divinity, and unshared Sovereignty. Bowing before His infinite
Greatness, limitless Power, and perfect Honor and Glory, we demonstrate, with the
rest of creation, our weakness and helplessness, humility and poverty by saying:
“Glory be to my Lord, the Mighty.” Prostrating in awareness of the undying Beauty
and Grace of His Essence, His unchanging sacred Attributes, and His constant everlasting
Perfection, we proclaim, through detachment from all that is not Him, our love and
servanthood in wonder and self‑abasement. Finding an All‑Beautiful Permanent, an
All‑Compassionate Eternal One to Whom we say: “Glory be to my Lord, the Most Exalted,”
we declare our Most Exalted Lord free of any decline or fault.
Then we sit reverently and willingly offer all creatures’ praises and glorifications
to the Eternal, All‑Powerful, and All‑Majestic One. We also ask God to bestow peace
and blessings on His holy Messenger in order to renew our allegiance to him, proclaim
our obedience to His commands, and renew and strengthen our belief. By viewing the
universe’s wise order, we testify to the Creator’s Oneness and Muhammad’s Messengership,
herald of the sovereignty of God’s Lordship, proclaimer of what pleases Him, and
interpreter of the Book of the Universe’s signs or verses.
Given this, how can we be truly human if we do not realize what the evening prayer
represents: an agreeable duty, a valuable and pleasurable service, a fine and beautiful
worship, a serious matter, a significant conversation with the Creator, and a source
of permanent happiness in this transient guest‑house?
The time of ‘isha·(nightfall), when night covers Earth, reminds us of
the mighty disposals of God’s Lordship as the Changer of Night and Day. It calls
to our mind the Divine activities of the All‑Wise One of Perfection as the Subduer
of the sun and the moon, observed in His turning the white page of day into the
black page of night, and in His changing summer’s beautifully colored script into
winter’s frigid white page. It recalls His acts as the Creator of Life and Death
in sending the dead entity’s remaining works to another world. It reminds us of
God’s majestic control and graceful manifestations as the Creator of the Heavens
and Earth, and that this narrow, mortal, and lowly world will be destroyed. The
same is true for the unfolding of the broad, eternal, and majestic world of the
Hereafter. It also warns that only the One Who so easily turns day into night, winter
into summer, and this world into the other world can be the universe’s Owner and
True Master. Only He is worthy to be worshipped and truly loved.
At nightfall our spirits, which are infinitely helpless and weak, infinitely
poor and needy, tossed to and fro by circumstances and whirling onward into a dark
and unknown future, perform the ‘isha prayer. We say, like Abraham: I
love not those that set (6:76). We seek refuge at the Court of the Ever‑Living,
the Ever‑Worshipped, the Eternal Beloved One. From our transient life in this dark,
fleeting world and dark future, we beseech the Enduring, Everlasting One. For a
moment of unending conversation, a few seconds of immortal life, we seek the All‑Merciful
and Compassionate’s favors. We ask for the light of His guidance that will illuminate
our world and our future, and bind up the pain from the decline of all creatures
and friends.
We forget the world, which has left us for the night, and pour out our heart’s
grief at the Court of Mercy. Before death‑like sleep comes, after which anything
can happen, we perform our “last” duty of worship. To close our day’s activities
on a favorable note, we pray and enter the Eternal Beloved and Worshipped One’s
presence, rather than the mortal ones we loved all day; the All‑Powerful and Generous
One’s presence, rather than the impotent creatures from which we begged all day;
and the All‑Compassionate Protector’s presence ·in the hope of being saved from
the evil of the harmful creatures before which we trembled all day.
We start the prayer with Surat al‑Fatiha, which extols praising the Lord
of the worlds, Perfect and Self‑Sufficient, Compassionate and All‑Generous. We move
on to You alone do We worship (1:5). That is, despite our insignificance
and being alone, our connection with the Owner of the Day of Judgment, the Eternal
Sovereign, causes us to be treated like an indulged guest and important officer.
Through You alone do we worship and from You alone do we seek help
(1:5), we offer Him the worship of all creatures and seek His assistance for them.
Saying Guide us to the Straight Path·(1: 6), we ask to be guided to eternal
happiness and the radiant way.
Saying God is the Greatest, we bow down and contemplate the Grandeur of
the Majestic One, Who orders hidden suns and waking stars, that are like individual
soldiers subject to His command just like the plants and animals that have now gone
to sleep, and are His lamps and servants in this world.
We think of all creatures’ universal prostration. That is, like the creatures
that sleep at night, when all creation living in a certain age or period is discharged
from the duty of worship by the command of “Be!” and it is like a well‑ordered
army of obedient soldiers, and is sent to the World of the Unseen, it prostrates
on the rug of death in perfect orderliness saying: “God is the Greatest.” They are
resurrected in the spring by an arousing, life‑giving trumpet‑blast from the command
of Be! and it is, and rise up to serve their Lord. Insignificant humanity
makes the same declaration in the presence of the All‑Merciful One of Perfection,
the All‑Compassionate One of Grace, in wonder‑struck love, eternity‑tinged humility,
and dignified self‑effacement. We then prostrate and achieve a sort of Ascension.
Thus each prescribed prayer time points to a mighty revolution, is a sign to
the Master’s tremendous activity, and a token of the universal Divine bounties.
And so this matter is a result of perfect wisdom.
Glory be to You. We have no knowledge save what You have taught us. Truly,
you are the All‑Knowing, the All‑Wise.
O God! Bestow blessings and peace upon the one You sent as a teacher to
Your servants to instruct them in knowledge of You and worship of You; to make
known the treasures of Your Names, the interpreter of the signs or verses of
Your Book of the Universe; to serve as a mirror, through his worship, to the
Grace of Your Lordship; and upon his Family and Companions. Have mercy on us
and all believers. Amin. For the sake of Your Compassion, O Most Compassionate
of the Compassionate.
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