In the name of Allah, the Merciful, the Compassionate.
Surely the prayer is a timed prescription for the believers. (4:103)
Once, a man of considerable age, great stature, and high social position said to me: ‘The prayer is OK, but five times a day is too much; it bores and wearies.’
A long time after the man said this, I gave ear to my carnal soul, and I heard it say exactly the same things. I realized that with the ear of laziness, it was taught the same lesson by Satan. Then I came to understand that those words had issued from the man in the name of all evil-commanding souls. So I said to myself: Since my soul orders evil, and one who does not reform his own soul cannot reform others, I shall begin with my own soul.
I said: O soul! In response to those words which you uttered in compound ignorance, in the bed of indolence, in the torpor of idleness, hear from me the following five warnings:
First warning
O wretched soul! Is your life permanent? Have you any documents showing that you will remain until next year, or even until tomorrow? What causes you weariness is your fancy that you live forever. You complain as though you will remain in the world for eternal enjoyment. Try and understand that your life-time is short, and that it passes all in vain. Then you would surely understand that—far from causing boredom or weariness—spending one twenty-fourth of it on a fine, agreeable, easy, and gracious act of service which is the means to happiness in the real, eternal life, in fact arouses vigor and gives pleasure.
Second warning
O gluttonous soul! Every day you eat, drink and breathe; does any of that cause you boredom? It does not; because since the need recurs, it gives pleasure, not boredom, to satisfy it. That being so, the five daily prayers should not cause you boredom for you have companions in the house of the body, namely the heart, the spirit, and inward God-directed faculties, and the prayers attract and conduct to each of them its sustenance, water of life, and air.
The food and strength of a heart which is exposed to endless grief and pain, and inclined to infinite pleasures and ambitions, may be obtained by knocking through supplication on the door of One All-Compassionate and Munificent.
For a spirit which is connected with most beings and speedily traveling to the other world amid cries of separation, the water of life may be imbibed by turning through the five daily prayers towards the spring of mercy of an Everlasting Beloved.
Finally, a conscious inward sense, a luminous God-directed faculty by nature desires the eternity for which it was created. It is a mirror to the Eternal Being and is infinitely delicate and subtle. It is surely most needy of ‘air,’ of relief and relaxation, in the distressing, crushing, and suffocating conditions of this worldly life, and it can only ‘breathe’ through the ‘window’ of the prayers.
Third warning
O impatient soul! Is it at all sensible to be thinking now of the hardship of worship past, the difficulties of praying, of troubles and calamities, and be distressed, and to anticipate the difficulties of future duties of worship and service in prayer, and the pain of future misfortunes, and show impatience?
In such impatience as this you resemble a foolish commander. When one flank of the enemy forces have come over to join the right flank of his forces, thus becoming fresh reinforcements for that flank, he sends a significant contingent from the center of his defenses to that right flank, thus weakening the center. Also, while no enemy forces are attacking the left flank, he sends a big contingent to that flank and even gives the command of fire. Thus he leaves the center without any significant strength at all, and seeing this, the enemy attacks the center and puts it to rout.
Indeed, you resemble this commander, for the trouble of the past days has today become mercy; the pain they caused has gone, while their pleasure remains. The hardships have changed into blessing, and the trial and toil into reward. That being so, it should not cause you weariness, rather, it should arouse you to new eagerness, a fresh zeal, and a serious effort to continue. As for future days, since they have not come as yet, it is the same lunacy as complaining and being distressed now about future hunger and thirst to think of them now and feel bored and wearied.
Since this is the truth, if you are sensible, you will consider only today with respect to worship, and say: ‘I am spending one out of its twenty-four hours on pleasant and elevated acts of service, the reward for which is great and whose trouble is little.’ Then your bitter disappointment will change into a pleasurable endeavor.
O impatient soul! You are charged with three types of perseverance. One is perseverance in worship. Another is perseverance in refraining from sins. A third is perseverance in the face of misfortunes. If you are reasonable enough, take as your guide the truth contained in the comparison in this third warning, and call in manly fashion, ‘O Most Persevering One!,’ and derive strength from these three types of perseverance. If you do not use up in the wrong way the power of perseverance that Almighty Allah has given you, it will suffice for every difficulty and misfortune, so hold out with that power.
Fourth warning
O foolish soul! Is this duty of worship so fruitless, and is the reward for it so little that it causes you weariness? Whereas if someone were to offer you a little money, or to threaten you, he could make you work till evening, and you would work without listlessness.
Again, are the five daily prayers in vain, which in this guest-house of the world are the ‘food’ for your weak heart, and in your grave (which will be a station for you to eternal life) sustenance and light? Are the five daily prayers useless which on the Last Day, when you will anyway be judged, will be a document and warrant, and on the Bridge, over which you are bound to pass, a light and a mount? Or is the reward for them little? Whereas if someone were to promise you a present worth a few hundred dollars, he could make you work for several days. Though the man may go back on his word, you would trust him and work without showing any signs of tiredness.
The One for Whom the breaking of promise is inconceivable, promises you a reward like Paradise and a gift like eternal happiness, and employs you for a very short time in a most agreeable duty. If you, in return, do not perform that service, or act in a manner to accuse Him of His promise or belittle His gift by working reluctantly like someone forced to work, do you not think that you will deserve a severe reprimand and terrible punishment? While you serve without slacking in the heaviest toil in this world out of fear of imprisonment, does the fear of an eternal imprisonment like Hell not give you zeal for so light and pleasant an act of service as the prayers?
Fifth warning
O worldly-minded soul! Are your sluggishness in worship and deficiency in the prescribed five daily prayers because of the multiplicity of your worldly pre-occupations, or because you are pressed for time on account of the struggle for livelihood? Were you created only for this world that you should spend all your time on it?
You know that, with respect to your potential, you are superior to all the animals; and that, with respect to providing for yourself the necessities of worldly life, you are less capable than a sparrow. Why, then, do you not understand that your basic duty is not to labor like animals but, like a human being, to toil for the real, everlasting life? Most of what you call worldly pre-occupations are various trivial, useless matters which, although they do not concern you, you meddle in and confuse officiously. Leaving aside the most essential things, you spend your time, as though you had thousands of years to live, on acquiring useless information. For example, you waste your precious time to take an interest in worthless things like what the rings around Saturn are like, or how many chickens there are in America.... Why? Are you preparing a doctorate in astronomy or in statistics about livestock?
Source: http://www.islamanswers.net/prayers/much.htm
3 comments:
a very interesting article!
Assalamualaikum to all and sister Safyiah. Hope and pray that all is well with anyone who reads this.
Sister, first of all, jazakAllah kher for posting such an article. Some of the lines really caught my attention and are worth pondering upon. However, sometimes I fear that my ignorance is quickly catching up to my insight for the things that actually matter, like my prayer for instance. I feel like despite of all the knowledge, my soul still gives in to the quicksand of incompetence much too quickly. I pray to Allah for rectification but my tongue fails to utter that which my heart yearns for.
Please if you read this, and to anybody else who reads this...please remember this sister in your prayer as well...that I may open my heart to Allah's light and embrace it inside out, completely. Ameen.
wa aleikom al salam wa rahmatullahi wa barakatuhu
inshaAllah sis, you'll be in my du'a.
If you'd like me to recommend a good book, I recommend "The Purification of the Soul". A compilation of the works from Ibn Qayyim and Al-Ghazali.
I felt that this book helped review myself and my actions and I hope it does help you in any way, inshaAllah.
may Allah increase your emaan and make you firm in His religion, ameen.
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