Page 40 - The Vision of Islam
P. 40

The Four Pillars

             The first type of prayer entitles one to paradise, but the second
          type can only lead to doom:
             Woe to  those  who pray  but are  unmindful  of their  prayer
          (107:4-5).
             On one occasion, when the Prophet was seated in his mosque in
          Madinah, a man entered, prayed without much concentration, and
          then came before him. The Prophet told him to go back and pray
          again, “for you have not prayed.” On another occasion the Prophet
          said:
             The closest man comes to his Lord is in the act of prostration
          during prayer (Muslim).
             The difference between the two kinds of prayer does not relate
          to outward appearances, or to the performance of certain rituals.
          It is entirely dependent upon the inner state in which the prayer
          is performed. Unmindful prayer is simply an empty ritual during
          which one is not conscious of what one is doing; one goes through
          the formalities of prayer, but, inwardly, one does not participate in
          the prayer experience. Anas gives us the Prophet’s description of
          the hypocrite’s prayer: “He sits and watches the sun go down. Then
          when it has become pale and yellow (i.e. when the time is almost
          up), he gets up and prays in the manner of a chicken pecking at the
          ground. He remembers God but little in his prayer.” (Nasai).
             Humble prayer is the prayer of submission, an experience
          in which one’s whole being shares. Uqbah ibn Amir reports this
          saying of the Prophet:
             One who peforms his ablutions well, and then prays two rakat
          in which, inwardly and outwardly, he is concentrating fully on his
          prayer, is assured of paradise (Muslim).
             On another occasion, the Prophet said as reported by Usman
          ibn  Affan that whoever performed his ablutions as he had
          demonstrated, then prayed two rakat without thinking of anything
          else, would be forgiven all previous sins (Bukhari and Muslim).
             One fundamental requirement of prayer is adherence to specific
          outward forms, which the Quran calls “attending to prayer”
          (70:34). There are certain actions by means of which one enters
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