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3. Prayer (Ṣalāh)

Prayer is the best act of worship. If it is accepted by the Lord of the worlds, then all other ritual acts of worship (ʿibādāt) are accepted. If it is not accepted, then all other acts of worship are not accepted. In the same way that no dirt would remain on one’s body if he were to wash himself in a stream five times a day, performing the five daily prayers cleanses a person of sins. It is befitting for one to perform prayers at the start of their prescribed time (awwal al‑waqt), and one who considers prayers lowly and unimportant is like one who does not perform prayers. It has been reported that the Most Noble Messenger (Ṣ) said, ‘One who does not give importance to prayers and considers them unimportant deserves chastisement in the Hereafter.’ It has also been reported that once, when His Eminence (Ṣ) was in the mosque, a man entered and began performing prayers but did not perform the bowing (rukūʿ) and prostration (sajdah) properly. His Eminence (Ṣ) said, ‘If this man dies while his prayers are like this, he will not leave this world adhering to my religion.’

Therefore, one must be careful not to perform prayers in a hurry. While performing prayers, one should remember Allah the Exalted, be humble, submissive, dignified, and mindful of whom he is communicating with. He should consider himself extremely low and insignificant in relation to the greatness and grandeur of the Lord of the worlds. If a person is completely mindful of this matter while performing prayers, he will become oblivious to his own self, just as the Commander of the Faithful, ʿAlī (ʿA), was reported to have been when an arrow was pulled out from his blessed foot while he was performing prayers. Furthermore, one must repent and seek forgiveness and not commit sins that are obstacles to prayers being accepted; sins such as jealousy, pride, backbiting, eating unlawful (ḥarām) things, drinking intoxicating beverages, and not paying the one-fifth tax (khums) or the alms-tax (zakat). In fact, one must refrain from all sins. Similarly, it is befitting that one does not do anything that diminishes the reward of prayers; for example, one should not perform prayers while sleepy or needing to go to the toilet, nor should one look at the sky while performing prayers. Instead, one should do things that increase the reward of prayers; for example, one should wear a ring with an agate (ʿaqīq) stone, wear clean clothes, comb his hair, brush his teeth, and apply perfume.

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  • Ruling 1096

    If a person forgets a rukn and performs the act after it which is not a rukn – for example, before performing two sajdahs he says tashahhud – he must perform the rukn and then perform again what he mistakenly performed before …

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  • Ruling 1097

    If a person forgets something that is not a rukn and performs the rukn that comes after it – for example, he forgets Sūrat al-Ḥamd and starts performing rukūʿ – his prayer is valid.

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  • Ruling 1098

    If a person forgets something that is not a rukn and performs the act that comes after it that is not a rukn either – for example, he forgets Sūrat al-Ḥamd and recites the other surah – he must perform …

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  • Ruling 1099

    If a person performs the first sajdah thinking that it is the second sajdah, or if he performs the second sajdah thinking that it is the first, his prayer is valid. [The sajdah he deems as] his first sajdah is counted as …

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  • Ruling 1100

    One must perform [the parts of the] prayer in close succession, i.e. he must perform acts such as rukūʿ, sujūd, and tashahhud one after the other, and he must say those things that are said in prayers one after …

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  • Ruling 1101

    If during prayers one inadvertently pauses between letters and words but the pause is not long enough for it to break up the form of the prayer, in the event that he has not started performing the rukn after …

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  • Ruling 1102

    Prolonging rukūʿ and sujūd and reciting long surahs does not break muwālāh.

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  • Ruling 1103

    In all the obligatory and recommended prayers, it is recommended to perform qunūt before the rukūʿ of the second rakʿah. However, in the shafʿ prayer, one must perform qunūt with the intention of rajāʾ. In the witr prayer – despite it being …

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  • Ruling 1104

    It is recommended that in qunūt one places his hands in front of his face with his palms facing the sky and with both hands kept next to each other; and apart from his thumb, he should close his …

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  • Ruling 1105

    In qunūt, it is sufficient to say any dhikr, even if it is one subḥānal lāh, and it is better if one says the following:لَا إِلٰهَ إِلَّا اللهُ الْحَلِیْمُ الْکَرِیْمُ، لَا إِلٰهَ إِلَّا اللهُ الْعَلِـيُّ الْعَظِیْمُ، سُبْحَانَ اللهِ …

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