Islamic Rulings -
Living Shariah Verdicts
Islamic Questions & Answers
What are
the conditions of worship in Islam?
Praise be to Allaah.
Shaykh
Muhammad ibn Saalih ibn 'Uthaymeen (may Allaah have
mercy on him) said:
Firstly:
The worship
must be in accordance with sharee'ah in its reasons.
Any person who worships Allaah by doing an act of
worship that is not done for a reason proven in
sharee'ah is doing an act of worship that will be
rejected and is not enjoined by Allaah and His
Messenger. An example of that is celebrating the
Mawlid or birthday of the Prophet (Peace And Blessings
Of Allaah Be Upon Him), or celebrating the
twenty-seventh night of Rajab, claiming that the
Prophet (Peace And Blessings Of Allaah Be Upon Him)
was taken up into heaven on that night. This is not in
accordance with sharee'ah so it is to be rejected.
1- There is no kind of historical proof that the
Mi'raaj (ascent into heaven) of the Prophet (Peace And
Blessings Of Allaah Be Upon Him) took place on the
twenty-seventh night of Rajab. The books of hadeeth
that we have do not contain even a single letter that
indicates that the Prophet (Peace And Blessings Of
Allaah Be Upon Him) was taken up into heaven on the
twenty-seventh night of Rajab. It is known that this
is the kind of information that cannot be accepted
without sound isnaads.
2- Even if it were proven, do we have the right to
innovate some kinds of worship on that date or to make
it a festival? Not at all. Hence when the Prophet
(Peace And Blessings Of Allaah Be Upon Him) came to
Madeenah and saw that the Ansaar had two days on which
they would play, he said: "Allaah has replaced these
for you with something better," and he mentioned to
them Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha. This indicates that
the Prophet (Peace And Blessings Of Allaah Be Upon
Him) disliked any festival to be innovated in Islam
apart from the Islamic festivals, of which there are
three: the two annual Eids, which are Eid al-Fitr and
Eid al-Adha, and the weekly festival which is Friday.
Even if it were proven that the Messenger (Peace And
Blessings Of Allaah Be Upon Him) was taken up into
heaven on the twenty-seventh of Rajab which it is
impossible to prove we cannot innovate anything on
that occasion without the permission of the Lawgiver.
As I have said to you, bid'ah (innovation) is a
serious matter which has a bad effect on the heart
even if a person feels softness in his heart at that
moment. For the matter will subsequently be the
opposite, because if the heart rejoices in falsehood,
that joy will not last, rather it will be followed by
pain and regret. Every bid'ah is serious because it
implies criticism of the Messenger, because this
bid'ah implies that the Messenger (Peace And Blessings
Of Allaah Be Upon Him) did not bring the complete
sharee'ah, even though Allaah says (interpretation of
the meaning):
"This day, I have perfected your religion for you,
completed My Favour upon you, and have chosen for you
Islam as your religion"
[al-Maa'idah 5:3]
It is strange that you find some of those who indulge
in these innovations strongly urge people to follow
them, but they are negligent about matters which are
more beneficial, more sound and more useful.
Hence we say that celebrating the night of the
twenty-seventh of Rajab as the night in which the
Messenger of Allaah (Peace And Blessings Of Allaah Be
Upon Him) was taken up into heaven is a bid'ah,
because it is based on something that is not mentioned
in sharee'ah.
Secondly:
The act of
worship should be in accordance with sharee'ah in its
type or nature.
For example, if a person were to sacrifice a horse,
that would be contrary to the sharee'ah in the nature
of the action. Because a sacrifice can only involve an
animal of the an'aam class, namely a camel, a cow or a
sheep.
Thirdly:
The act of
worship must be in accordance with sharee'ah in its
amount. If someone were to say that he was going to
pray Zuhr as six rak'ahs, would this act of worship be
in accordance with sharee'ah? Not at all, because it
is not in accordance with it in terms of the amount or
number. If someone were to say Subhaan Allaah (Glory
be to Allaah), al-Hamdu Lillaah (praise be to Allaah)
and Allaahu akbar (Allaah is Most Great) thirty-five
times following a prescribed prayer, would this be
correct? The answer is that if your aim is to worship
Allaah by saying it this number of times because you
believe this is the proper way, then you are mistaken.
If you deliberately add something to what the
Messenger of Allaah (Peace And Blessings Of Allaah Be
Upon Him) has prescribed, but you believe that the
proper way prescribed in Islam is thirty-three, then
the extras are fine, because you are not suggesting
that the higher number is the proper way that is
prescribed.
Fourthly:
The act of
worship must be in accordance with sharee'ah in how it
is done.
If a person does an act of worship that is acceptable
in its type, amount and reason, but he goes against
sharee'ah in the manner in which he does it, then it
is not valid. For example, a man breaks wind etc. and
does wudoo', but he washes his feet and then wipes his
head, then washes his hands, then washes his face is
his wudoo' valid? Not at all, because he has gone
against sharee'ah in the way in which he did it.
Fifthly:
The act of
worship must be in accordance with sharee'ah with
regard to its timing.
For example, if a person fasts Ramadaan in Sha'baan,
or in Shawwaal, or he prays Zuhr before the sun has
passed its zenith, or after the shadow of an object
becomes equal in length to it because if he prays
before the sun has passed its zenith he is praying
before the time has come, and if he prays after the
shadow of an object becomes equal in length to it he
is praying after the time has gone his prayer is not
valid.
Hence we say that if a person deliberately does not
pray until the time for that prayer is over, with no
valid excuse, his prayer will not be accepted even if
he prays a thousand times. Hence we follow an
important principle in this regard which is that in
the case of every act of worship that is to be done at
a certain time, if a person does it outside of the
proper time with no valid excuse, it will not be
accepted, rather it will be rejected.
The evidence for that is the hadeeth of 'Aa'ishah (may
Allaah be pleased with her) who said that the Prophet
(Peace And Blessings Of Allaah Be Upon Him) said:
"Whoever does an action that is not in accordance with
this matter of ours (i.e., Islam) will have it
rejected.
Sixthly: the act of worship must be in accordance with
sharee'ah with regard to the place where it is done.
If a person stands in Muzdalifah on the day of 'Arafah,
this standing is not valid, because the act of worship
is not in accordance with sharee'ah with regard to the
place where it is done. Similarly, for example, if a
person were to do i'tikaaf in his own house, that
would not be valid, because the place of i'tikaaf is
the mosque. Hence it is not valid for a woman to do
i'tikaaf in her house, because this is not the place
for i'tikaaf. The Prophet (Peace And Blessings Of
Allaah Be Upon Him) saw some of his wives had set up
tents in the mosque; he told them to take them down
and not to do i'tikaaf, but he did not tell them to do
i'tikaaf in their houses. This indicates that the
women should not do i'tikaaf in their houses because
that goes against sharee'ah with regard to the place
where it is done.
So with regard to these six factors, an act of worship
is not regarded as following sharee'ah unless it
combines all six:
1- Reason
2- Type
3- Amount
4- Manner
5- Time
6- Place
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