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Wednesday, June 15, 2022

Selected Chapters from al-Mu'tamad: Ch. 07, On Congregational Prayer

The Seventh Chapter: On Congregational Prayer

                                

          Learn, dear faithful Muslim, that Islam is the religion of Oneness and unity. As Islam is not complete without the Oneness [of Allah], the faith as well is not complete without unity and togetherness. Hence, all pillars of Islam call for unity and coherence, and warn from dispute and division. Moreover, Islam considers the disunity inconsistent with the obedience to Allah. For instance, fasting, pilgrimage and due charity are all collective rituals. Among these great rituals is the congregational prayer.

          It is indeed among the signs of guidance which were legalized by the Book, Sunnah and Consensus...

 

Section

On the Legitimacy and Virtue of the Congregational Prayer

          The textual evidence, taken from the Book of Allah and the Sunnah of His Prophet (PBUH), concerning the legality and virtues of the congregational prayer are numerous. Of them is the following:

1-     The Exalted in His Book says:

﴿وَإِذَا كُنتَ فِيهِمْ فَأَقَمْتَ لَهُمُ الصَّلَاةَ..﴾ النساء: 102

And when you are among them and lead them in prayer (Q, the Women. 4:102).

Meaning, you lead them in congregational prayer1.

 

2-    The Prophet (PBUH) in his Sunnah states: ‘Praying in congregation is twenty-seven times better than praying alone, and he (PBUH) also says: ‘One who performs the Night prayer in congregation will be as if he has performed prayer for half of the night. And one who performs the Dawn prayer in congregation will be as if he has performed Prayer for the whole night.

 

3-    With regard to Ijma’ (the Consensus of Muslim scholars), all Muslims, generation after generation, have agreed on the general legality of congregational prayer.

Section

On the Legal Ruling of the Congregational Prayer

          The congregation for the five daily prayers and Friday prayer is fard ’ayn (individual obligation2). Therefore, it is mandatory upon every legally responsible/accountable person (mukallaf), if he is capable, to attend the congregation. This is the opinion adopted and upheld by the two Shaykhs (May Allah maintain them). Hence, the other opinion is weak. In fact, abandoning the congregational prayer is a sign of hypocrisy and is the habit of hypocrites (May Allah save us and you from hypocrisy and hypocrites)

          Dear student, I will briefly mention some of the evidence demonstrating the obligation to attend the five prayers in congregation, and leave the rest of them to the detailed books of Islamic Jurisprudence.

1-     The Almighty’s saying:

﴿وَارْكَعُوا مَعَ الرَّاكِعِينَ ﴾ البقرة: 43

‘And bow with those who bow’ (Q, the Cow. 2:43).

This command can only be implemented in congregation.

 

2-   The Messenger’s (PBUH) saying: ‘I sometimes thought of giving orders for firewood to be collected, then for proclaiming the adhan for prayer. Then I would appoint an Imam to lead prayer, and then go to the houses of those who do not come to perform congregational prayer, and set fire to their houses’. If the prayer had been only fard kifayah (community/collective obligation3), the Prophet (PBUH) and those who prayed with him would have been sufficient to establish the congregational prayer, and there would have been no need for such harsh punishment.

 

3-    What was ascribed authentically to ’Abdullah b. Mas’ud (May Allah be pleased with him) who said: ‘He who likes to meet Allah tomorrow (i.e. on the Day of Requital) as a Muslim, should take care and observe the Salat when the Adhan is announced for them. Allah has expounded to your Prophet (PBUH) the ways of right guidance, and these (the prayers) are part of the right guidance. If you have to

3-perform Salat in your houses, as this man who stays away (from the mosque) and performs Salat in his house, you will abandon the Sunnah (practice) of your Prophet (PBUH), and the departure from the Sunnah of your Prophet (PBUH) will lead you astray. I have seen the time when no one stayed behind except a well-known hypocrite. I also saw that a man was brought swaying (on account of weakness) between two men till he was set up in a row (in the mosque)’.

          The abovementioned proofs are self-evident and, thus, require no commentary or any further clarification.

 

Section on the Excuses to Leave the Congregation

          As it has been established for you (May Allah save you from any evil) that the congregational prayer is an individual obligation, be informed that there are legitimate excuses allowing one to leave the prayer in congregation. Amongst these legal excuses are what follows:

1-     Fear and illness: based on the Prophet’s (PBUH) saying and practice. His verbal Sunnah is what was narrated on the authority of ibn ‘Abbas who ascribed to the Prophet (PBUH) the following: ‘The Prophet (PBUH) was asked what an excuse consisted of, and he replied that it was fear or illness’. As for the Prophet’s (PBUH) practice, the Messenger did not attend the congregational prayer in the period during which he was very sick, which continued until his death. At the time, the Prophet (PBUH) commanded Abu Bakr to lead people in payer, despite his (PBUH) house being adjacent to the Noble Mosque.

 

2-   Severe winds, rain or cold: for the report of Abu Sa’id al-Khudri that when it was a cold, rainy night, the Messenger of Allah (PBUH) used to command the Mu’adhdhin to say: ‘Pray in your dwellings’.

 

3-    Eating food with unpleasant smell: Likewise, anyone who is suffering from the incontinence of wind, it is recommended for them to stay away from the mosque. This latter one is much worse on his fellow prayers and angels. This ruling is derived from the Prophet’s (PBUH) prohibition: ‘He who has eaten onion or garlic should not approach our mosque, because the angels are also offended by the strong smells that offend the children of Adam’.

 

4-   Being too hungry in the presence of food: as praying in this case distracts one’s attention while praying. The Messenger (PBUH) is authentically reported to have said: ‘If the Iqamah for (’Isha’) prayer is proclaimed and supper is served, take your supper first, lest you might be distracted by hunger and be preoccupied from prayer and, therefore, shorten it’. Furthermore, it should be taken into account that he is allowed to eat till his hunger is satisfied, not to go beyond this limit; resulting in eating and drinking while people are praying in their mosques.

 

5-   Struggling with the two akhbathayn (urine and stool): for the Prophetic prohibition from praying while the need [to relieve oneself] is too dire.

 

Section on the Prayers Offered in Congregation

          The congregational prayer is only obligatory on the five daily prayers and Friday’s prayer. Apart from these, praying in congregation is optional, such as the Funeral prayer, the two ‘Ids prayer, the Eclipse prayer, Tarawih prayer and the Rain-Seeking prayer. Allah knows best.

 

Section on Repeating the Congregation

          Learn (May Allah guide me and you to the means of knowledge) that people are disallowed to establish a congregational prayer before the first regular/main congregation. Also, they are not allowed to deliberately establish a congregation after the first congregation without legitimate excuse. The reason being that, the congregational prayer is legislated to gather and unite people, and doing otherwise is a proof of division and a sign of dispute.

          The congregation may be legally conducted after the first main one in the case of some people coming late due to an excuse, such as sleep, as long as this does not lead to neglecting the prayer, or being lazy to attend the prayer in its first regular congregation. The evidence for this is a sound hadith speaks of a man who entered the Prophet’s (PBUH) Mosque after the Prophet (PBUH) had finished leading his Companions in congregation. As a result, Allah’s Messenger (PBUH) asked: ‘Is there any man who may do good [voluntary prayer] with this (man) and pray along with him’.

          This ruling applies to all obligatory prayers except the Dawn and Afternoon prayers, as there is no voluntary prayer after any of these two, as established authentically in the sound hadith.

          Additionally, the former hadith signifies that congregations

are conducted legally by two persons onwards.

          Moreover, based on the opinion adopted and held by the two Shaykhs (May Allah save them), a congregation is repeated when there is a reason for this repetition, as there is no proof to prevent repeating the same prayer if it is broken. Thus, Muslims have to repeat their prayer in congregation if the original one is proved to be broken.

          By agreement, establishing two congregational prayers at the same time and place is prohibited. However, if one of the two prayers is different from the other, the second group must wait till the first group finishes their congregational prayer. if praying at the same time is necessary, the second group must go to a remote place in the mosque to pray, wherein they will not be heard by the first congregation.

          Warning: Whoever establishes a congregational prayer knowing that there is another congregation nearby praying at the same time and place (at the same mosque), the latter congregation is invalid, even if the two prayers are different. Therefore, they must repeat their prayer. Hence, let this be noted by all.

 

Juristic Issue

          Whoever enters the mosque while the first congregation (the main/regular) is being established must join this congregation, even if he already previously offered that prayer. If this is the case, he intends the latter to be a voluntary prayer. All five daily prayers, including the Dawn and Afternoon prayers, are equal in this regard, because joining the first congregation for those who happen to be in this mosque is mandatory. Such a firm ruling is taken from the authentic Prophetic tradition in which

the Prophet (PBUH) said to the man who did not join them in prayer: “What kept you from praying with people? Are you not a Muslim man?” He said: “Yes, but I had already prayed with my family.” The Messenger of Allah (PBUH) replied to him: “When you come you should pray with the people even if you have already prayed with your family”.

          However, if the congregation is not the first, e.g. it is a second or third one, the comer is given an option whether he joins it or not, except if it is after the Dawn or Afternoon prayers. If it is one of these two prayers, the comer should not join. This ruling is because following these two there is no optional prayers after them. Allah knows best.

 

Section on the Woman’s Prayer in Congregation

          Get to know, O servant of Allah, that the woman’s prayer in her house yard is better than prayer in her neighborhood mosque. And her prayer inside her own room is better than prayer in her house yard. However, the woman can go to the mosques to pray in congregation for the five obligatory prayers and on Friday, providing that she leaves her house with full decency, away from that which might attract men’s attention, such as any apparent adornment. On the authority of ’A’ishah (May Allah be pleased with her) who said: ‘If the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, had seen what women do now, he would have forbidden them from going into the mosques, just as the women of the Bani Isra’il were forbidden’.

 

 

 

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1 - The verse signifies clearly the obligation of the congregational prayer upon every individual, as will be discussed soon, Allah willing.

2 - Fard ‘Ayn: is an act that has to be done by every Muslim, such as praying five times a day.

Saleh. Dictionary of Islamic Words and Expressions. p.55.

3 - Ford Kifayah: is something that the whole community is responsible for. If some members do it, that would suffice the whole. If none does it, then the whole community is at fault and has sinned. An example is funeral Prayer.

Saleh. Dictionary of Islamic Words and Expressions. p.55.

 


Reference:

The Reliable Jurisprudence of Prayer, al-Mu’tamad fi Fiqh as-Salah, by al-Mu’tasim al’Ma’wali, pg: 289-297.


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