Ascending in the Levels of Worship: Step 18 in the Journey to Allah

(Ibn Ata’s Words of Wisdom: Part 18)

“God diversified the acts of worship for you because He knows how quickly you get bored.

And He did not permit you certain acts of worship at certain times so you do not go to extremes.

The objective is to perfect your prayers not to merely perform them. Not every performer of prayers perfects them.”

This word of wisdom is actually discussing a very important topic which is the quality of your worship. When you worship Allah (SWT) what is the quality?

Are you bored while you are worshiping Allah (SWT)? Or are you achieving the higher quality of worship, which is to establish the worship, not just to do the prayer?

He (SWT) has ways of making us raise the quality of our worship. He diversified the acts of worship so that we raise the quality. Allah (SWT) knows the human diversity, to start with the diversity of people.

Some people are very zealous, and they really want to do things, many things, at the same time and so forth. And they want to be consistent with fasting for example, or prayers or any of the acts of worship, without taking any break. So He (SWT) enforces a break on us.

So we cannot fast every single day. There are days that we should not fast. The day of Eid for example, and the day before Eid. And it’s not right to fast Friday by itself, and so forth.

It’s not right to pray all the time. There are times when it is not recommended to pray; in the morning in the beginning of the morning all the way until noon, and before the sun sets and so forth. And these small rules are for us to take a break when people who are too zealous, and they don’t want us to stop.

And Allah (SWT) is directing us, the sheikh is saying, to an important goal here which is the quality of the prayers. Because not every prayer is at the highest quality.

There are three levels of quality that we mentioned in one of the previous steps: Islam, Iman and Ihsan. The quality of doing prayers with your body, and then the higher quality of feeling it in your heart, and then the highest quality of the excellence in prayers.

Actually in scholarship, scholars divided these three classes into humility, awe and happiness.

Humility

Humility is when you pray and you feel the humbleness that you are praying in front of Allah (SWT) and therefore you do your ruku’ and sujood and so forth and the prayer in the right way.

Awe

Awe is a kind of fear, that is the higher level of prayers, the higher level of khushu’, or humility.

The higher level is to have some sort of a fear from Allah’s greatness (SWT) and His power and so forth. And that awe will make your prayer a better prayer.

Happiness

Yet, there is a third level, which is happiness, or al farah bil salah, when you pray and you are happy that you are praying. And actually this applies to everything. It applies when you fast just with your body, or when you fast with an awe that Allah (SWT) is allowing you to fast. Or when you fast and you are happy with your fasting and you are totally content with your fasting

These three levels, we ask Allah (SWT) to take us through so that we pray at the highest quality of prayers, In-Shaa-Allah.

A Journey to God (Folder)

 

About Dr. Jasser Auda
Jasser Auda is a Professor and Al-Shatibi Chair of Maqasid Studies at the International Peace College South Africa, the Executive Director of the Maqasid Institute, a global think tank based in London, and a Visiting Professor of Islamic Law at Carleton University in Canada. He is a Founding and Board Member of the International Union of Muslim Scholars, Member of the European Council for Fatwa and Research, Fellow of the Islamic Fiqh Academy of India, and General Secretary of Yaqazat Feker, a popular youth organization in Egypt. He has a PhD in the philosophy of Islamic law from University of Wales in the UK, and a PhD in systems analysis from University of Waterloo in Canada. Early in his life, he memorized the Quran and studied Fiqh, Usul and Hadith in the halaqas of Al-Azhar Mosque in Cairo. He previously worked as: Founding Director of the Maqasid Center in the Philosophy of Islamic Law in London; Founding Deputy Director of the Center for Islamic Ethics in Doha; professor at the University of Waterloo in Canada, Alexandria University in Egypt, Islamic University of Novi Pazar in Sanjaq, Qatar Faculty of Islamic Studies, and the American University of Sharjah. He lectured and trained on Islam, its law, spirituality and ethics in dozens of other universities and organizations around the world. He wrote 25 books in Arabic and English, some of which were translated to 25 languages.