Salah – The Purpose of Life

The Kashmir Monitor

By Yasmin Mogahed

Man has taken many journeys throughout time. But there is one journey that nobody has ever taken-except one.

On a vehicle no man has ever ridden, through a path no soul has ever seen. To a place no creation has ever before set foot. It was the journey of one man to meet the Divine. It was the journey of Muhammad, prophet of God, to the highest heaven. It was al Isra’ walMi’raj (the magnificent journey).

On that journey, Allah took his beloved prophet to the seventh heaven – a place not even angel Jibreel could enter. In the Prophet’s mission on earth, every instruction, every commandment was sent down through angel Jibreel – except one.

There was one commandment so important that rather than sending angel Jibreel down with it, Allah brought the Prophet up to Himself. That commandment was salah (prayer).

When the prophet was first given the command to pray, it was to be 50 times in a day. After asking Allah to make it easier, the commandment was eventually reduced to five times a day, with the reward of the 50.

Reflecting upon this incident, scholars have explained that the process of going from 50 to five was a deliberate one, intended to teach us the true place salah should hold in our lives. Imagine for a moment actually praying 50 times a day.

Would we be able to do anything else but pray? No. And that’s the point. What greater way than that to illustrate our life’s true purpose? As if to say salah is our real life; all the rest that we fill our day with … just motions.

And yet, we live as if it’s exactly the opposite.

Salah is something we squeeze into our day, when we find time – if that. Our ‘lives’ don’t revolve around salah. Salah revolves around our ‘lives.’ If we’re in class, salah is an afterthought.

If we’re at the mall, the Macy’s sale is more urgent. Something is seriously wrong when we put aside the very purpose of our existence in order to watch a basketball game.

And that is for those who even pray at all. There are those who have not only put aside their life’s purpose but have abandoned it completely.

What we often don’t realize about the abandonment of salah is this: No scholar has ever held the opinion that committing fornication makes you a disbeliever. No scholar has ever held the opinion that stealing, drinking or taking drugs makes you a disbeliever. No scholar has even claimed that murder makes you a non-Muslim.
But, about salah, some scholars have said he who abandons it is no longer Muslim.

This is said based on a hadith such as this one: “The covenant between us and them is prayer, so if anyone abandons it, he has become a disbeliever.” [Ahmad]
Imagine an act so egregious that the prophet would speak about it in such a way. Consider for a moment what Satan did wrong. He didn’t refuse to believe in Allah. He refused to make one sajdah (prostration). Just one. Think of all the sajdahs we refuse to make. Ponder the seriousness of such a refusal. And yet, think how lightly we take the matter of salah.

Salah is the first thing we will be asked about on the Day of Judgment, and yet it is the last thing on our mind. The Prophet said: “The first thing which will be judged among a man’s deeds on the Day of Resurrection is the Prayer. If this is in good order, then he will succeed and prosper, but if it is defective, then he will fail and lose.” [Tirmidhi]

On that Day, the people of paradise will ask

those who have entered Hellfire why they have entered it.

And the Qur’an tells us exactly what their first response will be:

“What led you into Hell Fire? They will say:

‘We were not of those who prayed.’ ” (Qur’an 74:42-43)

How many of us will be among those who say “We were not of those who prayed, or we were not of those who prayed on time, or we were not of those who made prayer any priority in our lives?”

Why is it that if we’re in class or at work or fast asleep at the time of Fajr and we need to use the restroom, we make time for that? In fact, the question almost sounds absurd. We don’t even consider it an option not to. And even if we were taking the most important exam of our lives, when we need to go, we will go.
Why?

Because the potentially mortifying consequences of not going makes it a non-option.There are many people who say they don’t have time to pray at work or school or while they’re out. But how many have ever said they don’t have time to go to the bathroom while at work or school? How many of us just don’t feel like waking up at Fajr time if we need to use the bathroom, and choose instead to wet our bed?

The truth is we’ll get out of bed, or leave class, or stop work, to use the bathroom, but not to pray.

It sounds comical, but the truth is we put the needs of our body above the needs of our soul. We feed our bodies, because if we didn’t, we’d die.

But so many of us starve our souls, forgetting that if we are not praying, our soul is dead. And ironically, the body that we tend to is only temporary, while the soul that we neglect is eternal.

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