the opening prayer in islam
when the man prayer he read all when he stand
the opening :
- In the name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful.
- Praise be to Allah, the Cherisher and Sustainer of the worlds;
- Most Gracious, Most Merciful;
- Master of the Day of Judgment
- Thee do we worship, and Thine aid we seek.
- Show us the straight way,
- The way of those on whom Thou hast bestowed Thy Grace, those whose (portion) is not wrath, and who go not astray.
The opinion of the
majority of the scholars, amongst them Maalik, ash-Shaafi’ee and Ahmad,
is that it is obligatory to recite al-Fatihah in
the prayer and that the prayer is not valid without it. Their opinion is based
upon many proofs; from amongst them the sayings of the Prophet (Peace and
Blessings be upon him),
“There is no
prayer for the one who does not recite the Opening of the Book.” [Reported
by Saheeh Bukhari [Eng.
Trans. 1/404 no. 723], Saheeh Muslim [Eng.
Trans. 1/214 no. 771]]
“Whosoever performs
a prayer in which he does not recite the Mother of the Book then it is
deficient, it is deficient, it is deficient, it is incomplete.” [Reported
by Saheeh Muslim [Eng.
Trans. 1/215 no. 775]]
“The prayer is
not valid in which the Mother of the Qur’an is not recited.” [Reported
by Saheeh Muslim [Eng.
Trans. 1/215 no. 772]]
However according
to Abu Haneefah, those of his
companions who agreed with him, al-Awza’ee and ath-Thawree, it is not obligatory to recite
al-Fatihah, rather any portion of the Qur’an would be sufficient. They based
this upon the saying of Allah,
“And recite what is
easy [for you] from the Qur’an.” [Surah Al-Muzzammil (73): 20]
And the saying of
the Prophet (Peace and Blessings be upon him) to the man who prayed badly,
“When you stand for
pray, say the takbeer and then recite
what is easy for you from the Qur’an.” [Reported by Saheeh Bukhari [Eng. Trans. 1/404 no. 724]]
On top of this,
according to ash-Shaafi’ee and a
group of the People of Knowledge it is obligatory to recite al-Fatihah in
every rak’ah of the
prayer. However, another group were of the opinion that it is sufficient
to recite it in the majority of the rak’ahs and yet another group, from amongst
them al-Hasan and the majority of the scholars of Basrah, were of the opinion that it is sufficient just
to recite it in one rak’ah.
This latter group took to the literal sense of the hadeeth,
“There is no prayer
for the one who does not recite the Opening of the Book.”
In the case where
one is a follower in a congregational prayer then the scholars fell into three
opinions with regards to the follower’s reciting al-Fatihah:
1. It is
obligatory upon him to recite it in all prayers.
2. It is upon him
not to recite it in all prayers.
3. He should
recite it in those prayers in which the recitation is silent, but not in those
prayers in which the recitation is loud.
The point here is
not to discuss which is the strongest opinion but to show that al-Fatihah has
specific rulings to it that are not shared by any other chapter of the Qur’an.
Allah Knows best.
"Allah said: 'I have divided the prayer between Myself and My slave
into two halves, and My slave shall have what he has asked for.'When the slave
says: 'Al-hamdulillah i rabbil Alameen (All the praise is to Allah, the Lord of
all that exists),' Allah says:'My slave has praised Me, and My slave shall have
what he has asked for.' And when he says: 'Ar-Rahmanir-Rahim (The Mos Gracious,
the Most Merciful),' Allah says: 'My slave has extolled Me, and My slave shall
have what he has asked for.' And when he says: 'Maliki yawmiddin [The Only
Owner (and he Ruling Judge] if the Day of Recompense],' Allahs says: 'My slave
has Glorified Me. This is for Me, and this Verse is between me and My slave in
two halves.' And when he says: ' Iyyaka na'budu wa iyyaka nastain [You (Alone)
we worship, and You (Alone) we ask for help],' He says: 'This is between Me an
My slave, and My slave shall have what he has asked for.' And the end of the
Surah is for My slave.' And when he says: 'Ihdinas-siratal-mustaqeema,
siratal-alldhina an'amta alayhim a lad-dallin [Guide us to the Straight Way,
the way of those on whom You have bestowed Your Grace, not(the way) of those
who earned Your Anger, nor of those who went astray],' He says: 'THis is for My
slave, and My slave shall have what he has asked for."
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