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The Rules on Prayer & Fasting

  • Prayer
    • Obligatory Prayers
    • Daily Prayers
    • The time for fajr prayer
    • The time for ẓuhr and ‘aṣr prayer
    • The Time of Maghrib/‘Ishā’ Prayer
    • Rulings regarding the Times of Prayer
    • Order among prayers
    • Mustaḥabb prayers
    • Rulings about the Qiblah
    • The Coverage of Clothes in Prayer
    • Conditions of a Place for Prayer
    • Rulings on masjids
    • Adhān and Iqāmah
    • Obligatory Acts in Prayer
      • 1. Intention
      • 2. Being in a Standing Posture
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        2. Being in a Standing Posture

         

        149. Standing while uttering takbīrah al-iḥrām and before going to rukū‘ is considered a foundational (rukn) element, meaning that if a person abandons it – even by mistake or due to forgetting it, the prayer becomes void.
        150. Standing while reciting chapter al-Fātiḥah, the next chapter, or the four tasbīḥ in the third/fourth rak‘ah or standing after rukū‘ is not considered a foundational (rukn) element, meaning that intentionally abandoning standing in the mentioned positions will make the prayer void but to do so by mistake does not invalidate the prayer.
        151. A person who is able to offer his prayer in a standing posture and has no excuse [not to do so] should be in a standing posture from the beginning of the prayer up to rukū‘. Also, it is obligatory that they stand after rukū‘ and before going to sajdah.
        152. If a person forgets to perform rukū‘ and sits down after reciting chapter al-Fātiḥah and another chapter, and then remembers that he has not performed rukū‘, he should first stand up and then go into rukū‘. If he returns to rukū‘ immediately without having stood up first, his prayer is void.
        153. When a person stands for recitation, he should not move his body, nor should he tilt towards one side or lean on anything, unless it is inevitable to do so, or he does so by mistake or forgetfully.
        154. While reciting chapter al-Fātiḥah and another chapter or the four tasbīḥ in the third/fourth rak‘ah, the body should be still. Therefore, if they want to go a little backward or forward or to move his body a little towards the right side or the left side, they should stop reciting at that moment.
        155. It is mustaḥabb that the person in a standing position keep his body straight, slacken down his shoulders, place his hands on his thighs, join his fingers together, look at the place of sajdah, place the weight of his body equally on his both feet, stand in humility, and not put one foot ahead of the other.
        156. A person who is not able to offer the prayer in a standing posture should offer the prayer in a sitting posture, but if he is able to stand and lean on something, he should offer his prayer in a standing posture.
        157. A person, who prays sitting, should pray standing as much as possible, i.e. without unbearable difficulty and hardship. Therefore, a person who is able to stand up in some rak‘ah or parts of the prayer, but cannot be in standing posture during the entire prayer, it is obligatory to pray standing as much as he can, and when he is unable to stand, he may pray in sitting posture and if he becomes able to stand up again, he should continue the prayer while standing.
        158. A person, who is not able to stand, if they can stand enough to say takbīrah al-iḥrām, they should say takbīrah al-iḥrām while standing and continue the rest of the prayer while sitting.
        If a person, who offers the prayer in a sitting posture, can stand after reciting chapter al-Fātiḥah and another chapter, he should stand and from a standing posture go to rukū‘.
        159. If a person can offer the prayer in a standing posture, but he fears that standing would be harmful for him or cause an illness, he can perform the prayer in a sitting posture, and in case he has the same fear about offering the prayer in a sitting posture, he should offer the prayer in a lying posture.
        160. If a person cannot offer the prayer in a sitting posture, he should offer prayer in a lying posture, and based on obligatory caution, he should — if he is able — lie on his right side so that his face and the front part of his body face qiblah. Otherwise, he should lie on his left side in the same way. And if this is not possible either, he should lie on his back, with the soles of his feet facing qiblah.
        161. If a person who is offering the prayer in a lying position can sit or stand without unbearable difficulty and harm in the middle of prayer, he should sit or stand and perform those parts in a standing or sitting posture as much as he can.
        162. If a person considers it probable that at the end of the prescribed time he will be able to offer prayer standing, by obligatory caution, he should wait until then. But if he offers his prayer in a sitting posture at the beginning of the prescribed time due to an excuse and that excuse remains until the end of the time, the prayer he has offered is valid, and he does not need to perform the prayer again.
        163. If a person is not able to pray in standing position early during the prayer’s time and he is sure that his inability to pray in standing position will continue until the end of the time, he may say his prayer in a sitting posture at the beginning of the time. However, if he becomes able to say his prayer in standing position before the time ends, he is obligated to repeat his prayer in standing position.
      • 3. Takbīrah Al-iḥrām
      • 4. Recitation
      • 5. Rukū‘
      • 6. Sajdah
      • 7. Tashahhud
      • 8. Salām
      • 9. Sequence (tartīb)
      • 10. Succession (muwālāt)
    • Qunūt
    • Prayer’s Ta‘qīb (Mustaḥabb Supplications/Dhikr Recited after Prayers)
    • Translation of the Prayer
    • What Invalidates the Prayer
    • Doubts in Prayer
    • Sajdah of Inadvertence
    • Qaḍā’ of Forgotten Sajdah and Tashahhud
    • A Traveler's Prayer
    • Qaḍā’ Prayers
    • Hire Prayers
    • Qaḍā’ Prayers for Parents
    • Āyāt Prayer
    • Congregational Prayers
    • The Friday Prayer
  • Fasting
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