Of other cordial disciplines of the salat and other worships, one, which has
good results, or rather it opens some doors and uncovers some secrets of
worships, is that the salik is to try to worship with vivacity, cheerfulness of
heart and gaiety of mind, and to avoid laziness and reluctance in performing
worships. He is to choose for worship a time in which he is quite prepared to
perform it with animation and freshness, feeling no tiredness or lassitude.
Should one force oneself to worship in times of laziness and tiredness, it would
probably bring about bad consequences, such as feeling tired of worshipping and
of taking the trouble and bearing difficulty. Then, gradually, one may feel
disgusted with worshipping. Furthermore, it may possibly turn man completely
away from remembering Allah, and give pains to the spirit from the state of
servitude, which is the source of all happiness. Such worship will bring no
luminosity to the heart, and the inside of the soul will not have any reaction,
and the image of servitude will not become the image of the inner heart. It has
already been said that the aim of worship is that the inner soul should become
the image of servitude.
We now say that one of the secrets and results of worships and austerities is
that the will of the soul becomes operative on the realm of the body, and its
authority is overcome by the majesty of the soul and is annihilated, and the
forces and soldiers spread in the kingdom of the body can no longer revolt,
disobey and be obstinate and selfish. They actually surrender to the inner
kingdom of the heart, or rather those forces gradually dissolve in the invisible
heavenly domain, and its command is effective on the visible dominion. The will
of the soul gets stronger and takes the reins of the kingdom from Satan and the
commanding soul, and the soldiers of the soul are driven to submission, from
submission to contentment, and from contentment to annihilation. In this
situation the soul will get to discover some secrets of worship and some actual
manifestations will appear. But all these cannot be implemented unless the
worships are performed cheerfully and actively, away from every sort of laziness
and carelessness, so that a mood of affection and love towards remembering
Allah, the Exalted, and the state of servitude, with familiarity and
consistency, happen. Loving Allah and remembering Him is one of the great
affairs which is very much cared for by the people of knowledge, and is a
subject of competition among the people of suluk. Physicians believe that if
food is eaten with cheerfulness and gaiety, it will be digested much easier.
Similarly, psychiatrists stress that if the spiritual nutrition is taken
cheerfully and enthusiastically, and with avoiding laziness and affectedness,
its effect will appear very quickly in the heart and the inner heart will be
purified more quickly, too.
This discipline is referred to in the Glorious Divine Book, the upright Lordly
pages, as it, in defiance of the disbelievers and the hypocrites, says: "... And
they do not come to the salat unless they are sluggish, and they do not spend
unless they are reluctant ...",1 and the noble ayah:
﴾O you who believe! do not approach the salat when you are drunk ...﴿,2
The word "drunkenness" is explained in a hadith to mean "sluggishness". Some
narratives refer to this discipline. By relating some of them we shall give
pride to these papers.
Muhammad ibn Ya'qub, quoted Abu Abdullah (Imam as Sadiq) (AS) as to have said:
"Do not force yourselves to worship."3
Abu Abdullah (as Sadiq) (AS) is (also) quoted to have said: "The Messenger of
Allah (SA) said: 'O Ali, this religion is firm, get into it mildly, and do
not cause yourself to hate worshipping your Lord."4
Imam al-Askari (AS) is quoted to have said: "when the hearts are active, confide
in them; and when they are reluctant, bid them farewell". This is a general
instruction to deposit in your hearts any information you may when they are
lively and gay, and leave them alone when they are restive. So, in acquiring
knowledge [maarif] and sciences this discipline must also be applied, and
the hearts must not be forced when they are irresponsive.
It can be gathered from this and other hadiths that there is another discipline
which is also an important chapter of asceticism. This discipline is
"considerateness" [muraat], that is, the salik, in whatever stage he is, in
scholarly or in spiritual and practical austerities and strives, must consider
his conditions, treat his soul with kindness and care, and avoid burdening
himself with more than it can bear, especially the young people and the
inexperienced, to whom this discipline is quite important. If the young people
do not treat themselves considerately and kindly, and if they do not meet the
needs of (their) nature through lawful ways, they will be subject to a great
danger which cannot be compensated. The danger is that when one is too severe
with his self and pulls the reins too hard, they will break off, and then the
will gets out of control, and the accumulated natural needs and the sharp fires
of desire, under unlimited pressure of austerity, burn out the whole kingdom. If
a salik's reins break off -God forbid! -or an ascetic person becomes unable to
control himself, he will fall so deep in a precipice that he can never see the
face of rescue, nor can he ever return to the road of happiness and
righteousness. Thus, a salik, like a clever physician, has to feel his own pulse
during his progress on the journey and to treat his self according to the
requirements of the conditions of the journey. When the flames of desire, which
are the vanity of youthfulness, blaze high, one is not to completely prevent his
nature from getting satisfaction, but one has to resort to lawful ways to put
out the flames of his desire, as gratifying the desire, according to the divine
command, is a complete help along the journey to Allah. So, he is to marry, as
it is one of the great divine laws, which, besides being the base of the
survival of the species, has a great effect on the journey to the Hereafter,
too. For this reason, the Messenger of Allah (SA) said "He who marries will
keep half of his religion."5 Another hadith says: "He who
desires to meet Allah pure, let him meet Him with a wife."6 The
Messenger of Allah (SA) is quoted to have said: "Most of the people of Hell
are the singles".7 A hadith from Amirul Mu'minin (Ali) (AS.)
says: "A group of the companions abstained from women (their wives), and from
eating in daytime and sleeping at night. The Messenger of Allah (SA) was
informed about them by Umme Salamah (his wife). He came to them and asked them:
'Do you reject women (your wives)? I do go into women (my wives), eat in daytime
and sleep at night. Whoever disregards my tradition is not of me. Allah, the
Exalted, has revealed:
﴾O you who believe! do not forbid the good things which Allah has made
lawful for you, and do not transgress. Surely Allah does not love the
transgressors, And eat of what Allah has provided you as lawful and good, and
fear Allah in Whom you believe,﴿8
Generally speaking, the traveler along the road to the Hereafter is to be
considerate with respect to the ups and downs of the soul. And, while he is
never to curb the needs (of his nature) which, otherwise, would cause big
mischiefs, he is also not to be severe nor to exert pressure upon himself with
respect to worship and practical austerities, especially during his youth and on
starting the journey, as otherwise this will also cause the soul to feel
exasperated and bolt away, and, perhaps, lead him to abandoning remembering
Allah.
This point is frequently referred to in the noble hadiths. The noble Al-Kafi,
quoting Imam as Sadiq (AS), says: "During my youth I was seriously and
earnestly doing my worshipping. My father told me: 'My son, act less on that, as
when Allah, the Exalted, loves someone, He will accept his little"'.9
Another hadith goes almost the same.10
The same course relates another hadith to the effect that Abu Ja'far (Imam al-Baqir)
(AS), quoting the Messenger of Allah (SA), said: "Surely this religion is
firm, so go deep in it with mildness, and do not cause Allah's servants to hate
worshipping Him; otherwise, you will be like the one whose mount was too tired
to go on, so he neither finished the journey nor preserved the mount".11
Another hadith says: "Do not cause yourselves to hate worshipping Allah."12
However, the criterion for being "considerate" is that one should be observant
of his soul's conditions and act according to its strength and weakness. When
one's soul is strong and able to perform worships and bear hardship with good
endurance, he should, then, try to perform the acts of worship. As to those who
have crossed the prime of life, and the fires of their desires have subsided to
some extent, it is suitable for them to increase their ascetic austerity, and to
set foot on the road of self-discipline with manly vigilance and industry. The
more they accustom themselves to ascetic practices, the more doors will be
opened to them, until the soul gradually overcomes the forces of (their) nature,
which will be subjugated to them under the majesty of the soul.
Concerning the noble hadiths which urge the people to strive earnestly in
worshipping and praise the people who do so with reference to the worships and
austerities of the Imams of (the Islamic) guidance (AS), as well as the noble
hadiths which recommend economy in worshipping and praise it, both categories
are based on the different people of suluk and the ranks and conditions of the
soul. The general criterion is the vivacity and the strength of the soul or its
weakness and aversion.
* Book: Adabus Salat "The Disciplines of the Prayer". By: Imam Khomeini.
1- Surah at Taubah:
54.
2- Surah an-Nisa': 43.
3- 'Usul ul Kafi, vol. 3, p. 129, "Book of Belief and Disbelief', ch. on
"Equality (moderateness) of Acting and Continuing it", hadith 3.
4- Ibid., p. 138, ch. on "Economy in Worshipping", hadith 6.
5- Bihar al-Anwar, vol. 75, p. 377, "Book of ar-Raudah", ch. 29, hadith 3.
6- Ibid., vol. 100, p. 220, "Book of al-'Uqud wal-'IqaAt" (Contracts and
Agreements), chs. on "Marriage", ch. 1, hadith 14, quoted from Amali by Shaykh
al Tusi, vol. 2, p. 132.
7- Ibid, hadiths 18 and 35, quoting Raudatul Wa'izin, p. 373, and Nawadir
ar-Rawandi, p. 12.
8- Wasa'ilush-ShiAh, p. 15, "Book of Marriage", ch. 2, hadith 6.
9- Surah al-Ma'idah: 87-88. Ibid., hadith 8,
10- 'Usulul Kafi, vol. 3, p. "Book of Faith and Disbelief', ch. on "Economy in
Worshipping", hadith 5.
11- Ibid., hadith 4.
12- Ibid., hadith 1.
13- Ibid., hadith 2.