A cordial discipline of worship, especially the invoking worship, is "informing"
[tafhim]. It is to take the heart, at the beginning, as a child not yet able to
speak, and is wanted to be taught. So, each of the invocations, recitations,
facts and secrets of worship is to be taught to the heart with strict accuracy
and effort, and whatever the degree of perfection, one has to teach to the heart
the facts which he has so far recognized. Even if one was unable to understand
the meanings of the Quran and the invocations, and had no share of the secrets
of worship, he, nevertheless, would have to teach his heart the very general
meanings, such as telling it that the Quran is the words of Allah, that the
invocations are remembrance of Allah, and that worship is obeying the Creator.
He has to teach his heart such general information. Should he be of those who
understand the apparent meanings of the Quran and the invocations, such as the
promises, warnings, biddings and forbiddings, as well as the information about
the Source [mabda'] and Resurrection [maad], he must inform his heart of
whatever has been understood from them by him. Should a fact of knowledge or a
secret of worship be exposed to him, he is to inform it to his heart carefully
and strictly. The result of such information is that after a period of
perseverance the tongue of the heart will open to speaking and will become an
invoker and a reminder. At the beginning the heart is a learner and the tongue a
teacher. Whenever the tongue invokes, the heart also becomes an invoker, and so
the heart is a follower of the tongue. But after that the heart's tongue learns
to speak, the contrary happens: the heart becomes invoker and the tongue follows
it in invocation and in movement. Rather, sometimes it happens that even when
man is sleeping, his tongue starts invocating in pursuit of his heart's
invocation, as the heart's invocation is not confined to the state of
wakefulness, and when the heart remembers, the tongue, having become its
follower, starts invocating after it, and it leaks out from the dominion of the
heart: "Say: Every one acts according to his own manner ..."1
In short, at the beginning man must observe this discipline, that is,
"informing", so that the tongue of the heart starts speaking, which is the real
objective. The sign denoting that the heart's tongue has been released is that
the tiredness and the hardship of the invocation are removed and replaced by
animation and pleasure. It is like a baby which has not yet started talking, its
tutor feels tired and bored before it speaks. No sooner the baby starts
prattling than his tutor's fatigue goes away and the teacher follows up the
child's utterances without tiredness or trouble. Similar is the heart. It is a
mere infant at the start, knowing not how to speak. It is to be taught, and the
invocations and the recitations are to be placed on its tongue. Then, as it
begins talking, man begins to be its follower, and there will remain no pain of
teaching nor any tiredness of invocating. This discipline is quite necessary for
the beginners.
It must be noted that one of the secrets of repeating the invocations and
benedictions and continuing the remembrance and worshipping is that the heart's
tongue gets untied, and the heart becomes an invoking devotee. Without observing
this discipline the tongue of the heart would remain tied up.
Some noble hadiths refer to this. The noble al-Kafi, quoting Imam as Sadiq (AS),
who quoted Imam Ali (AS) who, referring to some disciplines of recitation, said:
"...But strike with it (the Quran) your hardened hearts, and do not be eager
to get to the end of the surah.2
In another hadith in al-Kafi, Imam as Sadiq (AS) told Abu 'Usamah: "O Abu 'Usamah,
call your hearts [qulub] to remember Allah, and avoid what displeases Him."3
Even the most perfect godly men (AS) used to observe this discipline. A hadith
relates that Imam al-Sadiq (may Allah's peace be upon him) (once) was subject to
a fit during the salat and fainted. When he came to his senses and he was asked
about the reason, he said: "I kept repeating this ayah to my heart until I
heard it from the one Who spoke it, and so, my body could not bear to see His
power."4
Abu Dharr is quoted to have said that the Messenger of Allah (SA) was one night
repeating this Quranic verse:
﴾If You should torment them, then they are, indeed, Your servants, and
if You should forgive them, then You are, indeed, the Mighty, the Wise.﴿5
In short, the reality of invocation and remembrance is the invocation of the
heart, without which the invocation of the tongue will be futile and worthless.
This is referred to in a number of hadiths. The Messenger of Allah (SA) informed
Abu Dharr: "Oh Abu Dharr, two rakats of salat in contemplation are better
than spending the whole night with an inattentive (or forgetful) heart."6
The Messenger of Allah (SA) is also quoted to have said: "Allah, the Exalted,
would not look at your faces, but at your hearts."7
In the hadiths concerning the presence of heart it is stated that, the more the
presence of heart in the salat, the better it is accepted, and the more the
negligence of the heart, the less it is acceptable. As long as the said
discipline is not observed, no cordial invocation will happen, and the heart
will not come out of its being inattentive and negligent.
It is narrated that Imam as Sadiq (A.S) said: "Make your heart a qiblah to
your tongue and do not move it except by a sign from the heart." But the
heart would not become a qiblah, nor would the tongue and the other organs
follow it unless the said discipline was observed. Should it happen without the
observation of this discipline, it would be a rarity, and one must not take
pride in it.
* Book: Adabus Salat "The Disciplines of the Prayer". By: Imam
Khomeini.
1- Surah Isra': 84.
2- Usulul Kafi, vol. 4, p. 418, Book on "The Merit of the Quran", ch. on
"Reciting the Quran in a Sweet Voice", hadith 1.
3- Al Kafi, (Raudah), Vol. 8, p. 167. Biharul Anwar, vol. 67 p. 59, Book on
"Faith and Disbelief' ch. 44, hadith, 38.
4- Al-Mahajjatul Bayda' vol. I. p. 352, Book on "The Secrets of the Salat", ch.
on "The Merit of Submission and its Meaning".
5- Surah al-Ma'idah: 118. Ruhul MaAni Tafsir al-Quran, by Allamah al-Alusi Vol.
7, p. 70, quoted from the Sunans of an-Nasai and al-Bayhaqi.
6- Biharul Anwar, vol. 74, p. 82, Book of "Ar-Raudah" ch. on "The Prophet's
Admonitions", hadith 2, quoted from Makarimul Akhlaq, p. 465.
7- Ibid. And Biharul Anwar, vol. 67, p. 248, quoted from jami 'ul Akhbar, p. 117
(with a slight addition).