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Friday prayers
The weekly convention of Friday Congregation is
the most important service and is compulsory upon every
Muslim who is
required to observe the other
prayers and has no reasonable excuses to abstain. It falls on Friday of
every week and is especially important because:
- It is the occasion earmarked by
Allah for
the Muslim to
express their collective devotion.
- It is an appointment to review our spiritual
accounts of the week gone by and get ready for the following week just as
people do in any other business.
- It is a convention for the
Muslims to
reassure themselves and confirm their religious bonds and social solidarity on
moral and spiritual foundations.
- It shows how the
Muslims give
preference to the call of God over and above any other concern.
This
prayer of Friday is marked
by these features:
- Its time falls in the same times as that of
the
noon
- It must be said in a congregation led by an
Imam. No single
person can offer it by himself.
- If any person misses it, he cannot make up
for it. Instead, he has to offer the
noon prayer, the
original prayer which
this service normally replaces.
- All kinds of normal work are allowed on
Friday as on any other week day. For
Muslims there is
no Sabbath. They can carry on with their usual duties and activities provided
they come to the congregational service in
time. After the
service is over, they may resume their mundane activities.
- This Friday Prayer must be performed in a
mosque, if there is one
available. Otherwise, it may be said at any gathering place, e.g. homes, farms,
parks, etc.
- When the
time for prayer
comes, the Adhan (Ezan) is said. Then, four units of
prayer are offered as
Sunnah (Sunnet), individually, in a low voice as in the
noon prayer. When
this part is completed, the
Imam stands up
facing the audience and delivers his sermon (khutbah - hutbe) which is an
essential part of the service. While the
Imam is taking
nobody should talk or pray; everyone present should take a sitting position
and listen to the sermon quietly to the end.
- The sermon (khutbah - hutbe) consists of two
parts each beginning with words of praise of
Allah and
prayers of blessing for
Prophet Muhammad. In the first part some
Qur'anic passage must be
recited and explained for the purpose of exhortation and admonition. At the
end of the first part the
Imam takes a
short rest in the sitting posture, then stands up to deliver the second part
of his sermon. General affairs of the
Muslims may be
discussed in either or both parts of the sermon. In the second part,
especially, the Imam
prays for the general welfare of all
Muslims.
- After that the Iqamah is made and the two
obligatory units are offered under the leadership of the
Imam who recites
the Fatihah and the other
Qur'anic passage in an audible voice. When this is done, the
prayer is completed.
After that two other Sunnah (Sunnet) units are offered individually in a low
voice.
The earlier four and the late two Sunnah (Sunnet)
units may be offered at home. Also they may be replaced with one has to make up.
Any participant in the weekly congregation or
the 'Ed Prayers should do his best to be neat and tidy. Though there is no
compulsory reason for a complete
ablution, a bath is
strongly recommended as it makes one fresher and more pleasant.
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