Bekijk volle/desktop versie : Dua ik weet dat je alleen zittend kan bidden, maar kan je ook alleen staand bidden?



26-06-2016, 01:21
Salam

Ik heb eerst gegoogled maar ik kon het nergens vinden. K voel een klein beetje last bij mn rug tijdens de buigingen. Is het mogelijk om daarom staand te bidden? Het is niet erg ofzo maar k voel dat ik er meer druk op zet op die manier waardoor ik het erger maak ipv het de rust te bieden die het nu nodig heeft.

Alvast shokran broeders en zusters

26-06-2016, 01:53



Citaat door weet_nie_meer:
Salam

Ik heb eerst gegoogled maar ik kon het nergens vinden. K voel een klein beetje last bij mn rug tijdens de buigingen. Is het mogelijk om daarom staand te bidden? Het is niet erg ofzo maar k voel dat ik er meer druk op zet op die manier waardoor ik het erger maak ipv het de rust aanbieden die het nu nodig heeft.

Alvast shokran broeders en zusters

Citaat:

Wa alikum assalam,

Hierbij ter info en ter nasieha fisabililah het onderstaande van de dragers van kennis m.b.t. jouw vraag aghi.Als je niet in staat bent sujoud en rukuh te verrichten vanwege overbelasting van je rug, dan dien je het op onderstaande beschreven wijze te verrichten, aldus de dragers van kennis.Wa Allahu ahlem.Insha Allah heb je er baat bij bi idni Allah.Moge Allah subhanahu watahala je rug spoedig doen genezen.Allahuma ameen.Ghair insha Allah!


How patients can perform Salah in hospitals:

[SIZE=2]Question:

A questioner in a letter explained that some patients are totally ignorant of the manner in which the sick should purify themselves and perform Salah (Prayer) when their condition does not allow them to perform it normally. The questioner requested a detailed Fatwa on the rulings related to Taharah (ritual purification) and Salah to be observed by the sick.

[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]After considering the stated question, the Committee gave the following answer:[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]
Salah performed by the sick:[/SIZE]

[SIZE=2]1. A sick person should perform Salah in a standing posture as much as they are able.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]2. The sick person who cannot stand may pray while sitting. It is preferable to sit cross-legged in positions where one normally stands during Salah.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]3. If the sick person cannot pray in a sitting position, they can pray while lying on their side, facing the Qiblah (Ka`bah-direction faced in Prayer). It is Mustahab (desirable) that they lie on their right side.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]4. If the sick person cannot pray on their side, they can pray while lying on their back.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]5. The sick person who can stand, but cannot bow or prostrate is not excused from the obligation of standing. They must pray in a standing position and gesture (lean forward) for Ruku` (bowing), then take a sitting position and gesture for Sujud (prostration).[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]6. If a person suffers from an eye disease, and a trustworthy doctor advises them that praying while lying on their back is conducive to better treatment outcomes, the sick person can pray lying on their back.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]7. A sick person who cannot bow or prostrate should gesture for them, and should make the gesture for Sujud lower than that for Ruku`.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]8. A sick person who is only unable to prostrate should bow and gesture for Sujud.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]9. A sick person who is unable to bend their back should bend their neck. If a person suffers from a curved spine and so appears to be bowing, they should bend their back a little bit more in Ruku`; while in Sujud, they should bring their face as close to the ground as possible.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]10. If the sick person cannot gesture with their head, they should make Takbir (saying: "Allahu Akbar [Allah is the Greatest]&quot and start reciting and intend with their heart the actions of standing, bowing, resuming a standing position again, prostrating, resuming a sitting position, sitting for a while between the two prostrations, and sitting for Tashahhud (testification recited in the sitting position in the second/last unit of Prayer). Then they should recite the prescribed Adhkar (invocations and remembrances said at certain times on a regular basis). As for the signal made by some patients with their finger, their practice has no basis in Shari`ah (Islamic Law).[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]11. Whenever the sick person finds, while praying, that they are able to do what they could not do before, such as standing, sitting, bowing, prostrating or gesturing, they should perform it in the rest of Salah and do not have to repeat the performed parts.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]12. If a sick person or any other person forgets a Salah or sleeps and misses it, they must offer it when they wake up or when they remember it. They are not permitted to delay offering it until the same Salah becomes due again (on the next day).[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]13. The Muslim is, by all means, forbidden to abandon Salah. Rather, the Mukallaf (person meeting the conditions to be held legally accountable for their actions) must observe Salah in any condition; when healthy or sick, as it is the pillar of Islam and the greatest Faridah (obligatory act) after declaring the Two Shahadahs (Testimonies of Faith). So the Muslim is by no means allowed to neglect the obligatory Salah until its due time is over, even if they are sick as long as their mind is intact. Rather, they have to offer it in its due time according to their ability, as mentioned in detail above. It is not permissible for a sick person to delay the Salah until they recover their health, for such behavior has no basis in Shari`ah.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]14. If the sick person finds hardship in offering each Salah at its due time, they can combine the Zhuhr (Noon) Prayer with the `Asr (Afternoon) Prayer, and Maghrib (Sunset) Prayer with `Isha' (Night) Prayer at the time of the earlier or later one, according to their circumstances and ability.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]As for Fajr (Dawn) Prayer, it may not be combined with either the Salah preceding or following it, for its time is separate from the times of Salahs before and after it.

[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]May Allah grant us success. May peace and blessings be upon our Prophet Muhammad, his family, and Companions.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]Permanent Committee for Scholarly Research and Ifta':

[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]Member Member Member Member Chairman[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2]Bakr Abu Zayd `Abdul-`Aziz Al Al-Shaykh Salih Al-Fawzan `Abdullah ibn Ghudayyan `Abdul-`Aziz ibn `Abdullah ibn Baz[/SIZE]
[SIZE=2][Issued by the Permanent Committee, Fatwa no. 17798]





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26-06-2016, 01:55
Vervolg tevens slot:


Citaat:

How to Pray in a Chair When Needed [Shaykh Saalih al-Fowzaan] hafidahu Allah:

In the Name of Allaah, the Most Gracious, the Ever Merciful…



Shaykh Saalih al-Fowzaan (may Allaah preserve him) was asked about how one is to pray in a chair when needed.

The reply: Prayer is the second pillar of Islaam. It is the foundational support-post of Islaam, and it is the first of all deeds a person will be held to account for on the Day of Judgment. If it is accepted [by Allaah], the rest of his deeds will be accepted. If it is rejected, the rest of his deeds will likewise be rejected. It is an obligation that no Muslim is ever excused from so long as he remains of sound mind.[1] A Muslim prays according to his ability.

As Allaah has said, “Fear Allaah to the best of your ability.”[2] And He, the Most High, has said, “Allaah does not burden any soul beyond its scope.”[3] Furthermore, the Prophet, may Allaah raise his rank and grant him peace, said, “When I have forbidden you from something, stay away from it [entirely]. When I have ordered you to do something, do as much of it as you are able.”[4]

From this [generality] is prayer. A Muslim is to pray to the best of his ability, the best he can, due to the statement of the Prophet, may Allaah raise his rank and grant him peace, “A sick person prays standing. If he is unable, then he may pray sitting. If he is unable, then he may pray [laying] on his side.”[5] In one narration, “If he is unable, then laying back with his feet toward the qiblah.”[6]

Prayer has its required conditions (shuroot), necessary elements (arkaan, lit. pillars), obligations (waajibaat), and recommended manners (sunan). A sick person is to do as much of these things as he is able to. Some things are to be done while standing, while others are done while sitting or in prostration.

What is done standing is the initial takbeerah (saying, “Allaahu akbar&rdquo, reading [Soorah] Al-Faatihah and whatever else is easy of the Qur’aan, and bowing (rukoo&rsquo, which is done by bending over with one’s head and back until the hands reach the knees, saying in that position, “Glorified be Allaah, the Great One.”

What is done while sitting is the tashahhud, the prostration, saying, “Glorified be Allaah, the Most High,” and the tasleem.

How does a [sick] person perform these actions?

If he is able to stand and sit, but cannot bow or prostrate, then he motions with his head for the bowing while he stands, and he motions with his head for the prostration while he sits.

If he is able to sit, but cannot stand, then he performs the initial takbeerah, the recitation of Al-Faatihah and what is easy of the Quran to recite [while sitting]. He motions with his head for the rukoo’ (bowing) while he sits. He prostrates on the ground if his able. If not, then he motions with his head for the prostration while sitting, making his nodding [or bending over] lower for prostration than for bowing.

When praying seated, it is better and more complete to sit on the floor if one is able. If not, then he may sit in a chair, and he does everything a person would do sitting on the floor.

The chair is to be lined up along with the row, and it should be a small chair whenever possible, so it does not take a large amount of space and encroach upon the space of those next to, behind, and in front of him.

He does not pray directly behind the imaam, to leave that place for healthy people who could take his place when needed, or prompt him when he cannot remember something in his recitation. This is due to his statement, “Let the people of intellect and understanding stand directly behind me [in congregational prayer].”[7]

This was written by [Shaykh] Saalih ibn Fowzaan al-Fowzaan, Member of the Council of Senior Scholars, on 08-17-1433.

Translation and footnotes: Moosaa Richardson



Source: http://www.alfawzan.af.org.sa/node/14011

Footnotes:

[1] With the exception of women during their menses and post-natal bleeding. (All footnotes are from the translator.)

[2] Soorah at-Taghaabun (64:16)

[3] Soorah al-Baqarah (2:286)

[4] From an authentic hadeeth collected by Al-Bukhaaree (no.7288) and Muslim (no.1337).

[5] From the meaning of an authentic hadeeth collected by Al-Bukhaaree (no.1117).

[6] This additional wording is not authentic as a hadeeth. Review: Irwaa’ al-Ghaleel (no.558).

[7] From an authentic hadeeth collected by Muslim (no.432).



26-06-2016, 02:04
Djazak Allah ou khayran. Duidelijker kan het niet.

26-06-2016, 02:12



Citaat door weet_nie_meer:
Djazak Allah ou khayran. Duidelijker kan het niet.
Alhamdulilah dat het nader verduidelijkt is voor je.Allahuma ameen op je oprechte dua.Wa iyaak.Ghair insha Allah!