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STRIVING IN WORSHIP
al-Jumu'ah Magazine
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The Salaf have understood the Deen of Allah as well as the essence of this 
life and its inescapable leading to the Hereafter, so they felt aversion for 
the distractions and the tribulations of the world. They found no sleep and 
their heart kept away from desires. They kept above the insignificant 
concerns of life. Their biographies abound with stories that show their 
striving in righteousness, repentance and their strong will in worship and 
humbleness:

Al-Hasan al-Basri said, "Whoever competes with you in the Deen then try to 
surpass him, and whoever competes with you in the matters of this life then 
throw it back at him." Whenever he missed a Salah in congregation, Ibn Umar 
radhiallahu anh used to fast one day, pray for one whole night, and free a 
slave .

Abu Musa al Ash'ari used to apply himself so much in worship a the end of his 
life that he was told, "Why don't you slow down and be gentle with yourself 
?" He replied, "When the horses are released for a race and are close to the 
finish line, they give all the strength they have. What is left of my life is 
less than that." He maintained the same level of devotion and worship until 
he died.

Mawriq al-'Ajli said, "I did not find an example, for the believer in this 
life, better than a man on a plank in the sea, imploring, 'O Lord, O Lord' 
hoping that Allah will save him."

Usamah said, "Whenever you see Sufyan ath-Thawri, it is as if you see someone 
in 'a ship fearing to drown,' one would often hear him say, 'O Lord, save me, 
save me!'." Fatimah bint Abdil Malik, the wife of the Khalifah Umar ibn 
Abdil-Aziz said, "I have never seen a person offering salah or fasting more 
than he did, or a person fearing the Lord more than than him. After offering 
Salat-ul-Isha, he would sit down and cry until he becomes sleepy, then he 
would wake up again and continue crying until sleep overtakes him."

Amir ibn Abdullah was once asked, "How can you tolerate being awake all 
night, and thirsty in the intense heat of the day?" He replied, "Is it 
anything more that postponing the food of the day to nighttime, and the sleep 
of the night to daytime? This is not a big matter." When the night came, he 
would say, "Remembrance of the heat of hellfire has taken sleepiness from 
me." And he would not sleep until dawn.

Ahmad ibn Harb said, "I wonder how the one who knows that above him, paradise 
is being embellished, and below him, hell fire is being kindled, and yet 
sleeps between them!" Waqi' said, "Al Amash was almost seventy years old and 
he never missed the first takbirah (for salah in the masjid). I used to visit 
him frequently for more than two years and never saw him make up for even one 
rakah."

Abu Hayan related that his father said, "Ar-Rabi' ibn Khuthaym was crippled 
and used to be carried to the congregational salah. So people told him, 'You 
have an excuse (for not coming)', he said, 'I hear 'hayee 'alas-salah', the 
call to salah; so if you can come to it even by crawling, do so," 
paraphrasing a hadith.

Abul-Mawahib ibn Sarsari said concerning Imam abul-Qasim ibn Asakir, "I have 
never seen the like of him, and none had encompassed as many good 
characteristics as he did concerning his adherence to one way for forty 
years, making salah in the first row unless he had an excuse, i'tikaf during 
Ramadhan and the ten days of Thul-Hijjah, and the lack of desire to 
accumulate properties and build houses, as he forbade himself these. He 
turned away any position of imam or speaker, though they were offered to him, 
and he devoted himself to enjoin good and forbid evil, and he would not fear 
anyone in that." 

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