In his Friday Sermon of October 14, 2011 Khalifatullah Hadhrat Munir Ahmad Azim Sahib of
Mauritius explains the spiritual purpose of Creation- the worship of the Almighty
Allah-by looking at the deep meaning of the various elements and postures
involved in the Islamic prayer- Azaan, Wudu and Salat.
The unique
character of the Islamic call to prayer- Azaan, the external purifying impact
of Wudu for active and awakened participation
in worship and the spiritual and physical benefits that arise out of performing
the Salat
through its various prescribed postures are explained in the sermon. The
Khalifatullah offers illuminating insights on the structural design of human
personality and the benefits it may derive by engaging in Salat.
Read the extracts from the Sermon:
Allah says in the Holy
Quran:
“I have only created Jinns and men, that they may worship Me.” (51: 57). The purpose
of creation, according to the Quran in Surah Az -Zariyat (51:57), is but that of
worship, and the Salat is the
most important worship in Islam. There are three elements to worship in Islam:
(i)
the preparation or call (Azaan).
(ii)
The purification or Wudu and
(iii)
Salat, the prayer itself.
Each of
these elements coalesce and overlap and no exact demarcation is possible, as
the Azaan proclaims: Come to prosperity, while the Salat itself is described in Surah Ash-Shams (91: 10) – Those who
purity their souls will make progress.
Azaan is the
unique call among all religions in that it does not consists of tolling bells or the
sounds of the Shofar (Jewish horn) or trumpet. The Azaan proclaims in a language which everyone can comprehend,
the cardinal principles of Islam, the witnessing of the existence of one sole God,
and the apostleship of Muhammad (peace be upon him).
This beautiful call
echoing in the early dawn, which requires repetition after the Muezzin
according to the Sunna, evokes
far greater reaction than the musical tones of the bell or trumpet which requires
an aptitude for musical perception, something not granted to all. The tolling
of mournful bells or fear-instilling blasts of the trumpet represent a wrathful
divinity compared to the Beneficent and Merciful God of Islam; calling people
to progress and prosperity both in this world and the next.
This is the reason for
the repetition of the words: Come to
prosperity and come to prayer, each call signifying the separate worlds
of existence. The early morning call signifies the awakening of the inner soul
of all. Creation as is proved by the wakening of all nature, the lifting of
darkness, the chirping of the birds and the emergence of the radiating fingers
of sunshine.