Adab al-Salah (Prayer Etiquette)
The recommended norms and inner attitudes that enrich the prayer.
Adab al-Salah (Arabic: آداب الصلاة) refers to the etiquette of prayer — the outward actions and inner attitudes that enrich the prayer beyond its obligatory requirements. Adab al-Salah is the dimension that transforms prayer from a mere duty fulfillment into a spiritual experience.
Islamic scholars have identified several levels of prayer perfection: (1) Performing the outward actions of prayer correctly, (2) Understanding the meaning of what one recites, (3) Achieving the heart's presence (hudur al-qalb), (4) Achieving khushu (humility), and (5) Achieving fana' (self-annihilation in Allah's presence).
Outward adab include: praying in clean, neat clothes, wearing fragrance (for men), praying in a clean and quiet place, turning toward the qibla with the entire body, lowering one's gaze toward the prostration spot, praying slowly and calmly, reciting clearly and beautifully, and observing a silent pause between the parts of prayer. Imam al-Sadiq said: "Straighten your clothes when you want to pray, for Allah says: 'Take your adornment at every place of worship'" (Al-Kafi, vol. 3, referencing Surah Al-A'raf 7:31).
Inner adab include: purifying the heart from worldly worries, imagining that one stands before Allah, reciting as if hearing the Quran for the first time, praying with fear and hope, and concluding the prayer with humility and gratitude. Imam Ali said: "Pray as if it is your farewell prayer — a prayer after which you will not pray again." Adab al-Salah is the lifelong journey toward perfecting one's prayer.
Related terms
Ihsan (Excellence)
The highest level of worship: to worship Allah as if one can see Him.
Tajwid (Proper Quran Recitation)
The science of proper pronunciation and recitation of the Quran during prayer.
Ashura (The Tenth of Muharram)
The tenth day of Muharram, the commemoration of Imam Husayn's martyrdom.
Du'a Jawshan al-Kabir (The Great Armor)
A long supplication with 1000 of Allah's names and attributes, recited during Ramadan nights.
Nahj al-Balagha (The Peak of Eloquence)
Imam Ali's collection of sermons and wise sayings, central to Shia prayer tradition.
Masjid al-Aqsa (The Farthest Mosque)
The third holiest mosque in Islam, in Jerusalem, connected to the Prophet's nocturnal journey.