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          T h e Ess e n ce o f Re lig i o n
        
        
          It is a situation of love and fear in which man runs towards the very
        
        
          Being he fears, hoping to receive from Him His divine blessings.
        
        
          It is a state of mental anguish, yet at the same time it is a state of
        
        
          complete solace.
        
        
          Thus we learn that prayer is basically a psychological experience
        
        
          rather than an external event. Man, in the last analysis, is a sensitive
        
        
          thinking being: so in its definitive form, prayer in relation to
        
        
          man, is the expression of an inner state rather than of an external
        
        
          happening. The Prophet has clearly stated that “righeousness is a
        
        
          thing of the heart.”According to the Quran, the essence of worship
        
        
          is to be God-fearing. This finds expression in a hadith. Once the
        
        
          Prophet observed pointing to his heart, ‘The fear of God lies here,’
        
        
          (
        
        
          
            At Taqwa ha huna
          
        
        
          ) (Bukhari).
        
        
          The Quran states: ‘O men, serve your Lord Who has created
        
        
          you and those who have gone before you, so that you may guard
        
        
          yourselves against evil’ (2:21).
        
        
          Worship, in terms of external expression, means bowing before
        
        
          the Sustainer, while in its inner sense it stands for that deep
        
        
          realization of and strong attachment to God in which man is so
        
        
          involved that he can experience the very presence of God. The
        
        
          Prophet is reported to have said, “Pray to God as if you are seeing
        
        
          Him.” (
        
        
          
            Mishkat,
          
        
        
          Chapter on Faith). According to this saying, the
        
        
          most sublime form of worship is that in which the worshipper is so
        
        
          lost in thoughts of God that he finds himself very close toHim. His
        
        
          apprehension of the divine presence should be as keen as if God
        
        
          were actually seeing him. This state of psychological proximity is
        
        
          the most sublime state of prayer.
        
        
          All rites of worship are aimed at arriving at that state. The
        
        
          postures to be adopted in the performance of these rites are
        
        
          ordained by God Himself. Anyone who asserts that it is possible to
        
        
          pray to God independently of these God-ordained rites, is making
        
        
          a false claim.Without performing these rites, no one can become a
        
        
          worshipper, in the real sense of the word. Although man is another
        
        
          name for that particular soul which is not visible to us, it is also
        
        
          a fact that man’s existence cannot be conceived of in this world