T h e Fo u r Pill a rs
        
        
          37
        
        
          the Prophet’s closest companions, addressed his contemporaries
        
        
          in these words:
        
        
          “You fast more than the Companions of the Prophet; you
        
        
          pray more than them, and strive more than them; but still they
        
        
          were better than you.” People asked him why. “They were totally
        
        
          disinterested in this world, they were extremely eager for the
        
        
          next,” was Ibn Masud’s reply. (
        
        
          
            Hilyatul Awliya
          
        
        
          , Vol. 1, p. 136)
        
        
          P
        
        
          rayer
        
        
          (
        
        
          
            
              Salat
            
          
        
        
          )
        
        
          The essence of prayer is remembrance of God (Quran, 20:14). The
        
        
          Arabic word for remembrance is
        
        
          
            dhikr
          
        
        
          . Itmeans to bring something
        
        
          to mind. One might say, for instance,
        
        
          
            dhakkartuhu fa tadhakkara
          
        
        
          (I
        
        
          reminded him and that brought it to his mind). God requires man
        
        
          to remember Him. Time and time again, His greatness, wisdom,
        
        
          creativity and sovereignty should spring to mind. Prayer has,
        
        
          therefore, been prescribed as an obligation to bring about this
        
        
          state of constant remembrance.
        
        
          The Quran states that everything in the universe is constantly
        
        
          engaged in praising God.When God placedAdam in charge of the
        
        
          earth, and commanded the angels to bow down before him, the
        
        
          angels replied: “We continuously sing Your praises and sanctify
        
        
          Your name.” (2:30) This shows that the angels thought that to be
        
        
          worthy of this trust God placed in man, one had to be continually
        
        
          praisingGod.According to Bukhari, the number of prayers initially
        
        
          decreed on the Prophet’s heavenly journey was fifty. Clearly, if one
        
        
          prayed fifty times in a 24-hour day, one would spend almost all of
        
        
          one’s time in prayer. In order to lessen the burden on people, this
        
        
          number was later reduced by God to five, although fifty remained
        
        
          the ideal.
        
        
          Prayer is an acknowledgement by God’s servant of the divinity
        
        
          of the Almighty. So many are the aspects of His divinity and so
        
        
          countless the forms in which it is made manifest to man that, even
        
        
          if one lives in a constant state of remembrance of God, one cannot