I thought I’d start a positive thread and share my personal experience/view of prayer as meditation.
Muslims are required to pray formally five times a day. This takes the form of ritual washing and preparing oneself mentally to turn away from ‘worldly issues’ and concentrate on ‘spiritual matters’.
During the prayer, one stands up and mentally presents oneself to God and goes into a state of prayer. In the prayer we start standing up and recite the opening chapter of the Quran – 7 verses which form the most recited prayer/holy chapter in the history of the world. Those 7 verses also encapsulate the whole Quran and the essence of Islam itself.
One then bows, stand up straight and then go into a prostration. Humbling oneself physically and mentally, whilst supplicating and glorifying God.
This physical aspect of the prayer echoes the meaning of the prayers being recited.
During the prostration, the believers can supplicate God in their own words and pray for the world, family etc. [I do this as part of the prayer, some muslims wait until after the formal prayer and do their supplications then]
At the end of the prayer, one signals leaving the ‘spiritual’ world and entering the mundane world by saying the muslim greeting ‘Assalamo Alaikum wa Rahmatullahe wa Barakatahu’.
When done with concentration and meaning, the muslim prayer takes on a form of meditation and calms the spirit. For the five to ten minutes it takes to perform the formal prayers, one takes a mental break from the world and recharges the spiritual battery.
The salat is my down time – time I put aside to present myself to my maker, to put things in perspective and humble myself. I recognize my place in the world and how insignificant I am in the scheme of things. I give thanks for the bounties – big and small, from the provision of the universe to my baby’s smile.
We are taught in Islam that the soul needs feeding, just like the body does. The food for the soul is prayer. Without the regular prayer, the soul does suffer and wither.. to the point that one’s soul may even be so weak as to be almost dead. However it can be revived slowly with sips of spiritual food – building up the strength until full meals of formal prayers can be enjoyed.
Some people need cigarette breaks, I take spiritual breaks.
Shafique