A Neglected, Uncommon Dhikr for the Morning and Evening
September 13, 2025 § Leave a comment
From Abu Hurairah who said, “Allaah’s Messenger ﷺsaid, ‘When one of you wakes up in the morning let him say:
أَصْبَحْتُ أُثْنِيَ عَلَيْكَ حَمْداً وأَشْهَدُ أَنْ لَا إِلَهَ إِلَّا الله
Aṣbaḥtu Uthniya ʿalaika Ḥamdan
wa Ash-hadu an Lā ilāha illallāh
‘I have woken up praising You, and I bear witness that none has the right to be worshipped except Allaah,’ three times, and when he reaches the evening, let him say the same.’”
Reported by an-Nisāʾī in As-Sunan al-Kubrā, 10406, and in ʿAmalul-Yawmi wal-Lailah, 571, and its isnād is ḥasan inshā Allaah.
And it is surprising that this dhikr is not found in many books specialising in the morning and evening adhkār that have become widespread among people, except for what Shaikh Muḥammad Ismāʿīl al-Muqaddam, may Allaah protect him, mentioned in An-Naṣīḥah fīl-Adhkār wal-ʾAdʿiyah Aṣ-Ṣaḥīḥah, and likewise the eminent Shaikh, al-ʿAllāmah Muqbil ibn Hādī al-Wādiʿī includes it in Al-Jāmiʾ aṣ-Ṣaḥīḥ fīma laysa fiṣ-Ṣaḥīḥayn.
Written by Majrī ash-Shahrānī.
Kunnāshah al-Bayrūtī Farāʾid Multaqaṭun wa Fawāʾid Mutanawwiʾah min Buṭūni Kutubis-Salaf al-Mutafanninah, vol. 4, p. 518.
Al-Badr on a Duaa that Ibn Taymiyyah Used to Encourage People to Say a Lot
June 13, 2025 § Leave a comment
The Recital of the Dying · The Fire will not Touch a Person who is Granted These Five Things at the Time of His Death
June 1, 2025 § Leave a comment
Shaikh ʿAbdur-Razzāq al-Badr, may Allaah protect him, said: “Ibn Mājah reported in his Sunan from al-Agharr Abu Muslim that he bears witness that Abū Hurairah and Abū Saʿīd bore witness that Allaah’s Messenger ﷺ said:
‘When a servant says:
لاَ إِلَهَ إِلاَّ اللَّهُ، وَاللَّهُ أَكْبَرُ
Lā ilāha illallāh, wallāhu Akbar
There is none worthy of worship except Allaah, and Allaah is the Greatest.
Allaah عز وجل says:
صَدَقَ عَبْدِي، لاَ إِلَهَ إِلاَّ أَنَا، وَأَنَا اللهُ أَكْبَرُ
‘My servant has spoken the truth—there is none worthy of worship except Me. And I am Allaah the Greatest.’
And when the servant says:
لاَ إِلَهَ إِلاَّ اللَّهُ وَحْدَهُ
Lā ilāha illallāh waḥdahu
There is none worthy of worship except Allaah Alone.
Allaah عز وجل says:
صَدَقَ عَبْدِي، لاَ إِلَهَ إِلاَّ أَنَا وَحْدِي
“My servant has spoken the truth—there is none worthy of worship except Me Alone.”
And when he says:
لاَ إِلَهَ إِلاَّ اللَّهُ لاَ شَرِيكَ لَهُ
Lā ilāha illallāh lā sharīka lahu
There is none worthy of worship except Allaah, He has no partner.
Allaah عز وجل says:
صَدَقَ عَبْدِي، لاَ إِلَهَ إِلاَّ أَنَا وَلاَ شَرِيكَ لِي
“My servant has spoken the truth—there is none worthy of worship except Me and I have no partner.”
And when he says:
لاَ إِلَهَ إِلاَّ اللَّهُ، لَهُ الْمُلْكُ وَلَهُ الْحَمْدُ
Lā ilāha illallāh lahul-Mulk wa lahul-Ḥamd
There is none worthy of worship except Allaah, to Him belongs the Kingdom and for Him is all praise.
Allaah عز وجل says:
صَدَقَ عَبْدِي، لاَ إِلَهَ إِلاَّ أَنَا، لِيَ الْمُلْكُ، وَلِيَ الْحَمْدُ
“My servant has spoken the truth—there is none worthy of worship except Me, to Me belongs the kingdom and for Me is all Praise.”
And when he says:
لاَ إِلَهَ إِلاَّ اللَّهُ، وَلاَ حَوْلَ وَلاَ قُوَّةَ إِلاَّ بِاللَّه
Lā ilāha illallāh, wa lā ḥawla wa lā quwwata illā billāh
There is none worthy of worship except Allaah, and there is no might nor power except with Allaah”
Allaah عز وجل says:
صَدَقَ عَبْدِي، لاَ إِلَهَ إِلاَّ أَنَا، وَلاَ حَوْلَ وَلاَ قُوَّةَ إِلاَّ بِي
“My servant has spoken the truth—there is none worthy of worship except Me, and there is no might nor power except by Me.”
Abū Isḥāq said that al-Agharr then said something I didn’t understand so I asked Abū Jaʿfar what he said. So he said [that he said], “Whoever is blessed with [the ability to say] them at the time of his death, the Fire will not touch him.”
And at-Tirmidhī reported it in the chapter on, “What a Servant is to Say when Ill,” and in that narration the wording is, “He used to say: whoever says it when ill and then dies, the Fire will not consume him.”
When enumerating the benefits of dhikr [in general], Ibn al-Qayyim said, “Dhikr is a cause for the Lord to confirm/endorse what His servant is saying, because he is talking about Allaah the Most High describing His Perfection and His Majestic Attributes, so when the servant talks about them His Lord confirms and verifies it, and whoever’s speech Allaah the Most High endorses/verifies will not be raised among the liars, and it is hoped that he will be raised along with the truthful,” and then Ibn al-Qayyim mentioned this ḥadīth.
He also said, “And due to His love for being praised He endorsed the person who is praising Him with descriptions of His Perfection.” And this is the title that Ibn Ḥibbān gave the chapter which has this ḥadīth, saying, “A Mention of the Statements which if Said by A Muslim the Lord عز وجل Attests to the Truthfulness Thereof.”
Regarding his ﷺ saying, “Whoever is blessed with [the ability to say] them at the time of his death, the Fire will not touch him,” when explaining this in his commentary on Ibn Mājah, as-Sindhī said, “I.e., whoever Allaah the Most High gives these words to at the time of his death and grants Him the ability [tawfīq] to say them then the Fire will not touch him, in fact, he will enter Paradise from the very onset along with the Virtuous [al-Abrār]. O Allaah! Make us from those people who You give the ability to say them!”
And ash-Shawkānī, may Allaah have mercy on him, said in Tuḥfatudh-Dhākirīn, “The reason for this is that these statements include Tawḥīd five times. And it has been established in authentic ḥadīths that whoever dies not associating any partners with Allaah will enter Paradise, and later [in the book] there will be mention of the ḥadīth that says, “Whoever’s last words are, ‘Lā ilāha illallāh,’ will enter Paradise,” and numerous ḥadīths with this meaning have been reported from a group of the Companions in the two Ṣaḥīḥs and elsewhere.”
In Al-Marʿāh, al-Mubārakfūrī, may Allaah have mercy on him, said, “And in this ḥadīth is proof that if a servant says these words in his illness and then dies during it upon these words—i.e., that they were the last thing he said while conscious and of his own free will, then the Fire will not touch him, and his previous sins will not harm him, and that these words atone for all sins.”
And Shaikh ʿUthaimīn, may Allaah have mercy on him, said in his explanation of Riyāḍ aṣ-Ṣāliḥīn, “So a person should memorise this dhikr, and say it abundantly when ill so that he may be granted a good end, inshā Allaah, and Allaah is the One who grants success.”
And my father, Shaikh ʿAbdul-Muḥsin al-Badr, may Allaah protect him, dictated the following to me, “This great dhikr has been mentioned in a ḥadīth reported by some of the authors of the Sunan alongside others, and a group of the people of knowledge authenticated it. It contains five declarations of the Oneness of Allaah in addition to praise of Him as He deserves. And Imām al-Bukhārī, may Allaah have mercy on him, concluded his Ṣaḥīḥ with the ḥadīth of Abū Hurairah, Allaah be pleased with him, in which he said that the Prophet ﷺ said, “There are two expressions which are very easy for the tongue to say yet very heavy in the balance and very dear to The Beneficent: SubḥānallāhilʿAdhīm, Subḥānallāha wa biḥamdīhī,” and it is right that those five declarations of the Oneness of Allaah [mentioned in the first ḥadīth in this article also be] described with these three characteristics that have been mentioned in this ḥadīth [i.e., that they are light on the tongue, heavy on the scales, beloved to Allaah].
And my son ʿAbdur-Razzāq, may Allaah protect him, has done well in reminding people of this ḥadīth and spreading it—and reminders benefit the believers. So it is proper that a Muslim should pay heed to this dhikr, especially when ill, and Allaah is the One who grants success.”
And Shaikh Aḥmad Abū ʿUbaidah al-Mihrazī al-Marākishī, may Allaah have mercy on him, used to recommend it abundantly and called it, “The Recital of the Dying.” And he used to say, “Neglect not the Recital of the Dying, and keep it, always, in mind.” And when explaining the difference between this dhikr and the ḥadīth which says, “Whoever’s last words are Lā ilāha illallāh will enter Paradise,” he said, “In this ḥadīth [‘Whoever’s last words are Lā ilāha illallāh will enter Paradise,’] maybe he will get to Jannah after going through punishment, but there [in the ḥadīth with the five declarations of Tawḥīd] there is no punishment which precedes it because it says, ‘… the Fire will not touch him.’” And he said, “These five statements at the time of death are the greatest provision [rizq], the most sublime provision.”
And Allaah honoured Shaikh Aḥmad al-Marākishī by making them the last words that he said in this world—in fact, there was a person on his deathbed next to him too and the Shaikh reminded and exhorted him to say them and he did and so that person ended his life having said them, thus the Shaikh so happened to be a person going through the pangs of death telling another person also going through the same to recite this dhikr, may Allaah forgive them both and all the Muslims who have passed away.
So this is a great, blessed dhikr, a Muslim should pay heed to it and repeat it abundantly, and make it his goal and purpose, hoping that Allaah عز وجل will enable him to utter it at the time of his death, so that he may attain a good ending through which he can enter Paradise immediately with the Virtuous without the Fire touching him [at all].
And Allaah is the only One who can grant success, He has no partners.”
.لاَ إِلَهَ إِلاَّ اللَّهُ، وَاللَّهُ أَكْبَرُ
.لاَ إِلَهَ إِلاَّ اللَّهُ وَحْدَهُ
.لاَ إِلَهَ إِلاَّ اللَّهُ لاَ شَرِيكَ لَهُ
.لاَ إِلَهَ إِلاَّ اللَّهُ، لَهُ الْمُلْكُ وَلَهُ الْحَمْدُ
.لاَ إِلَهَ إِلاَّ اللَّهُ، وَلاَ حَوْلَ وَلاَ قُوَّةَ إِلاَّ بِاللَّه
Ibn Taymiyyah on Duʿā in Someone’s Absence
May 18, 2025 § 1 Comment
The Shaikh of Islaam Ibn Taymiyyah said, “Supplicating for someone in their absence is far greater in [terms of] being answered than doing so in their presence, that is because it is more complete in sincerity and further removed from shirk.”
Qāʿidatun fit-Tawassul, p. 263.
So Easy You Don’t Even Have to Move Your Mouth to Say it
November 7, 2024 § 1 Comment
Imām Ibn Ḥazm said, “Say Lā ilāha illallāh abundantly, because it is made of words that can be said with the tongue [alone] without the need for [the movement of] the lips, so the person sitting with you won’t even know.”
At-Talkhīṣ li Wujūh at-Takhlīṣ, 1/100.
Al-Badr on Shaiṭān Waiting for you to Come Outside and How to Protect Yourself
June 22, 2024 § Leave a comment
Shaikh ʿAbdur-Razzāq al-Badr, Allaah protect him, said:
“But take note of a point here: every time you leave your house a shaiṭān is there waiting for you to come out.
Every time.
Every time you leave your house there is a shaiṭān waiting by your house—he has no other job except to wait for you to come out, and his mission and aim is well-known.
And he has helpers.
So when you say:
بِسْمِ الله، توكَّلْتُ عَلَى الله، وَلا حَوْلَ وَلا قُوَّةَ إلاَّ بِالله
Bismillāh. Tawakkaltu ʿalallāh. Wa lā ḥawla wa lā quwwta illa billāh.
“In the name of Allaah. I trust in Allaah. There is no might and no power but with Allaah.”
You are protected from his evil and that of his helpers and this shaiṭān then turns to his aids and brothers and tells them to lose hope in you, saying, ‘What are you going to do with a man who has been guided, defended and protected?’
That is why it is not fitting for a Muslim to deprive himself of this profound good and excellence, so he should make sure to say this great dhikr:
بِسْمِ الله، توكَّلْتُ عَلَى الله، وَلا حَوْلَ وَلا قُوَّةَ إلاَّ بِالله
Bismillāh. Tawakkaltu ʿalallāh. Wa lā ḥawla wa lā quwwta illa billāh.
“In the name of Allaah. I trust in Allaah. There is no might and no power but with Allaah.”
Sharḥ al-Wābil aṣ-Ṣayyib, lesson no. 22.
Sending Salaah on the Prophet ﷺ
October 6, 2023 § Leave a comment
Shaikh ʿUthaimīn, “If someone gave you directions to a place you wanted to get to you would see that as a favour he did for you—so what about the Prophet ﷺ who showed you the path to Paradise? It’s his right that you send salaah on him ﷺ.”
Fatāwā Nūr ʿalad-Darb, 12/210.
Ibn Taymiyyah on Seeking Forgiveness
October 25, 2022 § Leave a comment
In the nine volume collection of Ibn Taymiyyah’s works which Shaikh ʿUzair Shams checked and brought to light bi ithnillah, the Shaikh of the Shaikhs of Islaam Ibn Taymiyyah, said, “A person’s seeking forgiveness from Allaah [istighfār] is more important than all duʿās.”
Jāmiʿul-Masāʾil, vol. 6, p. 277.
On the Duaa Said when Leaving the Bathroom
July 17, 2020 § Leave a comment
Ibn Baaz said, “The wisdom in saying, ‘I seek Your Forgiveness!’ when leaving the bathroom is that Allaah blessed the servant with the food and drink that He gave him and then He blessed him by allowing him to relieve himself [lit: by allowing the things that are harmful to leave him], and the slave [of Allaah] falls short in giving thanks so He ordained that when he relieves himself after having had the blessing of food and drink that he seek His Forgiveness, and He سبحانه loves that His Slaves thank Him for His Blessings and He loves that they seek His Forgiveness from their sins.”
“O Allaah! Save us, save us.””
July 13, 2020 § Leave a comment
“Saʿīd ibn al-Musayyib used to abundantly say:
«اَللَّهُمَّ سَلِّمْ، سَلِّمْ.»
[Allāhumma sallim, sallim.]
“O Allaah! Save us, save us.””
Ṭabaqāt Ibn Saʿd, 6947.
On How the Salaf Would Stay Awake After Fajr Until Sunrise
May 19, 2018 § Leave a comment
Shaikh Abdur-Razzaaq al-Badr, may Allaah protect him, said, “If a person squanders the first part of the day which is the time of blessing, of being early, of excellence and the time when sustenance is sent down, then his day will be wasted, and whatever he does at its beginning will be true of and applicable to the rest of it, that is why it is imperative that a Muslim not waste the first part of the day by being sluggish, lazy or indifferent [to it].
The Salaf never knew sleep after Fajr, such that Ibn al-Qayyim said that if they were on a journey all night, in difficulty and hardship they would [still] not sleep after Fajr but would wait until the sun had risen and then sleep, doing all that in order to protect this excellent time which is after Fajr until just before the sun rises, this is a blessed time, an excellent time, and a time for the remembrance of Allaah تبارك وتعالى. The Salaf, may Allaah have mercy on them, would not spend it sleeping or being lazy or being half-hearted and such, but would persist in their adhkaar, in remembering Allaah, especially the tasbeeh [i.e., saying, ‘Subhaanallaah’] and other words of remembrance which have been reported in the Legislation.
And it has been reported in Sahih Muslim from Abu Waa’il Shaqeeq ibn Salamah that he said, ‘We went to Abdullaah ibn Mas’ood one morning after we had prayed Al-Ghadaah [i.e., Fajr] and we greeted him at the door, and he granted us permission (to enter). We stayed at the door for a while, then the slave girl came out and said, ‘Will you not enter?’ So we entered and found him sitting, reciting Tasbih. He said, ‘What kept you from entering when permission had been given to you?’ We said, ‘Nothing, except that we thought that some of the people of the household might be sleeping.’ He said, ‘Do you think there is idleness among the family of Ibn Umm Abd? [i.e., do you think Abdullah ibn Mas’ood’s family are heedless at that time and not remembering Allaah?]’ Then he went back to reciting Tasbih until he thought that the sun had risen and he said, ‘O girl, look and see whether it has risen.’ She looked and saw that it had not risen. Then he went back to reciting Tasbih until he thought the sun had risen and he said, ‘O girl, look and see whether it has risen.’ She looked and saw that it had risen. He said, ‘Praise be to Allaah Who has caused this day of ours to come when we are still in a state of soundness, and didn’t destroy us due to our sins.’”
Pay attention to this sentence, ‘Praise be to Allaah Who has caused this day of ours to come when we are still in a state of soundness, and didn’t destroy us due to our sins,’ when Ibn Mas’ood, may Allaah be pleased with him, said it, had the day finished or was it still at its very beginning?
Notice that as soon as the sun rose and while he was saying tasbeeh, saying Subhaanallaah, he then praised Allaah by saying, ‘Praise be to Allaah Who has caused this day of ours …’ most of the day still remains to come, he’s only at its beginning, so why did Ibn Mas’ood, may Allaah be pleased with him, say, ‘Praise be to Allaah Who has caused this day of ours …?’ Why did he make that statement?
I think the answer is clear to us all: he did so because whoever guards the start of the day then the rest of the day will be guarded for him, and that is why he said … even though he had only guarded the first part of the day with dhikr and tasbeeh until the sun rose and then he praised Allaah with this wording, saying, ‘Praise be to Allaah Who has caused this day of ours …’ even though the day is still ongoing, there is still a long time remaining, Duhaa time is still to come, Dhuhr time, Asr, a very long time still remains, only a very short time has passed, and yet he says, ‘Praise be to Allaah Who has caused this day of ours to come when we are still in a state of soundness, and didn’t destroy us due to our sins.’
From this we can derive a significant and important point of benefit: that whoever guards the first part of the day, the rest of the day will be guarded for him, whoever preserves the first part of the day the rest of it will be preserved for him. This is the reason the Salaf, may Allaah have mercy on them, would protect it and not waste it, the Salaf, may Allaah have mercy on them, knew the value of that part of the day and so they would attach great importance to it.
People in recent times don’t know the value of this time and so they are in a different state concerning it—in this day and age maybe the best time for most people to sleep is after Fajr, such that a person cannot miss it at all even if just for half an hour, even if he has to work, he must sleep for half an hour even though it does nothing to benefit him, makes his body slack, weakens it, doesn’t make him active, has no benefit attached to it, but [as we said] results in slackness, laziness, sluggishness, and yet along with that you will find that he never misses it, even though it is this time that the dhikr of Allaah تبارك وتعالى should be maintained.
So the point is that the Salaf, may Allaah have mercy on them, recognised the value of this excellent time and knew its standing, they knew its rank and so would guard it by remembering Allaah تبارك وتعالى.
Based upon that I say that all of us should learn the legislated adhkaar which have been reported and are established from our Prophet ﷺ and which it is recommended for us to say during the early morning and we should accustom ourselves to saying them everyday until it becomes something normal and habitual and which a person then feels he can’t break away from or leave, he should get himself used to that and stick to it always and by doing so he will be from those people who protect their remembrance of Allaah تبارك وتعالى at the start of the day.”