بِسْمِ ٱللّٰهِ ٱلرَّحْمٰنِ ٱلرَّحِيمِ
Al Islam
The Official Website of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community
Muslims who believe in the Messiah,
Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad Qadiani(as)
Showing 10 of 278 hadith
This Aadith is the same as No. 98.
Ali relates that the Holy Prophet visited Fatimah and him one night and inquired of them: Do you not offer Prayer at night (Bokhari and Muslim)?
Salim ibn Abdullah ibn Umar relates on the authority of his father that the Holy Prophet said: Abdullah is an excellent man only if he were to offer his voluntary Prayer at night. Salim adds that after this Abdullah slept but little at night (Bokhari and Muslim).
Abdullah ibn Amr ibn ‘As relates: The Holy Prophet directed me: Abdullah, do not be like So and So. He used to get up at night for voluntary Prayer but gave it up later (Bokhari and Muslim).
Abdullah ibn Mas‘ud relates that mention was made before the Holy Prophet of a man who slept through the night till after dawn, on which he observed: He is a man in whose ears (or ear) Satan has urinated (Bokhari and Muslim).
Abu Hurairah relates that the Holy Prophet said: When a person sleeps Satan ties three knots at the base of his head, muttering over each: The night is long, sleep on. If he wakes up and remembers Allah, one of the knots is loosened. Then if he gets up and makes his ablutions another one is loosened. If he says his Prayer, he is free of all of them and he begins his morning in a happy cheerful mood. Otherwise he gets up in a disagreeable, stothful mood (Bokhari and Muslim).
. Abdullah ibn Salam relates that he heard the Holy Prophet say: O" ye people, multiply the greeting of peace, feed people, strengthen the ties of kinship and be in Prayer when others are asleep, you will enter Paradise in peace (Tirmidhi).
Abu Hurairah relates that the Holy Prophet said: The best month for fasting next after Ramadhan is Muharram, and the best Prayer next after the prescribed Prayers is Prayer at night (Muslim).
Ibn Umar relates that the Holy Prophet said: Night Prayer is a succession of two raka‘as at a time, and when you perceive the approach of dawn add a single raka‘a to make an odd number (Bokhari and Muslim).
Ibn Umar relates that the Holy Prophet offered a succession of two raka‘as at night followed by a single raka‘a (Bokhari and Muslim).