Hadith Details
Discover timeless wisdom from the authentic teachings of Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him). Each hadith offers profound guidance for daily life, spiritual growth, and moral excellence, preserved and transmitted through generations of Islamic scholarship.
Sunan an-Nasa'i
كتاب المواقيت
The Book of the Times (of Prayer)
" مَا بَيْنَ هَاتَيْنِ الصَّلاَتَيْنِ وَقْتٌ "
' The time between these two is the time for prayer.'" [1] Meaning Fajr, the morning prayer. [2] The Fajr prayer was elongated because the Prophet recited at length during the prayer, so that it ended just before sunrise. That defined the end of the time for Fajr, as the beginning of the time was defined by the moment when he started the first Rak'ah.
More from The Book of the Times (of Prayer)
Other hadiths from the same chapter
- Hadith 572
"We heard Abu Umamah Al-Bahili say: 'I heard 'Amrah bin 'Abasah say: I said: 'O Messenger of Allah, is there any moment which brings one close to Allah than…
- Hadith 582
"Abu Tamim Al-Jaishani stood up to pray two Rak'ahs before Maghrib, and I said to 'Uqbah bin 'Amir: 'Look at this man, what prayer is he praying?' He turned…
- Hadith 584
"I came to the Messenger of Allah, who became Muslim with you?' He said: 'Free men and slaves.' I said: 'Is there any moment which brings one closer to Allah…
- Hadith 553
"Whoever catches up with a Rak'ah of the prayer, then he has caught up with the prayer."
- Hadith 600
"I heard Az-Zuhri say: 'Salim told me that his father said: 'I saw the Prophet (ﷺ), if he was in a hurry to travel, joining Maghrib and 'Isha'."
- Hadith 569
It was narrated from Ibn 'Abbas that the Prophet (ﷺ) forbade praying after 'Asr.