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About Jilsat-ul-Istiraahah before standing up from prostration

Question

Assalaamu alaykum. Shaykh ibn Baaz, in his book on the prayer, supports the view that Jalsat-Ul-Istiraahah (sitting before standing up) is recommended but that the person should not push himself up from the ground while standing up, but the hadith in which Jalsat-Ul-Istiraahah is mentioned says that the Prophet, sallallaahu 'alayhi wa sallam, pushed himself up from the ground while raising from this sitting, so the question arises: among the four Schools of Thought, Imam Maalik and Abu Haneefah, may Allaah have mercy upon them, do not concider it recommended, but Imam Ash-Shaafi'i does consider it recommended that one pushes himself up from the ground; so does any of the classical scholar of the four Schools of Thought support the view of Shaykh ibn Baaz that u should do Jalsat-Ul-Istiraahah but at the same time you should not push yourself up while rising? I hope that you understand my question. May Allaah reward you.

Answer

All perfect praise be to Allaah, The Lord of the worlds. I testify that there is none worthy of worship except Allaah and that Muhammad  sallallaahu  `alayhi  wa  sallam ( may  Allaah exalt his mention ) is His slave and Messenger.

Your question is very clear. The answer is that Shaykh Ibn Baaz  may  Allaah  have  mercy  upon  him was not the only one who held this view; rather, it is a view that corresponds to the Hanbali School, who say that it is permissible to sit for rest (Jilsat-ul-Istiraahah) (when getting up from the prostration of a Rak'ah [unit of prayer] to start the next Rak’ah) as some scholars of the Hanbali School are of the view that it is prescribed. Most of those Hanbali scholars who are of the view that it is prescribed say that a person uses his feet as support to get up, not his hands.

Al-Insaaf reads:

It was reported from Imaam Ahmad that the worshiper sits for Jilsat-ul-Istiraahah; this view was chosen by Abu Bakr Abdul ‘Azeez and Al-Khallaal, and he said that Ahmad withdrew his first opinion, and he (the author) authoritatively asserted his second opinion (that Jilsat-ul-Istiraahah is prescribed) in Al-Ifaadaat, and he favored this view in Ar-Ri’aayatayn and in Al-Haawi As-Sagheer, and he mentioned both views without favoring either of them in Al-Hidaayah, Al-Muthhab, Masbook Ath-Thahab, At-Talkhees, and Sharh Al-Majd. It was also said: the one who sits for Jilsat-ul-Istiraahah is the person who is weak; this is the view chosen by Al-Qaadhi, Al-Musannif (i.e. Ibn Qudaamah), and others … Hence, when a person stands, he does not support himself with his hands according to the sounder opinion; rather, he stands relying on his feet and using his knees for support. Al-Aajurri chose the view that one uses his hands for support when he stands up.

Based on the above, the statement of the Shaykh (Ibn Baaz)  may  Allaah  have  mercy  upon  him is a considered view in the Hanbali School, and it is not a new view.

Allaah knows best.

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