Praise be to Allaah.
This is an issue concerning which there is a difference of
opinion among the fuqaha’. Some of them are of the view that the worshipper
should clench his right hand and point with his index finger in the sitting
between the two prostrations as he does during the tashahhud, and some of
them say that he should stretch out his hand and not clench it.
Ibn al-Qayyim (may Allaah have mercy on him) said: Then he
(blessings and peace of Allaah be upon him) raised his head, saying takbeer
but not raising his hands, and he lifted his head from prostration before
his hands, then he sat muftarishan, spreading out his left foot and sitting
on it, and holding his right foot upright. Al-Nasaa’i narrated that Ibn
‘Umar said: One of the Sunnahs of prayer is to hold the right foot upright
with the toes facing towards the qiblah and to sit on the left foot. And
there is no report to suggest that the Prophet (blessings and peace of
Allaah be upon him) sat at this point in the prayer in any other way.
And he would place his hands on his thighs and place his
elbows on his thighs and the ends of his fingers on his knees, and he would
clench two of this fingers and make a circle, then he would raise his
finger, supplicating with it and moving it. This was said by Waa’il ibn
Hajar. Then he would say between the two prostrations: “O Allaah, forgive
me, have mercy on me, help me, guide me and grant me provision.” This is how
Ibn ‘Abbaas (may Allaah be pleased with him) narrated it from him (blessings
and peace of Allaah be upon him). Hudhayfah stated that he used to say:
“Lord forgive me, Lord forgive me.” End quote from Zaad al-Ma’aad,
1/230
Shaykh Ibn ‘Uthaymeen (may Allaah have mercy on him) said:
With regard to the left hand, it should be laid flat with all
the fingers hand close together and pointing towards the qiblah and the edge
of the elbow should be at the end of the thigh, meaning that he should not
hold it away from the body; rather it should be resting on the thigh.
As for the right hand, the Sunnah indicates that he should
clench the pinkie finger and ring finger, make a circle with the thumb and
middle finger, and raise the forefinger, moving it when saying the du’aa’.
This is what it says in the reports from Imam Ahmad of the hadeeth of Waa’il
ibn Hajar, with an isnaad of which the author of al-Fath al-Rabbaani
said is jayyid. The commentator on Zaad al-Ma’aad said that it is
saheeh, and that was also the view of Ibn al-Qayyim.
As for the fuqaha’, they said that the right hand should be
laid flat when sitting between the two prostrations, like the left hand, but
following the Sunnah is better, and it is not narrated in the Sunnah in any
hadeeth, whether it be saheeh (sound), da’eef (weak) or hasan (good) that
the right hand should be spread out on the right thigh. Rather it is
narrated that it should be clenched; the pinkie finger and ring finger
should be clenched, and a circle should be made with the thumb and middle
finger, or the middle finger should also be clenched, and the thumb should
be clenched with it when sitting in prayer. Thus it was narrated in general
terms, and in some versions it says, “when he sits for the tashahhud.” Both
versions appear in Saheeh Muslim. So when we take the phrase “when he
sits in prayer”, we say: This is general and applies to all sittings, and
the words “when he sits for the tashahhud” in some versions do not refer to
that specific point in the prayer, because we have a principle which was
mentioned by the scholars of usool, and among those who always mentioned it
was al-Shawkaani in Nayl al-Awtaar and al-Shanqeeti in Adwa’
al-Bayaan, among others, who say that if there is a report stating that
the ruling is broadly application and there is another report which mentions
that ruling in a specific situation, that does not mean that the second
report is specifying and limiting the application of the ruling mentioned in
the first report; rather the specifying and limiting is to be understood as
applying when a report refers to specific situations with a ruling different
from that which is applicable in regular situations.
An example of the first is if I tell you: honour the
students. This is general in meaning and includes all students. Then I tell
you: honour So and so - who is one of the students. Does this imply that I
should not honour other students? The answer is no, but it implies that
there is a particular reason why I singled him out for mention.
And an example of the second is if I say: honour the
students, then I say: do not honour So and so - who is one of the students.
This is specifying, because in the first case I mentioned So and so so as to
apply a ruling to him that is applicable to everyone, because he is one of
the students, but in the second case, I mentioned him so as to apply a
ruling different from the ruling that is applicable to everyone. Hence they
say when defining specification in the context of a ruling that is different
or when excluding some from that ruling: therefore a different ruling must
be applied to them. But if the ruling that applies to these is the same
ruling as is applicable to the others, the majority of scholars of usool
think that it does not indicate exclusivity for this group, as stated by the
author of Adwa’ al-Bayaan. This is clear, as in the examples that we have
given. Based on this, the fact that some of the versions of the hadeeth of
Ibn ‘Umar which refer to clenching the hand in the tashahhud only does not
mean that this is the only point in the prayer in which that is to be done,
because there are other reports which state that this is to be done in any
sitting in the prayer. End quote from al-Sharh al-Mumti’, 3/177.
Thus the evidence for this issue, and where it is to be found
in al-Sharh al-Mumti’, is clear to you.
And Allaah knows best.