Tartib (Order in Prayer)
The correct sequence of the prayer's actions and the daily prayers.
Tartib (Arabic: ترتيب) means "order" or "arrangement" and is an important principle in Shia fiqh that requires the prayer's actions to be performed in the correct sequence, and the daily prayers to be prayed in the right order.
Within prayer, tartib requires that the actions are performed in this order: qiyam (standing) with recitation, ruku (bowing), qawmah (rising), first sujud, juloos (sitting), second sujud. If one deliberately changes this order — e.g., performing sujud before ruku — the prayer is invalid. Imam al-Sadiq (peace be upon him) said: "Prayer has a specific form — the one who changes it has invalidated it" (Wasail al-Shia, vol. 6).
Between the daily prayers, tartib requires that Dhuhr is prayed before Asr, and Maghrib is prayed before Isha. Fajr has its own time window. Imam al-Baqir (peace be upon him) said: "Do not pray Asr before Dhuhr or Isha before Maghrib" (Al-Kafi, vol. 3). If one mistakenly prays Asr before Dhuhr, one must pray Dhuhr and then repeat Asr.
Tartib also applies to qada prayers (makeup prayers): they must be prayed in the order they were missed, if the order is known. Islamic scholars explain that tartib is a wajib condition for the prayer's validity, and that deliberate neglect of tartib invalidates the prayer. The tartib principle reflects Islam's general emphasis on order, discipline, and respect for the divine arrangement in worship.
Related terms
Isnad (Chain of Narration)
The chain of narrators connecting a hadith back to the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him).
Du'a Kumayl (Kumayl's Supplication)
One of the most famous Shia supplications, taught by Imam Ali to Kumayl ibn Ziyad.
Salat al-Tasbih (The Prayer of Glorification)
A special voluntary prayer with 300 tasbih recitations, recommended for forgiveness of sins.
Minaret (Prayer Tower)
The mosque's tower, from which the adhan (call to prayer) is traditionally recited.
Usul al-Fiqh (Principles of Jurisprudence)
Islamic legal theory that defines the methods for deriving legal rules from the sacred sources.
Sunnah Mu'akkadah (Emphasized Sunnah)
Voluntary prayers that the Prophet (peace be upon him) performed regularly and rarely omitted.