Mustahab (Recommended)
Actions that are recommended but not obligatory, and that give extra reward.
Mustahab (Arabic: مستحب) means "recommended" or "desirable" and refers to actions that are recommended in Islamic law but not obligatory. Performing a mustahab action earns reward, but omitting it is not a sin. In the context of prayer, there are numerous mustahab actions that enrich and deepen the prayer.
Mustahab actions in connection with prayer include: adhan and iqamah (call to prayer), nawafil (voluntary prayers), qunut in the second rak'ah, Tasbihat al-Zahra after the prayer, recitation of Ayat al-Kursi and dhikr after the prayer, praying in a mosque, praying in congregation, and praying at the prayer's preferred time (waqt al-fadilah).
Imam al-Sadiq (peace be upon him) said: "Allah's servant draws nearest to Him through the obligatory actions. But then he draws nearer through nawafil (voluntary actions), until Allah loves him. And when Allah loves him, He becomes his hearing, sight, and hand" (Al-Kafi, vol. 2). This hadith qudsi (divine hadith) shows that mustahab actions are the path to Allah's special nearness.
In Shia fiqh, there are hundreds of mustahab actions related to prayer, dhikr, du'a, fasting, and other forms of worship. Mafatih al-Jinan by Shaykh Abbas al-Qummi is essentially a collection of mustahab actions organized by time and occasion. For the believer, mustahab actions are an opportunity to earn extra reward, strengthen one's connection to Allah, and enrich one's spiritual practice without the obligation that accompanies wajib actions.
Related terms
Mutahhirat (Purifying Agents)
The agents and methods that purify impure things according to Shia fiqh.
Adab al-Salah (Prayer Etiquette)
The recommended norms and inner attitudes that enrich the prayer.
Ma'ad (Resurrection)
Belief in resurrection and judgment day — the fifth article of faith in Shia Islam.
Haram (Forbidden)
Actions that are strictly forbidden in Islamic law.
Sunan Abu Dawud (Abu Dawud's Hadith Collection)
One of the six canonical hadith collections in Sunni Islam with a special focus on legal narrations.
Surah Al-Ikhlas (Chapter of Sincerity)
The 112th chapter of the Quran, declaring Allah's absolute oneness.