Muwalat (Continuity in Prayer)
The requirement of continuous and coherent performance of the prayer's parts.
Muwalat (Arabic: موالاة) means "continuity" or "coherence" and is the requirement that the prayer's parts be performed in a coherent, uninterrupted sequence. The prayer should flow naturally from one action to the next without unnecessary pauses or interruptions.
In Shia fiqh, muwalat is a wajib condition: if a long pause (tawaquf) occurs between the prayer's parts that breaks the natural coherence, the prayer may become invalid. For example, if one stops in the middle of the prayer for a long period without valid reason, one must start the prayer over.
Imam al-Sadiq (peace be upon him) said about wudu (which also requires muwalat): "If you wash your face and then wait so long that it dries before you wash your arms, your wudu is invalid — you must start over" (Al-Kafi, vol. 3). The same principle applies to prayer: continuity is essential.
Exceptions to muwalat include: a brief pause due to forgetfulness (one can continue), necessary interruptions such as protecting oneself from danger, and Imam al-Sadiq's permission for a brief pause to answer a parent or other necessary communication in extreme circumstances. Islamic scholars explain that muwalat does not require haste — one should pray calmly and thoughtfully — but one should avoid unnecessary pauses that break the prayer's coherence. Muwalat ensures that prayer remains a focused and coherent act of worship.
Related terms
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Salat al-Jama'ah (Congregational Prayer)
The congregational prayer, where Muslims pray together in rows behind an imam.
Niyyah (Intention)
The conscious intention in the heart to perform a specific prayer.
Sunan Ibn Majah (Ibn Majah's Hadith Collection)
The sixth of the canonical hadith collections in Sunni Islam with unique narrations.
Adl (God's Justice)
The doctrine of God's absolute justice — the second article of faith in Shia Islam.
Ijtihad (Independent Legal Reasoning)
The independent interpretive effort to derive legal rules from the Islamic sources.