How Praying Gave Me Community
A third major change when I started praying was becoming part of the Muslim community. By wearing a scarf, I met other Muslims on campus. By attending Friday prayers, I started to meet other Muslims at the mosque. I started attending educational programs, and when my parents kicked me out, through the mosque I found a Muslim roommate.
The five daily prayers are a kind of glue that holds the Muslim community together–at first it just gave me a reason to socialize with other Muslims, though eventually they became some of my closest friends.
How Praying Taught Me Quran
One more major change I noticed after praying was that I wanted to learn more Quran.
Reading the same surah time after time began to feel less satisfying, knowing there are over 600 more pages to be memorize and recite.
Prayer gave me my first motivation to learn to read Arabic, and to start memorizing Quran–plus daily opportunities to review what I had already memorized. That eventually led me to study Arabic more deeply when the opportunities arose.
Alhamdulillah, reading the Quran in Arabic, with comprehension, and memorizing it, are now all part of my daily routine. And daily prayers are still a motivation to keep learning, to improve my prayers.
Conclusion
The Quran says:
{We have not sent down to you the Quran that you be distressed.} (20:2)
Unfortunately I was distressed when I began my journey as a Muslim, but once daily prayer became part of my routine, my life changed for the better.
Establishing prayer and making it part of your daily routine, can change your life too, Insha’Allah.
(From Discovering Islam’s archive)