Imam Ibn ul Qayyim al Jawziyyah
35.  Remembrance is easy for the servant-whether he lies in bed or journeys,  in health or in illness, in comfort and luxury, in his daily work,  standing, sitting or lying down, on his way or at home. No [other] act  can be performed so often and in so many situations. In fact, it is so  easy that he could sleep in his bed and still be ahead of the one who  stands [in worship] but is heedless. The sleeper rises having traversed a  great distance, all the while stretched out on his bed; whereas the one  standing heedlessly rises seated on his mount. ‘And that is the grace  of God which He gives to whomever He pleases.’ [57:21]
It  is recounted that there once was an ascetic [rajul min al-`ibad] who  stayed the night with a man as a guest. The ascetic spent the entire  night standing in prayer, while the host was stretched out in his bed.  When he rose in the morning, the ascetic said to the host, ‘The caravan  has gone on before you,’ [sabaqak al-rakb, by which he meant, ‘I have  surpassed you in the journey to God’] or words to that effect. To which  the [host] replied, ‘It is unimportant that one spend the night  travelling and then wake up with the caravan. What is important is that  one spend the night in bed but wake up having crossed a great distance.’
This  and similar sayings have beneficial and detrimental aspects. If they  lead someone to think that by lying in bed he can surpass a person who  stands in prayer, then they are false. Rather, they refer to the one who  lies in bed but his heart is attached to his Lord; the love of his  heart cleaves to the Throne, and so he passes the night encircling the  Throne with the angels. The man himself has passed away from the world  and what it contains. The only thing that keeps him from standing in  prayer is some hindrance, such as physical pain, cold or fear of being  seen by enemies pursuing him, or some other excuse. He lies in bed, but  God knows best what is in his heart.
The  other person, however, stands in prayer and recites. In his heart is  the desire to be seen, to impress others, to have some rank or praise  from them. Or else, his heart is one place and his body in another. And  God knows best what is in his heart.
There  is no doubt that the one in bed will rise having far surpassed the one  who stands, because [the value of] an act rests in the heart, not the  body: it depends on the dweller, not the dwelling. [The meaning of an]  expression is in its first motion [that is, whatever intention motivates  someone to a word or deed, determines the meaning of that word or  deed], and it is remembrance which inspires the dweller’s resolve,  stimulates the love that is dormant [in his soul] and resurrects the  quest that has died.
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