Praise be to Allaah.
Al-Bukhaari (1197) and Muslim (827) narrated from Abu Sa’eed
al-Khudri (may Allaah be pleased with him) that he said: “There is no prayer
after ‘Asr prayer until the sun has set and there is no prayer after Fajr
prayer until the sun has risen.”
The words “There is no prayer” include all prayers, but some
of the prayers are excluded on the basis of texts and others are excluded
according to scholarly consensus.
That includes:
Firstly: repeating the prayer in congregation, such as if a
man prays Fajr in his mosque, then goes to another mosque and finds them
praying Fajr, then he may pray with them, and there is no sin or prohibition
on him. The evidence for that is that the Prophet (peace and blessings
of Allaah be upon him) prayed Fajr in Mina one day, and when he finished he
saw two men who had not prayed with him, and asked them, “Why did you not
pray?” They said: We prayed in our camp. He said: “If you have prayed in
your camp then you come to the mosque of the congregation, then pray with
them.” This was after Fajr prayer.
Secondly: When a person has done tawaaf around the Ka’bah, it
is Sunnah to pray two rak’ahs after tawaaf behind Maqaam Ibraaheem. If he
does tawaaf after Fajr prayer, he may pray the two rak’ahs for tawaaf. The
evidence of that is the words of the Prophet (peace and blessings of
Allaah be upon him): “O Banu ‘Abd Manaaf, do not prevent anyone from
circumambulating this House or praying here at any time they want, night or
day.”
Some of the scholars quoted this verse as evidence that when
a person has done tawaaf he may offer the two rak’ahs even at times when
prayer is prohibited.
Thirdly: If a person enters the mosque on a Friday when the
khateeb is delivering the khutbah, if that is when the sun is at its zenith,
it is permissible for him to pray tahiyyat al-masjid (two rak’ahs to greet
the mosque), because the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon
him) was delivering the khutbah to the people when a man came in and sat
down, and he said to him: “Did you pray?” He said: No. He said: “Get up and
pray two rak’ahs, but make them brief.”
Fourthly: When entering the mosque. If a person enters the
mosque after Fajr prayer or after ‘Asr prayer, he should not sit down until
he has prayed two rak’ahs, because there is a reason for this prayer.
Fifthly: Solar eclipse. If the sun is eclipsed after ‘Asr
prayer, we say: The eclipse prayer is Sunnah, so he should offer the eclipse
prayer. But if we say that the eclipse prayer is obligatory, then the matter
is clear, because there is no time at all when an obligatory prayer is
forbidden.
Sixthly: After doing wudoo’. If a person does wudoo’, it is
permissible for him to pray two rak’ahs at a time when prayer is otherwise
forbidden, because there is a reason for this prayer.
Seventhly: Istikhaarah prayer. If a person wants to pray
istikhaarah and ask Allaah for guidance concerning a decision, he should
pray two rak’ahs, then recite the du’aa’ of istikhaarah. If he is faced with
a matter that he cannot delay, he may pray istikhaarah concerning it at a
time when prayer is otherwise forbidden. That is permissible.
To sum up, this hadeeth (“There is no prayer after Fajr
prayer and there is no prayer after ‘Asr prayer”) is specific; if a person
offers a prayer for which there is a reason, then it is not prohibited.
What I have mentioned is the view of al-Shaafa’i (may Allaah
have mercy on him) and one of the two views narrated from Imam Ahmad, as
well as being the view favoured by Ibn Taymiyah (may Allaah have mercy on
him) and it is the correct view, because there is no prohibition on the
prayers for which there is a reason. End quote.
Shaykh Muhammad ibn ‘Uthaymeen (may Allaah have mercy on him).
Majmoo’ Fataawa al-Shaykh Ibn ‘Uthaymeen (14/344).