We live in a time when almost everything depends on technology. From communication to navigation, everything runs on the internet, GPS, and electricity. But what happens if these fail?
Problem:
Outages occur more often than we think. Networks go down. Apps don't work. Batteries run out. In times of crisis, such as power outages, geopolitical tensions, or natural disasters, the fragility of this dependence becomes clear.
Yet many Muslims daily rely on apps for their prayer times and Qibla direction.
Confrontation:
But prayer is not an optional act.
It is an obligation, at fixed times.
“Indeed, prayer has been decreed upon the believers at specified times.”
— Surah An-Nisa (4:103)
If technology fails, that obligation doesn't disappear.
So the real question is:
Are you prepared to maintain your prayer, without being dependent on external systems?
Insight:
Generations before us had no apps.
No internet. No notifications.
Yet they did not miss their prayers.
They relied on knowledge, structure, and tools that always worked, regardless of circumstances.
Conclusion:
Technology is a tool. Not a foundation.
Anyone who becomes completely dependent on systems beyond their control risks losing their structure when it truly matters.



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