Faith & Spirituality

How Making Niyyah in Rajab Transforms the Next Three Months? - Light Upon Light by IslamiCity - Episode 40

Source: IslamiCity   January 6, 2026
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Rajab arrives quietly.

It does not demand the discipline of Ramadan, nor does it carry the anticipation of Eid. It comes softly-almost unnoticed-yet it holds immense spiritual weight. Rajab is not a month of obligation. It is a month of orientation.

Allah tells us in the Qur'an:

"Indeed, the number of months with Allah is twelve months... of them, four are sacred." (Surah At-Tawbah 9:36)
Rajab is one of these sacred months-honored by Allah Himself. And when Allah honors time, it is an invitation for us to honor our intentions within it.

Nothing in Islam Begins With Action

In Islam, transformation does not begin with action. It begins with niyyah.

The Prophet ď·ş said:

"Actions are only by intentions, and every person will have only what they intended." (Bukhari & Muslim)
This is not merely a legal maxim. It is a spiritual law. Your prayer is not prayer without intention. Your fasting is not fasting without intention. And your Ramadan is not transformative without intention.

Rajab teaches us a critical truth: you do not prepare for Ramadan with your body first-you prepare with your heart.

Rajab, Sha'ban, and Ramadan: One Journey

Rajab comes before Sha'ban. Sha'ban comes before Ramadan.Three months. One journey. The scholars described this progression beautifully:
  • Rajab is the month of planting seeds.
  • Sha'ban is the month of watering them.
  • Ramadan is the month of harvesting.
But no one plants seeds without deciding what they want to grow. That decision-quiet, sincere, unseen-is niyyah.

If Rajab passes without intention, Sha'ban becomes rushed preparation, and Ramadan becomes exhaustion instead of elevation.

Why Two People Leave Ramadan Differently

Every Ramadan, millions fast the same days and pray the same nights. Yet one person leaves forgiven, softened, and transformed. Another leaves tired, unchanged, and spiritually distant. The difference is not stamina. The difference is intention.

Allah says:

"Say: Each works according to his own disposition, and your Lord knows best who is most guided in way." (Surah Al-Isra 17:84)
Your inner direction determines your outer outcome. Rajab gives us space to set that direction before the intensity begins.

The Questions Rajab Asks

Rajab invites honest reflection:
  • Why do I want Ramadan to come?
  • What do I want Allah to change in me?
  • What am I willing to let go of before I stand before Him?
The early Muslims took Rajab seriously-not through invented rituals, but through inner readiness. They would make du'a:
"O Allah, bless us in Rajab and Sha'ban, and allow us to reach Ramadan."
Embedded in this du'a is a deeper plea: Allow us to reach Ramadan with hearts already awake.

Intention Is a Direction, Not a Sentence

Niyyah is not a phrase whispered once. It is a direction chosen daily.

In Rajab, you might intend:

  • To repair your relationship with the Qur'an
  • To soften a hardened heart
  • To leave one sin-just one-sincerely
  • To pray with presence, not perfection
  • To enter Ramadan seeking Allah, not aesthetics
Allah promises:
"And those who strive for Us-We will surely guide them to Our ways." (Surah Al-'Ankabut 29:69)
Notice Allah does not say those who succeed. He says those who strive. And striving always begins with intention.

Quiet Repentance in Rajab

Rajab is also a month of repentance-not dramatic repentance, but quiet repentance. The kind where you sit alone and say: "O Allah, I want to come back."

And Allah responds:

"Say, O My servants who have transgressed against themselves, do not despair of the mercy of Allah." (Surah Az-Zumar 39:53)
When you make niyyah to return, Allah meets you with mercy before you even arrive.

The Weight of an Unseen Intention

Intentions in Rajab are powerful because they are unseen. No one applauds them. No one records them-except Allah. The Prophet ď·ş said:
"Whoever sincerely asks Allah for martyrdom, Allah will grant him the status of a martyr even if he dies on his bed."
This is the weight of intention. Sometimes Allah rewards the intention even if the action never fully comes.

So what if you intend in Rajab to be sincere in Ramadan-even if you fall short? Allah still sees the heart that tried. Ramadan does not suddenly change people. It reveals what they prepared for. Allah says:

"Allah is the Light of the heavens and the earth... light upon light." (Surah An-Nur 24:35)
One sincere intention becomes light.

Another adds more light. Until the heart is illuminated enough to recognize Allah again. As Rajab passes, do not ask: How much have I done? Ask instead: Where is my heart facing? Make your intention now-even if it feels small, even if it feels fragile. A sincere niyyah made in Rajab can carry you through Sha'ban and transform your Ramadan. And Allah knows best.

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Source: IslamiCity   January 6, 2026
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