The First Question on the Day of Judgment
đ§© âIf the prayer is sound, the rest of the deeds will be sound. If it is corrupt, the rest will be corrupt.â â Prophet Muhammad ï·ș

Khalid Rahman was a well-known name in his city. A man in his early forties, he had built a real estate empire from the ground up. He lived in a luxurious home, drove the latest electric cars, wore designer suits, and often gave to charity. His reputation in business was pristine. People respected him. Some envied him.
But there was something missing.
Khalid hadnât prayed regularly in years. He prayed only on Eid, sometimes on Fridays, and when visiting his mother. She always cried and begged him:
âMy son, do you not realize that prayer is the first thing you will be asked about on the Day of Judgment?â
He would kiss her forehead and say,
âMama, Allah is Merciful. He knows Iâm busy. I give sadaqah. I help people. Doesnât that count?â
His motherâs heart broke every time. She would whisper in her du'as for her son's heart to awaken before it was too late.
One night, after a long day of business meetings, Khalid fell asleep in his lavish penthouse suite. The city skyline glittered outside his glass window.
But in his dream, there was no city. No lights.
Only darkness.
He was standing alone in a vast, endless desert. The air was thick. Heavy. There was no sound, yet there was a pressure in his ears like thunder waiting to explode.
Suddenly, he heard a voiceâmighty and shaking the earth.
âBring forth Khalid Rahman!â
He turned and saw angelsâmassive, glowing beings with eyes like burning stars. They grabbed him and led him to a gigantic plain, where millions stood, trembling, eyes cast down.
He realized what this was: the Day of Judgment.
In front of him stood a throne, the Arsh of Allah, so vast that the heavens bowed before it. Light more powerful than the sun emanated from beyond the veil.
Then a book was placed before himâhis Book of Deeds.
He looked inside⊠and froze.
Page after page was empty. His prayers were missing. His five daily salatâgone. All those years. All the missed Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha.
He heard the voice again:
âThe Prophet Muhammad ï·ș said:
âThe first thing a servant will be asked about on the Day of Judgment is Salah (prayer).
If it is sound, all of his deeds will be sound.
If it is corrupt, all his deeds will be corrupt.ââ
â (Tirmidhi, Hadith 413)
Khalid screamed:
âBut I gave to charity! I built mosques! I helped orphans!â
The angels replied:
âYou abandoned what was Fard (obligatory). Prayer is the covenant between man and His Lord. You broke that covenant.â
Suddenly, the sky tore open. Flames emerged from the cracks. From beneath the earth, smoke and screams rose.
Khalid saw people being draggedâby their faces, by chains, calling out for mercy.
He felt the ground open under his feet. The angels stepped back.
âTake him.â
Dark shadows rose, whispering in twisted tongues, pulling him toward the abyss. He fought, screamed, begged:
âPlease! Just one more chance! One more day to pray! Please!â
And thenâ
He woke up.
His body was drenched in sweat. The time on his clock: 4:58 AM. Fajr time.
Without thinking, he leapt from bed, made wudhu, and placed his forehead on the prayer mat for the first time in years.
Tears flowed. Not just from fearâbut from relief.
He had been given a warning. A glimpse. A gift from Allah.
From that day forward, Khalid never missed another prayer. Five times a day, he stood before His Lord. The same man who once neglected the call of prayer was now the first to answer it.
đ Hadith Reference:
The Messenger of Allah ï·ș said:
âThe first deed for which a person will be brought to account on the Day of Judgment will be his prayer. If it is sound, then the rest of his deeds will be sound. And if it is bad, then the rest of his deeds will be bad.â
â Tirmidhi, Hadith 413
Salah, Day of Judgment, scary hadith, Islamic horror, prayer neglect, reminder, death, accountability
About the Creator
Razu Islam â Lifestyle & Futuristic Writer
âïž I'm Md Razu Islam â a storyteller exploring future lifestyles, digital trends, and self-growth. With 8+ years in digital marketing, I blend creativity and tech in every article.
đ© Connect: [email protected]


Comments (1)
This story really makes you think. It shows how easy it can be to get caught up in worldly things and neglect our spiritual duties. I've seen people focus so much on work and success that they forget about what truly matters. Like Khalid, we might think our good deeds are enough, but prayer is a fundamental part of our faith. Have you ever seen someone make a similar mistake in real life? How did it turn out for them?