Circumambulating the Ka'bah
     Ibn 'Abbas reported that the Messenger of Allah said,    "Circumambulation is a type of prayer, but Allah has    permitted speaking during it. Whoever speaks during it    should only speak good."
         This hadith is related by at-Tirmidhi, ad-Daraqutni,    al-Hakim, Ibn as-Sakin and Ibn Khuzaimah, who classified    it as sahih.
    
Touching a copy of the Qur'an
     Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad related from his father on the    authority of his grandfather that the Prophet, upon whom    be peace, sent a letter to the people of Yemen which    stated, "No one is to touch the Qur'an except one who is    purified."
         This hadith is related by an-Nasa'i, ad-Daraqutni,    al-Baihaqi and al-Athram. Of its chain, Ibn 'Abdul-Barr    says, "It appears to be a continuous transmission."
    'Abdullah ibn 'Umar reported that the Prophet, upon whom    be peace, said, "No one is to touch the Qur'an unless he    has purified himself." (Al-Haithami mentioned it in    Majma' az-Zawaid and said its narrators are trustworthy.)    Apparently, this hadith has a problem. The word "purify"    must have one particular meaning here. Therefore, to say    that one who has a minor defilement may not touch the    Qur'an makes no sense. Concerning Allah's statement,    "...which none touches save the purified," (alWaqi'ah    79), apparently the pronoun refers to "the Book kept    hidden" (from the preceding verse) and that is "the    well-preserved tablet" and the "purified" refers to the    angels, which is similar to the verses, "On honored    scrolls, exalted, purified, (set down) by scribes, noble    and righteous" (Abasah 13-16). Ibn 'Abbas, ashSha'bi,    adh-Dhahak, Zaid ibn 'Ali, al-Mu'aiyad Billah, Dawud, Ibn    Hazm and Hammad ibn Abu Sulaiman are of the opinion that    one who has a minor defilement may touch the Qur'an. Most    of the scholars, however, agree that such people may    recite the Qur'an without touching it.
    
While mentioning the name of Allah
Al-Muhajir ibn Qunfudh related that he greeted the Prophet, upon whom be peace, but that the latter did not return his salutation until he had made ablution: "There is nothing that prevented me from responding to you except that I do no like to mention the name of Allah unless I am in a state of purity." Said Qatadah, "Because of this, al-Hassan hated to recite the Qur'an or mention Allah's name unless he had performed ablution. (Related by Amad, Abu Dawud, an-Nasa'i and Ibn Majah.) Raeported Abu Juhaim ibn al-Harith, "The Prophet, upon whom be peace, met a person at the well of Jaml, who greeted him, but he did not return his greeting until he had wiped his face and hands." (Related by Ahmad, al-Bukhari, Muslim, Abu Dawud and an-Nasa'i.) This action was one of preference, not of obligation. Mentioning the name of Allah is permissible for the one who is in a state of purity, one who has a minor impurity, a person in post-sex impurity, or one who is standing, sitting, and so on. Said 'Aishah, "The Messenger of Allah used to remember Allah at all times." (Related by "the five," except for an-Nasa'i.) Al-Bukhari recorded it in mu'alliq form.) Reported 'Ali, "The Messenger of Allah would come from relieving himself, recite to us and eat meat with us. Nothing would stop him from the Qur'an except post-sex impurity." (Related by "the five." At-Tirmidhi and Ibn as-Sakin categorized it as sahih.)
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"When a person dies, his works end, except for three: ongoing charity, knowledge that is benefited from, and a righteous child who prays for him."
Prophet Mohammed (PBUH)
"The best of what a man leaves behind are three: a righteous child who supplicates for him, ongoing charity the reward of which reaches him, and knowledge that is acted upon after him."
Sunan Ibn Mājah
"Every day two angels come down from Heaven and one of them says, 'O Allah! Compensate every person who spends in Your Cause,' and the other (angel) says, 'O Allah! Destroy every miser.'"
Sahih Bukhari