7. SUNNA & HADITH

 

 

 

The Sources of Islam are, in order of importance:- (1) Allah, (2) Quran, (3) Hadith, (4) Aql (Intelligence or the use of the faculties, for observation, reasoning and questioning. A distinction can be made between Tafsir, Qias, Ijma, Istihsaan, Istislaah). (5) Urf and Adat (Practices and Customs).

It is supposed by most Muslims that the Quran is the first source of Islam. But this can be refuted on the following grounds:-

(a) We accept the Quran only because it is a revelation from Allah.

(b) The Quran tells us that no one can accept or understand the Quran except when guided by Allah. 10:101

(c) The Quran says:- ”Lo! The guidance of Allah Himself is sufficient guidance.” 2:120

(d) Muslims must accept that Allah has sent scriptures other than the Quran, specially the Torah and the Gospel.

(e) Islam is continuous with the religion sent through Abraham, Jacob, Moses, Jesus and many other prophets sent throughout the world. All true religion is Islam. The word Muslim is applied to all who submit to Allah whatever Prophet they follow. 2:213, 3:84 5:48 5:69, 10:48 22:78

(f) No distinction is to be made between the different Prophets and between them and Allah because they all submit to Allah, though some excel over others. 2:253, 285, 4:150-151, 3:81

There is no dispute among Muslims that the Quran is a fundamental source of Islam. Some go as far as saying that it is the only acceptable source. But in view of the above this cannot be accepted. But, though caution is required, it is also unacceptable owing to the following:-

The Hadith are the third source of Islam after the Quran. These are books containing the traditions (Sunna), reports by third parties of the sayings and doings of the Prophet Muhammad and his companions. They are equivalent to the Christian Gospels. There are several compilations of these traditions in two sets - those honoured by the Sunnis and those honoured by the Shiahs. The Sunnis have six Authentic Books by Bukhari, Muslim, AbuDaud, Ibn Maja, Tirmidhi and al-Nasa‘i. The Shiahs have four, by al-Kulaini, ibn Babuwayh, al-Murtada and Jafar Muhammad al-Tusi.

In order to assess the importance of the Hadith the following facts should be noted:-

(1) The Sunna is justified as follows:-

(a) Most people have no experience of God. It is a Prophet who receives revelation from Allah and tells us about Allah. There can be no religion without a Prophet. He is the bridge between Allah and mankind.

(b) The Quran tells us:-

"Verily in the Messenger of Allah ye have a good example for him who looks unto Allah and the Last Day, and Remembers Allah much." 33:21

"Say (O Muhammad unto mankind: If ye love Allah, follow me; Allah will love you and forgive you your sins. Allah is Forgiving, Merciful." 3:31

"But nay, by thy Lord, they will not believe in truth until they make thee (Muhammad) judge of what is in dispute between them and find within themselves no dislike of that which you decide and submit with full submission....whoso obeys Allah AND the Messenger, they are those unto whom Allah hath shown favour, of the Prophets and the saints and the martyrs and the righteous. The best of company are they." 4:65, 69

(c) There have been other Prophets, but though Muslims are required to make no distinction between the Prophets, it is obvious that each succeeding Prophet brings something that is suitable for his times and the coming age, and he brings something new and adds to the religion. Thus religion is completed through the Prophet Muhammad (saw) and it the Quran which he brought which tells us that all the Prophets are to be accepted. Muslims are now distinct from other religions by the fact that they follow the perfected Islam which comes through Muhammad (saw) and not a previous one. However, it is important to realise that this religion is not called Mohammedanism, but Islam. It is Universal.

(d) The following verse has been used not only to establish the authority of the Prophet but also of others, particularly some of the descendants of the Prophet as Imams.

"O ye who believe! Obey Allah and obey the Messenger and those of you who are in authority; and if ye have a dispute concerning any matter, refer it to Allah and the Messenger if ye are in truth believers in Allah and the Last Day. That is better and more seemly in the end.2 4:59

This verse does not, in fact, require us to submit a disagreement to this third kind of authority and does not establish the authority of Imams in general or any Imam in particular. This third type of authority may consist of those whom the Prophet or the Caliphs had appointed over a community to fulfil some kind of administrative function. It could apply today to government officials. An authority could be anyone who has achieved excellence as a result of piety, research and knowledge or ability. An expert or teacher is an authority for the pupil or non-expert. Asking Allah could be done through prayer, studying the scriptures, exploration, investigating or scientific research. While the Prophet was alive people could ask him, but now that he has departed one could consult his Sunna.

"Lo! We reveal unto thee the Scripture with the Truth, that you may judge between mankind by that which Allah shows you..." 4:105

See also 2:104, 6:46, 20:2-4, 33:6, 21, 36:2 68:4, 72:15-16

 

(2) The main objections to the Hadith and the Sunna as sources of Islam are that this involves idolatry. Allah has no partners and Islam requires exclusive submission to Allah. The Quran asks us to judge all things by the Quran. It is the criterion. 2:213, 3:55, 6:45, 25:1, 86:13 54:6 6:154

Christians idolised their Prophet so much that they elevated him to the status of God, and then in order to retain Unity had to invent the doctrine of the Trinity. Apart from the Quran, the Prophet (saw) himself insisted that he and all Prophets were human beings who had submitted to Allah and is reported to have told his followers not to idolise him as the Christians had done with Jesus.

According to one Hadith the Prophet is reported to have said:-

"I leave behind me two things for your guidance, the Quran and my Sunna."

But this argument gets us into a vicious circle. If we reject the Sunna then we must also reject this report. We must, of course, then also reject the report forbidding us to idolise him. On the other hand if we reject the Sunna, then we disobey the Quran which requires us to obey the Messenger. Some Muslims reject Hadith on the grounds that they not the Sunna of the Prophet but reports by others and collections by third parties. But that is like saying the Quran is not the Word of God but reports by others collected under the instructions of the Caliph Uthman. The rejection of Hadith as a whole cannot, therefore, be justified.

However, there is no question of making the Hadith equal to the Quran. The Quran contains that which was directly revealed to the Prophet and the Hadith contain reports of what he said and did as a leader of the Umma. They are not revelations but interpretations and applications of the revelations. We do not reject the text books on science, engineering, history, law or any other subject. We need not, therefore, reject the Hadith either.

 

(3) The word Hadith means news, story or message and the word Sunna means law, custom, behaviour or system. The Prophet was said to be the Quran in action. As a person who had Surrendered to Allah the Prophet lived his life according to the Quran. It is, therefore, argued that there is no separate Sunna of the Prophet. In the Quran, the words Hadith and  Sunna are used as follows:-

"And of mankind is he who upholds vain hadith in order to mislead others from the path of Allah without knowledge, and to make it a mockery. For such there is a shameful doom." 31:6

"Allah hath now revealed the fairest of hadith, a scripture self-consistent..." 39:23

"These are the signs of Allah which We recite unto thee (Muhammad) with truth. Then which hadith besides the revelation of Allah will they believe?" 45:6

It is obvious, therefore, that we ought to make no distinction between the Quran and the words and actions of the Prophet. This also follows from the verse which tells us that we must make no distinction between the Prophets and Allah (4:150-151) and that obeying the Prophet is obeying Allah (4:80).

The Sunna is judged by the Quran, not the other way round. There cannot be a contradiction between the Sunna and the Quran. There may, however, be errors in reporting or understanding those reports. The Quran must take priority. However, the Sunna may be regarded as interpretations or application of the Quran for particular situations.

 

(4) The Hadith were not written down during the life time of the Prophet Muhammad, nor during the lives of the first four Righteous Caliphs. The Prophet forbade the writing down of his words other than the Quran, which was direct revelation, because he did not want his words to be mixed up with the Quran. The Four Righteous Caliphs did likewise. The Hadith were, therefore, an oral tradition until they were collected and written down between 210 and 410 years after the Prophet‘s death. There may well be errors in it, due to lapses of memory and distortions in the transmission.

 

(5) After the death of the Prophet, the tribalism and rivalry which had divided the Arabs before the Prophet again began to raise its head. In particular there was rivalry between the supporters of Abu Bakr and Ali and later between the supporters of Ali and those who supported the Caliphs Omar and Uthman. In support of this political struggle a great number of Hadith were invented by either side. There are said to be 300,000 hadith.

Later, a Science of Hadith was developed in order to sort out the genuine from the spurious hadith. There are five degrees of certitude from maximum to minimum according to degree of witnessing, the veracity of the witnesses, the chain of reporters (asnad) and the report (matn) itself. The highest degree of certainty is to be given to the literal report when the message comes through several transmitters with the same words. It becomes hypothetical when there are different words, additions or omissions. Time is also important - earlier reports are abrogated by later ones. The greater the number of transmitters the greater the certainty, provided they are independent and no possibility of collusion or a common original source exists. There must be homogeneity of expression over time and there must be a consistency of the report with sensory evidence, reason, other hadith and the Quran, and with the laws of nature so as to prevent superstitions from creeping in. Unilateral reports require that the reporter is just, sincere, objective, intelligent, with good hearing, memory and speech so that he can be trusted to have transmitted hadith accurately.

No such criteria as have been applied to the Hadith were originally applied to the New Testament, though Christian and other scholars have recently applied some of these criteria to Bible criticism.

 

(6) It is also necessary to add a few more criteria:-

Most of these reports are like snapshots rather than systematic expositions on a subject. This may be because the words were overheard by someone who did not know what was being discussed. He did not know the context, and we all know that meanings change when the context changes. It is possible to say one thing to one person and it’s opposite to another and still create the same effect. You can, for instance, tell a person to use less force if he is using too much or tell another to use more force because he is using too little. You can tell someone something in a metaphorical manner if he understands that metaphor, but speak literally to someone else or use a different set of metaphors. Change in circumstances may lead to change in instructions. It is also necessary to know whether something was an instruction and whether it applied to a particular person only or to a particular circumstance, or whether it was a recommendation, or a statement of fact, or an observation or opinion, whether it was said seriously, or light heartedly or in jest or as a test.

Some Hadith may be regarded as weak because there has been only one transmitter or because the chain of transmission cannot be verified. But the Hadith may be valuable, nevertheless, because it is consistent with and illuminates a verse or a number of verses in the Quran. Some of the Hadith are comments by close companions of the Prophet, those who were taught more intimately and thoroughly than others.

 

(7) The Prophet was an Arab. His language, dress, manners and behaviour were, therefore, conditioned by his culture, place and times. Had he been born in another culture and another time and place these things would have been different. It is necessary to differentiate between what is accidental and what is essential to the religion he taught. Some of his behaviour and actions were governed by the circumstances and the nature of the people he was surrounded with. Given a different kinds of people the same goals can be gained by a different set of actions. The need for the readiness for battle, for instance, is reduced when one is not surrounded by hostiles ready to fight.

Whereas the Quran contains mostly that which is Universal and can, therefore, be applied to a variety of different cases, the Hadith contain specific applications of the Quran to the particular circumstances which arose in the times and place in which the Prophet found himself. If this is not understood we get extreme rigidity and mal-adaptation because of the tendency to imitate these specific actions when the circumstances have changed. It is not difficult to see that the study and application of the Quran leads to flexibility, adaptability and the use of the God given human faculties. But the rigid adherence to the Hadith leads to stagnation and unintelligence. However, it is still possible to learn from the Hadith how to interpret, adapt and apply the Quran.

 

(7) Political struggles, we have seen, led to the proliferation of invented hadith. This had several consequences:-

(a) The hadith were compiled into several different books. This led to sectarianism, something which the Quran would have made impossible since this is a single book the whole of which has to be accepted by the believer. It is, of course, still possible for different believers to concentrate their attention on different sets of verses in the Quran or to interpret some of the verses differently, thus creating sects. But it is much easier to do so when one can choose different books.

(b) One consequence of this is that in order to maintain sectarianism it is necessary to elevate the importance of the differences. This implies that the Hadith are used to replace the Quran. It becomes practically the first source. Indeed, the Quran itself complains that this was beginning to happen. (23:71)

The result of this sectarianism is mental fixation on certain distinguishing doctrines. These have to be clung to without understanding and all progress in knowledge comes to a dead stop. The Quran itself is constantly pointing to nature, history and man himself, encouraging him to seek knowledge and apply the faculties given to him by Allah and to develop. 32:9, 17:36-37, 6:107 13:19. 91:7-10, 90:8-17. Islam requires that everyone strives and that those who possess more knowledge and understanding help those who have less and those who have less learn from those who have more. Inevitably this upward motion implies that people will be on different rungs of the ladder. There will be differences of opinion because of differences in experiences and circumstances, differences in quantity and quality of knowledge, different degrees of integration and application. Each will then differentiate between truth and his own opinions, suspend his judgements or hold his opinions tentatively being willing to replace lesser truth with the greater. But this cannot happen when fixations are created. We get dogmatism, stagnation as well as conflicts between the sects.

(c) Another consequence is that religion requires experts and specialists to deal with all these Hadith. The majority of people being busy with the affairs of their lives relinquish their responsibilities to seek religious knowledge and leave it to a the few who now constitute a self-appointed priesthood. They gain control over the people and become concerned mainly with the protection and enhancement of their privileges, prestige and power. These people being specialist in religion seldom have any knowledge of the developments in science, history, political and economic or anything else which also affects changes in language. They cannot keep up with modern trends. They tend to adhere to the letter of the hadith and Quran rather than their meaning and significance, the forms rather than the spirit, the vessel rather than the contents. They bring the use of Aql, intelligence to a stop. The greater their maladjustment to the real changing situation, the greater becomes their frustration and passion. This often leads them to incitement of violence against variation which is regarded as a threat.

(d) Based on Hadith and Quran a great number of other works have been produced by Muslims over the centuries. They are meant to explain and elaborate, but each tends to select a different set of verses from the Quran and Hadith. Some of these works have themselves become the main focus of attention and the source of Islam displacing both the Quran and Hadith. This has increased sectarianism and schisms. As the number of ideas increase and life becomes more complex owing to the cumulative effects of human activity, then owing to the limited capacity of each individual they can only absorb small portions of the totality. This inevitably means an increase in diversity. The danger of misunderstanding and conflict increases unless some method of retaining unity also develops. The usual solution adopted by most nations is (i) the establishment of an authority which can develop and use methods of compulsion. (ii) Mental conditioning or brain washing. This can be done through propaganda, regimentation, methods of training the mind, learning by rote etc. (iii) The method of exchange of ideas and discussions. This does not include debate since this is merely a verbal form of competition and warfare in which each defends his own position while attempting to demolish that of the other. Discussion requires an open mind desiring to learn.

 

Thus thinkers arose in Islam who decided to codify the law using the Quran and Hadith. There arose four Schools of Law, the Madhabs. The consequence of this was that it formalised and fossilised the law as in a dead machine, and reduced flexibility, diversity and adaptability. There was an end to Ijtihad and the use of Aql. In order to rectify this situation other thinkers and reformers arose periodically. But owing to the rigidity of mind which had overtaken the people, they only managed to get a small section of the people as followers. These followers unfortunately formed attachment to their leaders and converted their teachings into dogmas without understanding and increased the sectarianism. This is the situation which continues to this day; except for the few, though an increasing number, who are awakening.

However, it is evident that if these people had the right to interpret and apply the Quran and Hadith, then this right must still exist. There has been no new revelation abrogating this right. Allah has given us faculties to be used as Vicegerents (2:30-31) and the Quran is constantly telling us to use them. But it also warns about the corrupting influence of subjective factors such as prejudices, habits, addictions, obsessions, superstitions and rationalisation of personal desires, ambitions and wishful thinking. These can only be overcome through inner vigilance and the religious discipline.

It is only upon this fact that the revival of Islam and its future can be built.

Consider what the Quran tells us:-

"He fashioned him (man) and breathed into him of His own spirit and appointed for you hearing and sight and hearts. Small thanks give ye." 32:9

"Follow that which is inspired in thee from thy Lord; there is no god save Him; and turn away from the idolaters." 6:107

"O man, follow not that of which you have no knowledge. Lo! the hearing and the sight and the hearts - of each of these it will be asked (to give an account). And walk not in the earth arrogant." 17:36-37

"Most of them follow naught but conjecture. Assuredly conjecture can by no means take the place of Truth." 10:37

"Those who put away false gods lest they should worship them and turn to Allah in repentance, for them there are glad tidings. Therefore give good tidings (Muhammad) to my bondmen who hear advise and follow the best of them. Such are those whom Allah guides, and such are men of understanding." 39:17-18

"O ye who believe! Ye have charge of your own souls. he who errs cannot injure you if you are rightly guided. Unto Allah will you all return and then He will inform you of what you used to do." 5:105

However, human powers of perception, reason and consciousness have limits, even apart from the proneness to fantasies, prejudices, superstitions, habits, illusions, rationalisations based on greed, pride, lust, fear, anger etc. Hence the need for education by those who know, a discipline and the acceptance of guidelines and revelations.

As for Traditions we are told:-

"And when it is said unto them: Follow that which Allah hath revealed, they say: we follow that wherein we found our fathers. What! Even though their fathers were wholly unintelligent and had no guidance?" 2:170

"These are the people which have passed away. Theirs is that which they earned, and yours is that which you have earned. And ye will not be asked of what they used to do." 2:134

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