Chapter 1
Difference Between Ḥadīth and Sunnah
Generally
people take ḥadīth and sunnah as synonymous terms. This is not a
correct impression for there is a great difference between these two terms. Ḥadīth
and Sunnah occupy distinct status and different station in the religious
knowledge. Taking them as synonyms complicates our perception of the religious
knowledge. With a view to understanding aḥādīth this difference between
the two terms is extremely important to understand.
1.1 Ḥadīth
The
term ḥadīth is used to denote a saying, act or tacit approval, validly
or invalidly, ascribed to the Prophet (sws).
The muḥaddithūn (experts in the
science of ḥadīth criticism) also use the term taqrīr for tacit
approvals. It means that, in the presence of the Prophet (sws), a believer did
something, which the Prophet (sws) noticed but did not disapprove or condemn.
Thus, the act done by a believer acquired tacit approval from the Prophet
(sws).
The muḥaddithūn
use another term khabar for a ḥadīth. It is commonly
acknowledged that khabar can be true or false. The scholars of the
science of ḥadīth criticism hold that a khabar and, therefore, a
ḥadīth can be a true report or a concoction. It is on the basis of this
premise that the Muslim scholars hold that a ḥadīth offers a ẓannī
(inconclusive/probably true) evidence. It is as though a ḥadīth may
have many possibilities on the plane of reliability. It can be ṣaḥīḥ,[1] ḥasan,[2] dha‘īf,[3] mawḍū‘[4] and maqlūb[5].
For obvious reasons, each of these kinds will be treated differently. They will
be given different weight as the source text.
1.2 Types of Khabar
The muḥaddithūn
divide the ḥadīth/khabar in two kinds, khabar-i mutawātir
and khabar-i wāḥid.
1.2.1 Khabar-i Mutawātir
The
author of al-Kifāyah fī ‘ilm al-Riwāyah, Khaṭīb Baghdādī, has defined
the Mutawātir report as follows:
A mutawātir
ḥadīth is reported by such a large number of narrators that cannot be
perceived to have jointly forged and narrated a tradition about an issue
without a compelling force.[6]
Although the term khabar-i mutawātir
is in vogue; what it denotes does not exist. Sometimes a ḥadīth is
believed to be khabar-i mash-hūr. But a little research reveals
that it has been transmitted by a single narrator in each of first three layers
in the isnād. Such narratives are reported by a large number of
reporters in the third or fourth layer. Similarly, in my opinion, all such
narratives which are usually termed as khabar-i mutawātir should
be thoroughly investigated. If a thorough and exhaustive survey proves them to
be mutawātir, they should be taken as such; but if they fail the test,
they must not be fictitiously termed as mutawātir any more. I must also
emphasize the point that, in my opinion, the Sunnah is mutawātir.
However, it is mutawātir in that it has been perpetually adhered to by
each generation of Muslims. This tawātur is not oral. This issue will
fully be explained later.
1.2.2 Khabar-i Wāḥid
Khabar-i
wāḥid signifies a historical narrative that falls short of
yielding certain knowledge. Even if more than one person reports the narrative,
that does not make it certain and conclusive truth except when the number of
narrators reporting it grows to the level that the possibility of their
consensus on forging a lie is perfectly removed. Most of the ḥadīth literature
consists of individual isolated narratives.
1.3 Categories of Aḥādīth according to Authenticity
Khaṭīb
Baghdādī divides the individual narratives in the following categories,
according to their epistemic value:
· aḥādīth which are clearly genuine and
acceptable.
· aḥādīth which are clear fabrications.
· aḥādīth whose status is not clear.
An
explanation of all three follows:
1.3.1 Genuine and Acceptable Aḥādīth
According
to Khaṭīb Baghdādī, the narratives of the following qualities belong to the
first category:
· The narratives that contain reports testified by the “human
intellect” (mimmā tadullu al-‘uqūl ‘alā mūjabihī) and that which are
aligned with common sense.
· The narratives that are a corollary of the Qur’ānic text and
the Sunnah.
· The narratives that have been received as acceptable by the ummah
as a whole.
This
should be appreciated that “the acceptance of the ummah” means only the
acceptance by the part of the ummah that has remained pure from the
contaminations of religious innovations and blind following. Thawbān (rta)
narrates that the Prophet (sws) said:
A group from among my ummah
will always hold fast to the truth. They shall not be harmed despite being
abandoned by some people. They will remain in this state (of steadfastness)
till God’s decree arrives. (Muslim, No: 1920)
1.3.2 Fabricated and Unacceptable Aḥādīth
According
to Khaṭīb, the second category of the narratives ascribed to the Prophet (sws)
consists of aḥādīth of the following characteristics:
· The narratives that offend reason.
· The narratives that contradict the Qur’ān and the Sunnah.
· The narratives that discuss issues of prime importance in
the religion which require absolute certainty. In such issues the Almighty cuts
all possibilities of excuse for the recipients. They are left with no
reasonable grounds to reject the teachings reported to them on the ground of
historical authenticity. However, the individual narratives fail to provide
required certitude of the reported knowledge and are not accepted.
· The individual narratives regarding issues which, by their
very nature, demand that they should have been reported by a large number of
people are also not acceptable.
According
to the Ḥanafī jurists, in the issues of ‘umūm-i balwā,[7]
the individual narratives carry no weight. In such issues they prefer qiyās
and ijtihād over this type of individual narratives.
1.3.3 Indeterminable Aḥādīth
Narratives
that give contradicting directives on a single issue and make it difficult for
us to determine the final command in that regard form the third category.
While
deciding on the applicability of the directives contained in this type of aḥādīth,
only such narratives should be accepted as valid which correspond to and accord
with the wording of the collated narratives, textual evidence from the Qur’ān
and the Sunnah.
1.4 The Sunnah
Literally
the word sunnah means clear, well trodden, busy and plain surfaced road.
The Qur’ān has used this word to connote the way God has always dealt with the
nations. It says:
This is the way God has dealt
with the people who passed before you. God’s decision is always predestined. (Q
33:38)
Do they look for anything other
than God’s way of dealing with the people of old? But you will never find any
change in the way of God; nor will you find that God’s way will turn off. (Q
35:43)
The word
sunnah in the discussion of the sources of religion, denotes the
practice of the Prophet (sws) that he taught and practically instituted as a
teacher of the sharī‘ah and the best exemplar. This practice is to be
adhered to in fulfilling the divine injunctions, carrying out religious rites
and moulding life in accord with the will of God. To institutute these
practices was, the Qur’ān states, a part of the Prophet’s responsibility as a
Messenger of God:
Verily God has shown grace to
the believers by sending to them a messenger of their own who recites to them
His verses, and purifies them, and teaches them the law and the wisdom;
although before his advent they were in manifest error. (Q 3:164)
You have indeed in the life of
the Messenger of God the best example; for those who expect meeting God and the
Last Day and remember Him much. (Q 33:21)
The
Prophet (sws) set the best example for us in every aspect of life. He not only
taught us all religious injunctions and etiquette –that we need to learn and
adopt – but also showed us the practice of how to follow and carry out them.
The
rejecters of the religious status and authority of the Sunnah hold that the
Prophet (sws) was not more than a mere postman appointed to deliver the divine
message. Their view is most absurd and baseless. The Prophet (sws) was
appointed not only to communicate to the world the Book of God but also to
purify the souls and to teach them how to practice the sharī‘ah. His
life is the perfect model for the believers to emulate. It is only by following
his example that we can mould our life in accord with the religion of Islam and
the dictates of the faith.
1.5 Importance of the Sunnah
The teachings
of Islam contained in the Qur’ān consist of core guidance. Details and
application of all the injunctions have not been provided in the Book. These
things have been left for the Prophet (sws) to explain. The entire edifice of
Islam is built on the building blocks of the Sunnah of the Prophet (sws). The
Qur’ān, for example, only gives basic directives regarding the ritual Prayer,
fast, ḥajj, zakāh and
other rites and rituals. However, none of these directives have been explained in
any detail in the Book. So much so we do not find even necessary details
regarding, for example, timings and units of the ritual prayer – the most
important religious injunction. The case of other worship rituals and
directives is no different. For example, the directive to cut the hands of a convicted
thief is found in the Qur’ān. Yet we do not know what value of the stolen item
renders the theft punishable. Where do we cut the hand from? Questions like
these have been explained through the tongue of the Prophet (sws) and his
practice. If we set aside the Sunnah we will only be left with principal
guidance of the Qur’ān and will remain ignorant as to how they are to be
practiced, as it happened with the followers of the religion of Abraham, the
so-called ḥanīfs. It is reported that they would sit against the walls
of the Ka‘bah and address God saying: “O Lord, we do not know how to worship You.
We would worship You the prescribed way had we known it.”[8]
This
shows that the Qur’ān can only be clarified and explained with the help of the Sunnah.
This is precisely for the same reason the Prophet (sws) said:
Beware, I have been granted the
Qur’ān and with it something similar to it. (Abū Dāwūd, No: 4604)
This
proves that following the Sunnah is as necessary as the Qur’ān. God Almighty
sent the Prophet (sws) to make the Qur’ān clear. He is the best exemplar who
sets paradigmatic example of the Qur’ānic teachings. He has beautifully
fulfilled this function.
So
this explains that the Sunnah is to the Qur’ān as body is to soul. Teachings of
the Qur’ān are a soul whose observable form is the Sunnah. Both constitute
the religion of Islam. Absence of either disfigures the religion and fells the
edifice of Islam.
1.6 Mutual Harmony of the Qur’ān and the Sunnah
The Sunnah
and the holy Qur’ān are not bound in an accidental interrelation. Their
interconnection, on the contrary, is natural and logical. Human life involves
innumerable issues in its diverse spheres which cannot be exhaustively recorded
in a single book. It requires a whole library of books to record even a part of
these issues.
Many
things, for example, cannot be explained verbally. They require practical
example. Without practical form and example, they do not provide concrete and
observable guidance. Such issues, as call for a practical manifestation, cannot
even be communicated verbally. Therefore, the holy Prophet (sws) set practical
examples in order to clarify them. After the demise of the Prophet (sws), this
responsibility was transferred to his Companions (rta). Later, the righteous
and pious people of the ummah, the witnesses to God on earth, fulfilled
this duty. It is incumbent upon the piety and all those who rise to work for
the religion of God to carefully observe the Sunnah themselves including things
that are not seemingly very important and to teach the generality to adhere to
them.
1.7 Nature and Scope of the Sunnah
The Sunnah
relates only to the practical aspects of human life. It deals only with the
religious practices. Muslim beliefs, history and occasion of revelation of the Qur’ānic
verses do not form the Sunnah.
1.8 The Sunnah is not based on Aḥādīth
The Sunnah
is not based on aḥādīth which can either be true or false. The Sunnah,
on the contrary, is based on the perpetual practice of the ummah. All
the Muslim generations, from the Prophet (sws) to us, have followed it without
a break.
Historicity of the Qur’ān is established by its
generality-to-generality transmission as the word of mouth. The Book has been first
transferred from the Prophet (sws) to the generation of his Companions (rta)
who passed it on to the next generation with consensus. This process of
continuous transmission of the Qur’ān has continued in each generation of the
Muslim ummah till it has reached us. The Sunnah too has been transmitted
through generality-to-generality by practical adherence of the entire
generation in each successive layer. We have, for example, not adopted Prayer
and ḥajj because we have learnt from some individual narrators (āḥād)
that the Prophet (sws) practiced and taught these worship rituals. We have, on
the contrary, followed these practices because the Prophet (sws) performed and
instituted them in the generation of the Companions (rta). The successors to
the Companions (rta) learnt these from the Companions (rta) and the coming
generation learnt from the successors, so on and so forth, till these reached
us. The corroboratory evidence for these practices, found in the major ḥadīth
works, is an additional support for them. If a ḥadīth narrative concerning
a practice, current among Muslims, accords with the practice of the ummah, that
is acceptable. If, however, it contradicts any established practice then the mutawātir
practice of the ummah shall prevail. However, we will try to reinterpret
the ḥadīth contradicting the Sunnah so as it is made in accord with the
practice of the ummah. If we fail to reconcile between the Sunnah and a
particular ḥadīth, in any way, we have to abandon the individual
narrative for the agreed upon concurrent practice. We prefer the Sunnah over aḥādīth
because the isolated ḥadīth reports are only probably true. The Sunnah,
on the contrary, is absolutely true and certain source of religious knowledge.
This
fact about the historicity of the Ḥadīth was clear on the Mālikī (Imām Mālik
and his followers) scholars. They preferred the practice of the people of
Madīnah (‘amal ahl al-Madīnah) over individual aḥādīth. They
believed that the practice of the community of the people of Madīnah is
absolutely certain. They usually introduce such a practice as follows: al-sunnatu
‘indanā hākadhā (the established practice with us is this). The followers
of Imām Abū Ḥanīfah do not attach much importance to the individual narratives
on this very basis either.
The
perpetual practical adherence of the ummah in this context is based on
the practice of the Prophet (sws), the Rightly Guided Caliphs (khulafā’
al-rāshidūn), and the Companions (rta) as a community. The Prophet (sws)
said:
It is upon you to follow my
practice and that of the Rightly Guided Caliphs. (Ibn Mājah, No: 42)
The Companions (rta) of the Prophet (sws) were the first
recipient of the religion and the first who practiced the religious teachings. They
received the religion from the Prophet (sws) and communicated it to the world.
That is why their practice is accepted and acknowledged as based on the Prophet
(sws). Herds of people that join together to innovate practices and observe
them as religious rites, in the present times, are innovators. The Prophet
(sws) condemned falsehood, fabrication and bid‘ah (innovation) introduced into the religion as waywardness
leading to Hell.
1.9 A Question to the Munkirīn-i Sunnah[9]
Recently a group
of people have emerged who admit authority of the Qur’ān and reject the
authority of the Sunnah. Their view as well as the logic behind it is
incomprehensible. What has made the Qur’ān absolutely authentic is that it has
reached us through generality-to-generality as the word of mouth (tawātur-i
qawlī). Historical authenticity of the Sunnah is established by a similar
process, the practical adherence and perpetual practice of the entire
generations from the Prophet (sws) to us (tawātur-i ‘amalī). The
intermediary generations of the believers worked as vehicle for the
transmission of both of these sources. Having rejected the authenticity of the Sunnah,
the rejecters of the Sunnah, cannot validly claim that the Qur’ān is the Book
of God received from the Prophet Muḥammad (sws), for there is no difference
between the Qur’ān and the Sunnah as far as historical authenticity and the
vehicle of transmission from the Prophet (sws) to us is concerned.
It is, therefore, extremely important
to grasp the difference between the term ḥadīth and sunnah.
Disregard for this difference between the two sources has led many people to
take the entire corpus of the Sunnah as spurious. They rent asunder the whole
edifice of the religion when they noticed that a few individual narratives failed
to sustain historical investigation. Initially the rejecters found faults with
and cast doubts on the ḥadīth literature. These doubts were then
extended to the Sunnah itself. This is in spite of the fact that the Qur’ān and
the Sunnah are equally authentic and the rejection of either entails negation
of the other.
Those alive to the history of the movement of rejection
of the Sunnah know that it originated in some questions over a few
unexplainable narratives. Later on, the scholars entered polemical debates on
the issue and, in the frenzy of hot debate for their position, lost track of
the difference between the Ḥadīth and Sunnah. Neither the attackers realized
what they were really felling nor did the defenders were aware of what they
were defending. They were spending their energies in fighting undefined
borders. The debate became an end in itself. This unawareness of the truth
caused great harms to both the parties. Subsequently, the claim of the rejecters
bordered on the rejection of Islam itself. The defenders of the authority and
authenticity of the Ḥadīth, too, by forgetting the difference between the two
sources, exposed the Sunnah to serious questions. They rendered the firm
bases of the Sunnah vulnerable to the attack of the rejecters.
1.10 Different Paradigmatic forms of a Single
Practice
Many people
are, likewise, not appreciative of the fact that there could be more than one
valid way of performing a single religious practice. Different sunan (plural
of sunnah) can be instituted for a single religious issue. Owing to the
failure to appreciate this fact the followers of the Sunnah were divided into
different factions, all of which declared each other as rejecters of the Sunnah.
Had they viewed the matter justly, they would have easily learnt that the holy
Prophet (sws) could have introduced different sunan regarding a single
issue.
Many aḥādīth
show that at the occasion of the sermon of the final ḥajj, the holy
Prophet (sws) took a seat and received the delegations from different tribes.
People came to him and sought his guidance regarding their performances of the ḥajj
rituals. A believer would explain that he had performed a certain ḥajj
ritual in a particular way. The Prophet (sws) would tell him that there was
nothing wrong (lā ḥaraj). Still another person would inquire about the
status of his method of performing the same ritual which would be different.
The Prophet (sws) would tell him that his method of performance was also
correct and valid. He did not incur any sin. People continued swarming to him
and seeking his decision on the ways they performed certain rituals. The
Prophet (sws) invariably approved the practice of all and did not, as far as I
know, reject the action reported by any pilgrim.
This
shows that all of these pilgrims practiced the ḥajj rituals
differently. Yet the Prophet (sws) approved of their way of performance. Their
acts fell within the acceptable Sunnah. This means that it is acceptable to perform
a religious obligation differently while observing the spirit and essence of
the ritual or practice. It cannot be termed deviance.
We know that aḥādīth give different information
regarding the tashahhud (reciting certain supplications while sitting in
the last part of the Prayer). All aḥādīth on this issue have been
ascribed to great Companions (rta) with extraordinary insight in the legal
matters. Most of these aḥādīth prescribe different supplications for
the occasion of tashahhud. Yet, however, the essence and spirit of all
is the same. Let us suppose that someone adopts the wording for the
supplication reported by ‘Umar (rta) or Ibn-i ‘Umar (rta) and does not recite
what has been ascribed to ‘Ᾱ’ishah (rta). Would it be appropriate to declare
that he deviated from the Sunnah? Certainly not! One can no doubt argue on the
authenticity of any of these aḥādīth and one can validly declare that
this narrative is more authentic than that. One cannot, however, declare any of
these supplications a deviation from the Sunnah.
I
believe the same is the case of loudly uttering the formula ’āmīn after
reciting Sūrah al-Fātiḥah (Q 1) or on hearing the imām complete the sūrah
in the Prayer. Similar is the status of folding one’s hands on the chest or
letting them fall free in the Prayer. There are ample indicators, rather
evidences, proving each an authentic sunnah. Owing to external factors, which
cannot be taken up here for want of brevity, some of these practices got
currency in certain cities while others were adopted in some other cities and
regions. We cannot exclude any of these from the list of the acceptable normative
sunan. One can, at best, declare some of these are more stressed (mu’akkad)
methods of carrying out the relevant ritual. There is no point in rejecting any
of these methods for they cannot be validly declared a deviation from normative
Sunnah.
_____________
[1]. A ṣaḥīḥ
ḥadīth is transmitted through an unbroken chain of narrators all of
whom are of sound character and memory. Such a ḥadīth should not clash
with a more reliable report and must not suffer from any other hidden defect. (Maḥmūd Ṭaḥḥān, Taysīr Muṣṭaliḥ
al-Ḥadīth, (
[2]. A ḥasan
ḥadīth is transmitted through an unbroken chain of narrators all of
whom are of sound character but weak memory. This ḥadīth should not
clash with a more reliable report and must not suffer from any other hidden
defect. (Ibid., 45)
[3]. A ḍa‘īf
ḥadīth is that which cannot gain the status of ḥasan because it
lacks one or more elements of a ḥasan ḥadīth. (For example, if
the narrator is not of sound memory and sound character, or if there is a
hidden fault in the narrative or if the chain of narrators is broken). (Ibid., 62)
[4]. A mawdū‘
ḥadīth is one that is fabricated and wrongly ascribed to the Holy Prophet
(sws). (Ibid., 88)
[5]. It
is that ḥadīth, in two different narrations of which the names of
narrators have been changed.
[6]. I
have referred to this work by Khaṭīb considering that it is a major work in
the field. For my personal study, I have read through all the relevant sources
but after having gone through all of them, I can say that this is the most
important work in this discipline. As far as I could gather, the other scholars
also hold a similar opinion about it. (Author)
[7] ‘Umūm-i balwā are the issues which by nature attract attention of the entire
community. For example, the number and form of the Prayer (ṣalah) by its position in the religion requires that it should be
received, practiced and communicated by the entire generation. Such issues are
not left on the choice of few individuals.
[8]. I
have not been able to find the source of this saying attributed to the ḥanīfs.
[9]. These
are a group of scholars who do not believe in the authenticity of the Sunnah
and hold that the Prophet (sws) could not give any religious rulings in
addition to the Qur’ān. In the Indian Subcontinent, the most prominent
upholders of this view are Ghulām Aḥmad Pervēz, Sayyid Aḥmad Khān, Aslam
Jērājpurī etc.
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