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The following
is the text of a talk given by Shaikh Nuh Ha Mim Keller at Nottingham
and Trent University on Wednesday 25th January 1995.
In the name of Allah, Most Merciful
and Compassionate
There
are few topics that generate as much controversy today in Islam as
what
is sunna and what is bida or reprehensible innovation, perhaps
because of the times Muslims live in today and the challenges they face.
Without a doubt, one of the greatest events in impact upon Muslims in
the last thousand years is the end of the Islamic caliphate at the first
of this century, an event that marked not only the passing of temporal,
political authority, but in many respects the passing of the consensus
of orthodox Sunni Islam as well. No one familiar with the classical literature
in any of the Islamic legal sciences, whether Qur'anic exegesis (tafsir),
hadith, or jurisprudence (fiqh), can fail to be struck by the fact
that questions are asked today about basic fundamentals of Islamic Sacred
Law (Sharia) and its ancillary disciplines that would not have
been asked in the Islamic period not because Islamic scholars were not
brilliant enough to produce the questions, but because they already knew
the answers.
My talk tonight
will aim to clarify some possible misunderstandings of the concept of
innovation (bida) in Islam, in light of the prophetic hadith,
"Beware
of matters newly begun, for every matter newly begun is innovation, every
innovation is misguidance, and every misguidance is in hell."
The sources
I use are traditional Islamic sources, and my discussion will centre on
three points:
The first
point is that scholars say that the above hadith does not refer to all
new things without restriction, but only to those which nothing in Sacred
Law attests to the validity of. The use of the word "every" in the hadith
does not indicate an absolute generalization, for there are many examples
of similar generalizations in the Qur'an and sunna that are not applicable
without restriction, but rather are qualified by restrictions found in
other primary textual evidence.
The second
point is that the sunna and way of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give
him peace) was to accept new acts initiated in Islam that were of the
good and did not conflict with established principles of Sacred Law, and
to reject things that were otherwise.
And our third
and last point is that new matters in Islam may not be rejected merely
because they did not exist in the first century, but must be evaluated
and judged according to the comprehensive methodology of Sacred Law, by
virtue of which it is and remains the final and universal moral code for
all peoples until the end of time.
Our first
point, that the hadith does not refer to all new things without restriction,
but only to those which nothing in Sacred Law attests to the validity
of, may at first seem strange, in view of the wording of the hadith, which
says, "every matter newly begun is innovation, every innovation
is misguidance, and every misguidance is in hell." Now the word
"bida" or "innovation" linguistically means anything new, So our
first question must be about the generalizability of the word every in
the hadith: does it literally mean that everything new in the world is
haram or unlawful? The answer is no. Why?
In answer
to this question, we may note that there are many similar generalities
in the Qur'an and sunna, all of them admitting of some qualification,
such as the word of Allah Most High in Surat al-Najm,
".
. . A man can have nothing, except what he strives for" (Qur'an 53:39),
despite there
being an overwhelming amount of evidence that a Muslim benefits from the
spiritual works of others, for example, from his fellow Muslims, the prayers
of angels for him, the funeral prayer over him, charity given by others
in his name, and the supplications of believers for him;
Or consider
the words of Allah to unbelievers in Surat al-Anbiya,
"Verily
you and what you worship apart from Allah are the fuel of hell" (Qur'an
21:98),
"what you
worship" being a general expression, while there is no doubt that Jesus,
his mother, and the angels were all worshipped apart from Allah, but are
not "the fuel of hell", so are not what is meant by the verse; Or
the word of Allah Most High in Surat al-Anam about past nations who paid
no heed to the warners who were sent to them,
"But
when they forgot what they had been reminded of, We opened unto them the
doors of everything" (Qur'an 6:44),
though the doors
of mercy were not opened unto them; And the hadith related by Muslim that
the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said,
"No
one who prays before sunrise and before sunset will enter hell",
which is a generalised
expression that definitely does not mean what its outward generality implies,
for someone who prays the dawn and midafternoon prayers and neglects all
other prayers and obligatory works is certainly not meant. It is rather
a generalization whose intended referent is particular, or a generalization
that is qualified by other texts, for when there are fully authenticated
hadiths, it is obligatory to reach an accord between them, because they
are in reality as a single hadith, the statements that appear without further
qualification being qualified by those that furnish the qualification, that
the combined implications of all of them may be utilized.
Let us look
for a moment at bida or innovation in the light of the sunna
of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) concerning new matters.
Sunna and innovation (bida) are two opposed terms in the
language of the Lawgiver (Allah bless him and give him peace), such that
neither can be defined without reference to the other, meaning that they
are opposites, and things are made clear by their opposites. Many writers
have sought to define innovation (bida) without defining the sunna,
while it is primary, and have thus fallen into inextricable difficulties
and conflicts with the primary textual evidence that contradicts their
definition of innovation, whereas if they had first defined the sunna,
they would have produced a criterion free of shortcomings.
Sunna,
in both the language of the Arabs and the Sacred Law, means way, as is
illustrated by the words of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace),
"He who
inaugurates a good sunna in Islam [dis: Reliance of the Traveller
p58.1(2)] ...And he who introduces a bad sunna in Islam...", sunna
meaning way or custom. The way of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give
him peace) in giving guidance, accepting, and rejecting: this is the sunna.
For "good sunna" and "bad sunna" mean a "good way" or "bad
way", and cannot possibly mean anything else. Thus, the meaning of "sunna"
is not what most students, let alone ordinary people, understand; namely,
that it is the prophetic hadith (as when sunna is contrasted with
"Kitab", i.e. Qur'an, in distinguishing textual sources), or the
opposite of the obligatory (as when sunna, i.e. recommended, is
contrasted with obligatory in legal contexts), since the former is a technical
usage coined by hadith scholars, while the latter is a technical usage
coined by legal scholars and specialists in fundamentals of jurisprudence.
Both of these are usages of later origin that are not what is meant by
sunna here. Rather, the sunna of the Prophet (Allah bless
him and give him peace) is his way of acting, ordering, accepting, and
rejecting, and the way of his Rightly Guided Caliphs who followed his
way acting, ordering, accepting, and rejecting. So practices that are
newly begun must be examined in light of the sunna of the Prophet
(Allah bless him and give him peace) and his way and path in acceptance
or rejection.
Now, there
are a great number of hadiths, most of them in the rigorously authenticated
(sahih) collections, showing that many of the prophetic Companions
initiated new acts, forms of invocation (dhikr), supplications
(dua), and so on, that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace) had never previously done or ordered to be done. Rather, the Companions
did them because of their inference and conviction that such acts were
of the good that Islam and the Prophet of Islam came with and in general
terms urged the like of to be done, in accordance with the word of Allah
Most High in Surat al-Hajj,
"And
do the good, that haply you may succeed" (Qur'an 22:77),
and the hadith
of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace),
"He
who inaugurates a good sunna in Islam earns the reward of it and all who
perform it after him without diminishing their own rewards in the slightest."
Though the original
context of the hadith was giving charity, the interpretative principle established
by the scholarly consensus (def: Reliance of the Traveller b7) of
specialists in fundamentals of Sacred Law is that the point of primary texts
lies in the generality of their lexical significance, not the specificity
of their historical context, without this implying that just anyone may
make provisions in the Sacred Law, for Islam is defined by principles and
criteria, such that whatever one initiates as a sunna must be subject to
its rules, strictures, and primary textual evidence.
From this
investigative point of departure, one may observe that many of the prophetic
Companions performed various acts through their own personal reasoning,
(ijtihad), and that the sunna and way of the Prophet (Allah
bless him and give him peace) was both to accept those that were acts
of worship and good deeds conformable with what the Sacred Law had established
and not in conflict with it; and to reject those which were otherwise.
This was his sunna and way, upon which his caliphal successors
and Companions proceeded, and from which Islamic scholars (Allah be well
pleased with them) have established the rule that any new matter must
be judged according to the principles and primary texts of Sacred Law:
whatever is attested to by the law as being good is acknowledged as good,
and whatever is attested to by the law as being a contravention and bad
is rejected as a blameworthy innovation (bida). They sometimes
term the former a good innovation (bida hasana) in view of it lexically
being termed an innovation , but legally speaking it is not really an
innovation but rather an inferable sunna as long as the primary
texts of the Sacred Law attest to its being acceptable.
We now turn
to the primary textual evidence previously alluded to concerning the acts
of the Companions and how the Prophet, (Allah bless him and give him peace)
responded to them:
(1) Bukhari
and Muslim relate from Abu Hurayra (Allah be well pleased with him) that
at the dawn prayer the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said
to Bilal, "Bilal, tell me which of your acts in Islam you are most
hopeful about, for I have heard the footfall of your sandals in paradise",
and he replied, "I have done nothing I am more hopeful about than the
fact that I do not perform ablution at any time of the night or day without
praying with that ablution whatever has been destined for me to pray."
Ibn Hajar
Asqalani says in Fath al-Bari that the hadith shows it is permissible
to use personal reasoning (ijtihad) in choosing times for acts
of worship, for Bilal reached the conclusions he mentioned by his own
inference, and the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) confirmed
him therein.
Similar to
this is the hadith in Bukhari about Khubayb (who asked to pray two rakas
before being executed by idolaters in Mecca) who was the first to establish
the sunna of two rak'as for those who are steadfast in going to
their death. These hadiths are explicit evidence that Bilal and Khubayb
used their own personal reasoning (ijtihad) in choosing the times
of acts of worship, without any previous command or precedent from the
Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) other than the general demand
to perform the prayer.
(2) Bukhari
and Muslim relate that Rifa'a ibn Rafi said, "When we were praying behind
the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) and he raised his head
from bowing and said , "Allah hears whoever praises Him", a man behind
him said, "Our Lord, Yours is the praise, abundantly, wholesomely, and
blessedly therein." When he rose to leave, the Prophet (Allah bless him
and give him peace) asked "who said it", and when the man replied that
it was he, the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said, "I saw
thirty-odd angels each striving to be the one to write it." Ibn Hajar
says in Fath al-Bari that the hadith indicates the permissibility
of initiating new expressions of dhikr in the prayer other than
the ones related through hadith texts, as long as they do not contradict
those conveyed by the hadith [since the above words were a mere enhancement
and addendum to the known, sunna dhikr].
(3) Bukhari
relates from Aisha (Allah be well pleased with her) that the Prophet (Allah
bless him and give him peace) dispatched a man at the head of a military
expedition who recited the Qur'an for his companions at prayer, finishing
each recital with al-Ikhlas (Qur'an 112). When they returned, they
mentioned this to the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace), who
told them, "Ask him why he does this", and when they asked him, the man
replied, "because it describes the All-merciful, and I love to recite
it." The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said to them, "Tell
him Allah loves him." In spite of this, we do not know of any scholar
who holds that doing the above is recommended, for the acts the Prophet
(Allah bless him and give him peace) used to do regularly are superior,
though his confirming the like of this illustrates his sunna regarding
his acceptance of various forms of obedience and acts of worship, and
shows he did not consider the like of this to be a reprehensible innovation
(bida), as do the bigots who vie with each other to be the first
to brand acts as innovation and misguidance. Further, it will be noticed
that all the preceding hadiths are about the prayer, which is the most
important of bodily acts of worship, and of which the Prophet (Allah bless
him and give him peace) said, "Pray as you have seen me pray",
despite which he accepted the above examples of personal reasoning because
they did not depart from the form defined by the Lawgiver, for every limit
must be observed, while there is latitude in everything besides, as long
as it is within the general category of being called for by Sacred Law.
This is the sunna of the Prophet and his way (Allah bless him and give
him peace) and is as clear as can be. Islamic scholars infer from it that
every act for which there is evidence in Sacred Law that it is called
for and which does not oppose an unequivocal primary text or entail harmful
consequences is not included in the category of reprehensible innovation
(bida), but rather is of the sunna, even if there should
exist something whose performance is superior to it.
(4) Bukhari
relates from Abu Said al-Khudri that a band of the Companions of the Prophet
(Allah bless him and give him peace) departed on one of their journeys,
alighting at the encampment of some desert Arabs whom they asked to be
their hosts, but who refused to have them as guests. The leader of the
encampment was stung by a scorpion, and his followers tried everything
to cure him, and when all had failed, one said, "If you would approach
the group camped near you, one of them might have something". So they
came to them and said, "O band of men, our leader has been stung and weve
tried everything. Do any of you have something for it?" and one of them
replied, "Yes, by Allah, I recite healing words [ruqya, def: Reliance
of the Traveller w17] over people, but by Allah, we asked you to be
our hosts and you refused, so I will not recite anything unless you give
us a fee". They then agreed upon a herd of sheep, so the man went and
began spitting and reciting the Fatiha over the victim until he got up
and walked as if he were a camel released from its hobble, nothing the
matter with him. They paid the agreed upon fee, which some of the Companions
wanted to divide up, but the man who had done the reciting told them,
"Do not do so until we reach the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace) and tell him what has happened, to see what he may order us to
do". They came to the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) and
told him what had occurred, and he said, "How did you know it was of the
words which heal? You were right. Divide up the herd and give me a share."
The hadith
is explicit that the Companion had no previous knowledge that reciting
the Fatiha to heal (ruqya) was countenanced by Sacred Law,
but rather did so because of his own personal reasoning (ijtihad),
and since it did not contravene anything that had been legislated, the
Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) confirmed him therein because
it was of his sunna and way to accept and confirm what contained good
and did not entail harm, even if it did not proceed from the acts of the
Prophet himself (Allah bless him and give him peace) as a definitive precedent.
(5) Bukhari
relates from Abu Said al-Khudri that one man heard another reciting al-Ikhlas
(Qur'an 112) over and over again, so when morning came he went to the Prophet
(Allah bless him and give him peace) and sarcastically mentioned it to
him. The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said, "By Him in
whose hand is my soul, it equals one-third of the Qur'an." Daraqutni recorded
another version of this hadith in which the man said, "I have a neighbor
who prays at night and does not recite anything but al-Ikhlas."
The hadith shows that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace)
confirmed the persons restricting himself to this sura while praying at
night, despite its not being what the Prophet himself did (Allah bless
him and give him peace), for though the Prophets practice of reciting
from the whole Qur'an was superior, the mans act was within the general
parameters of the sunna and there was nothing blameworthy about
it in any case.
(6) Ahmad
and Ibn Hibban relates from Abdullah ibn Burayda that his father said,
I entered the mosque with the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace),
where a man was at prayer, supplicating: "O Allah, I ask You by the fact
that I testify You are Allah, there is no god but You, the One, the Ultimate,
who did not beget and was not begotten, and to whom none is equal", and
the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said, "By Him in whose
hand is my soul, he has asked Allah by His greatest name, which if He
is asked by it He gives, and if supplicated He answers". It is plain that
this supplication came spontaneously from the Companion, and since it
conformed to what the Sacred Law calls for, the Prophet (Allah bless him
and give him peace) confirmed it with the highest degree of approbation
and acceptance, while it is not known that the Prophet (Allah bless him
and give him peace) had ever taught it to him (Adilla Ahl al-Sunna
wa'al-Jamaa, 119-33).
We are now
able to return to the hadith with which I began my talk tonight, in which
the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said, ". . . Beware of
matters newly begun, for every innovation is misguidance". And understand
it as expounded by a classic scholar of Islam, Sheikh Muhammad Jurdani,
who said:
"Beware
of matters newly begun", distance yourselves and be wary of matters
newly innovated that did not previously exist", i.e. things invented in
Islam that contravene the Sacred Law, "for every innovation is misguidance"
meaning that every innovation is the opposite of the truth, i.e. falsehood,
a hadith that has been related elsewhere as: "for every newly begun
matter is innovation, every innovation is misguidance, and every misguidance
is in hell" meaning that everyone who is misguided, whether through
himself or by following another, is in hell, the hadith referring to matters
that are not good innovations with a basis in Sacred Law. It has been
stated (by Izz ibn Abd al-Salam) that innovations (bida) fall under
the five headings of the Sacred Law (n: i.e. the obligatory, unlawful,
recommended, offensive, and permissible):
(1) The
first category comprises innovations that are obligatory , such as recording
the Qur'an and the laws of Islam in writing when it was feared that something
might be lost from them; the study of the disciplines of Arabic that
are necessary to understand the Qur'an and sunna such as grammar, word
declension, and lexicography; hadith classification to distinguish between
genuine and spurious prophetic traditions; and the philosophical refutations
of arguments advanced by the Mu'tazilites and the like.
(2) The
second category is that of unlawful innovations such as non- Islamic
taxes and levies, giving positions of authority in Sacred Law to those
unfit for them, and devoting ones time to learning the beliefs of heretical
sects that contravene the tenets of faith of Ahl al-Sunna.
(3) The
third category consists of recommended innovations such as building
hostels and schools of Sacred Law, recording the research of Islamic
schools of legal thought, writing books on beneficial subjects, extensive
research into fundamentals and particular applications of Sacred Law,
in-depth studies of Arabic linguistics, the reciting of wirds (def:
Reliance of the Traveller w20) by those with a Sufi path, and
commemorating the birth (mawlid), of the Prophet Muhammad (Allah
bless him and give him peace) and wearing ones best and rejoicing at
it.
(4) The
fourth category includes innovations that are offensive, such as embellishing
mosques, decorating the Qur'an and having a backup man (muballigh)
loudly repeat the spoken Allahu Akbar of the imam when the latter's
voice is already clearly audible to those who are praying behind him.
(5) the
fifth category is that of innovations that are permissible, such as
sifting flour, using spoons and having more enjoyable food, drink and
housing. (al Jawahir al-luluiyya fi sharh al-Arbain al-nawawiyya,
220-21).
I will conclude
my remarks tonight with a translation of Sheikh Abdullah al-Ghimari, who
said: In his al-Qawaid al-kubra, "Izz ibn Abd al-Salam classifies
innovations (bida), according to their benefit, harm, or indifference,
into the five categories of rulings: the obligatory, recommended, unlawful,
offensive, and permissible; giving examples of each and mentioning the principles
of Sacred Law that verify his classification. His words on the subject display
his keen insight and comprehensive knowledge of both the principles of jurisprudence
and the human advantages and disadvantages in view of which the Lawgiver
has established the rulings of Sacred Law.
Because his
classification of innovation (bida) was established on a firm basis
in Islamic jurisprudence and legal principles, it was confirmed by Imam
Nawawi, Ibn Hajar Asqalani, and the vast majority of Islamic scholars,
who received his words with acceptance and viewed it obligatory to apply
them to the new events and contingencies that occur with the changing
times and the peoples who live in them. One may not support the denial
of his classification by clinging to the hadith "Every innovation is
misguidance", because the only form of innovation that is without
exception misguidance is that concerning tenets of faith, like the innovations
of the Mutazilites, Qadarites, Murjiites, and so on, that contradicted
the beliefs of the early Muslims. This is the innovation of misguidance
because it is harmful and devoid of benefit. As for innovation in works,
meaning the occurrence of an act connected with worship or something else
that did not exist in the first century of Islam, it must necessarily
be judged according to the five categories mentioned by Izz ibn Abd al-Salam.
To claim that such innovation is misguidance without further qualification
is simply not applicable to it, for new things are among the exigencies
brought into being by the passage of time and generations, and nothing
that is new lacks a ruling of Allah Most High that is applicable to it,
whether explicitly mentioned in primary texts, or inferable from them
in some way. The only reason that Islamic law can be valid for every time
and place and be the consummate and most perfect of all divine laws is
because it comprises general methodological principles and universal criteria,
together with the ability its scholars have been endowed with to understand
its primary texts, the knowledge of types of analogy and parallelism,
and the other excellences that characterize it. Were we to rule that every
new act that has come into being after the first century of Islam is an
innovation of misguidance without considering whether it entails benefit
or harm, it would invalidate a large share of the fundamental bases of
Sacred Law as well as those rulings established by analogical reasoning,
and would narrow and limit the Sacred Laws vast and comprehensive scope.
(Adilla Ahl al-Sunna wa al-Jamaa, 145-47).
Wa Jazakum
Allahu khayran, wal-hamdu lillahi Rabbil Alamin.
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