QuranCourse.com

Need a website for your business? Check out our Templates and let us build your webstore!

The Evolution Of Fiqh by Bilal Philips

Period Of The Minor Scholars

The Development Of Fiqh During The Period Of The Minor Scholars Of The Madh-habs (850-950 CE) That Is, The Second Generation Of Students, Was Affected By The Following Factors.

A. Comopilation Of Fiqh

In order to make legal rulings and establish principles, previous scholars were obliged to spend a great deal of time and effort hunting in various parts of the Islamic State for Hadeeths and Athars (Sayings and acts of the Sahaabah and their students). In this period, the Sunnah of the Prophet (s.w.) was systematically collected and compiled in books of Hadeeth, thereby leaving scholars free to concentrate on the comprehension and application of Hadeeth.

Fiqh was also compiled on a wide scale and in a systematic fashion during this period. Some scholars personally compiled their own rulings, while others, such as Imaam Abu Haneefah and Imaam Ahmad ibn Hambal, dictated various problems and their solutioins to their students, who subsequently compiled them. Imaam Maalik’s alMuwatta’ is a collection of Hadeethss and opinions of the Sahaabah along with his personal ruolingl, and Imaam ash-Shaafi’ee’s book of Fiqh entitled al-Umm contains his legal rulings supported by their proofs.

Types Of Compilation:

1. The early books of Fiqh were usually a mixture of legal rulings, Hadeeths, opinions of the Sahaabah and of students of the Sahaabah. Al-Muwatta’ of Imaam Maalik is a classical example of this stage.

2. Some books of Fiqh were written about the basic principles of Fiqh, Hadeeths being mentioned only in order to prove the correctness of the authors’ deductions. Kitaab al-Kharaaj by Imaam Abu Yoosuf116 and al-umm by Imaam ash-Shaafi’ee are both good examples of this type of writing.

3. Other books of Fiqh concentrated of the application of Fiqh principles with but little reference to Hadeeths. These books were arranged in chapters according to the issues under discussion. The six books of Imaam Muhammad ibn al-Hasan117

and al-Mudawwanah by Imaam Ibn al-Qaasim118 are examples of this type of writing.

At first, the compilation of proofs for each legal ruling on various issues included the texts of Hadeeths along with their chains of narrators. Gradually concern for the chains of narration decreased, and scholars merely quoted the text of the appropriate Hadeeth along with a reference to the books of Hadeeth in which it could be found.

With the de-emphasizing of the importance of Hadeeth, or by neglecting to mention their sources and their levels of authenticity, the stand of the Madh-habs became the most important consideration. Thus, the opinions of the Madh-habs were gradually given precedence over one of the primary sources of Islamic law, namely the Sunnah. In these developments lay the beginnings of that rigidity which later became the hallmark of the Madh-habs.

However, later in this period, some prominent scholars reversed this trend, somewhat, by reintroducing the practice of quoting the sources and commenting on the accuracy of the Hadeeths.

B. Court Debates

There were also court debates during this period which were held for the interest and amusement of the caliphs and members of the royal court. Some scholars like magicians, singers, dancers and jesters, had become a permanent fixture of the royal court.119 They competed among themselves for the favors of the caliphs, and they invented issues solely for the purpose of debate. As a result, hypothetical Fiqh took on new dimensions as it evolved from sublime origins in the era of the Sahaabah and the early scholars, to the ridiculous product of court debates.

Court debates also spawned competitiveness and dogmatism, since the loser of a debate not only lost monetary reward from the caliph but also personal prestige. Furthermore, because loss of personal prestige also entailed loss of prestige on the part of one’s Madh-hab, the principle of defending one’s Madh-hab, right or wrong, came to be considered virtue. As a result, Madh-hab sectarianism became rampant among the court scholars.

C. Compilation Of Hadeeths

However, there arose an opposing trend among specialists in Hadeeth compilation and criticism, where by issues of Fiqh were tackled without dependence on the traditional rulings of existing the earlier scholars by basing their positions on authentic Hadeeths wherever available, rather than slavishly following earlier rulings merely because they had been made by prominent scholars. Focusing on Hadeeth to resolve the problems of Fiqh, great scholars of Hadeeth like Imaam al-Bukhaaree (810-870 CE) and Imaam Muslim (817-875 CE) went to great pains to collect from all possible sources authentic Hadeeths of the Prophet (s.w.) and Athars of the Sahaabah.

These, they arranged in chapters according to the format established by the Fiqh scholars. The initiator of this trend was the last of the major Imaams, Ahmad ibn Hambal, who compiled the most extensive work of Hadeeth called al-Musnad.120 Both Imaam alBukhaaree and Imaam Muslim were among his students.121

D. The Organization Of Fiqh

Through translations of the great books of science and philosophy from Greece, Rome, Persia, and India,122 Islamic scholars gained insight into new systems of reasoning, deduction and inference. This new knowledge influenced their approach to Fiqh which they proceeded to organize into fundamentals (Usool) and secondary principles (Furoo’). In time, Tafseer (explanation of the Qur’aan), Hadeeth and Nahw (grammer) developed under these influences into specialized branches of learning.

The positions of major scholars of Fiqh were recorded and the primary sources of Islamic law were identified and classified in order of their importance. 123

115 Muhammad ibn Ahmad ibn Rushd, Bidaayah al-Mujahid, (Egypt: alMaktabah at-Tajaareeyah al-Kubraa, n.d.), vol. 1, p. 405. See also as-Sayyid Saabiq, Fiqh as-Sunnah, (Beirut: Daar al-Kitaab al-Arabee, 3rd. ed. 1977), vol.2.p.378.

116 The main student of Imaam Abu Haneefah. 117 One of the main students of Imaam Abu Haneefah. 118 The main student of Imaam Maalik.

119 Hassan Ibrahim Hassan, Islam: A Religious, Political, Social and Economic Study, (Iraq: University of Baghdad, 1967) pp. 356-378.

Build with love by StudioToronto.ca