Thursday, November 21, 2013

The Evolution of Fiqh(6. MAIN REASONS FOR CONFLICTING RULINGS)

We have seen that although the Imaams of the four major
Madh-habs were all agreed on the primacy of the four fundamental
priciples of Islamic law (the Qur’aan, the Sunnah, Ijmaa’and
Qiyaas), certain differences have occurred and still exist among the
rulings of their Madh-habs. These differences arose for various
reasons, the chief ones being related to the following aspects:
interpretation of ward meanings and grammatical constructions;
Hadeeth narrations (availability, authenticity, conditions for
acceptance, and interpretation of textual conflict); admissibility of
certain principles (Ijmaa’, customs of the Madeenites, Istihsaan, and
opinions of the Sahaabah); and methods of Qiyaas. Mention will be
made of the positions of the four existing Madh-habs where relevant.
The interpretational differences, which occurred over the
meanings of words, took three basic forms:
a) Shared Literal Meanings
There are a few words which occur in both the Qur’aan and
the Sunnah with more than one literal meanings; for
example, the word Qur (plural Quroo’ or Aqraa’), which
means menses as well as the time of purity between menses.
Thus, scholars of Fiqh were divided into two camps
concerning the interpretation of the Qur’anic verse,
“Divorced women should wait three Quroo’.” Soorah al-Baqarah (2): 228.
The particular interpretation chosen makes an important
difference when considering the case of a divorced woman
who has started her third menses. According to those who
considered Qur’ to be the period of purity, the divorce
becomes finalized as soon as her menses have started , while
according to those who viewed Qur’ as the actual menses, it
is not finalized until her third menses have ended.
(i) Maalik, Ash-Shaafi’ee and Ahmad ruled that Qur’ meant
the period of purity.
(ii) Abu Haneefa, ruled that Qur’ meant the actual
menses.
Abdullaah ‘abdul-Muhsin at-Tarki, Asbaab Ikhtilaaf al-Fuqahaa,
(Riyadh: Matba’ah as-Sa’aadah, 1st ed. 1974), p. 190.
Note:
‘Aa’eshah r.a  said, “Umm Habeebah had irregualr menses
and she asked the Prophet (s.w.) about it. He told her to
stop praying during the days of her Qur’s.”Abu Daawood and an-Nasaa’ee
 ‘Aa’eshah r.a was also reported to have said, “I told Bareerah to
observe a waiting period (‘Iddah) of three menses.”
 Ibn Maajah and authenticated by al-Albaanee.
These narrations clearly indicate that the intended
meaning of Qur’ is the menses itself.
 
b) Literal and Figurative Meanings
There are also some words in the Qur’aan and the Sunnah
which have both literal and figurative meanings. For
example to word Lams (touch) is literally used to indicate
touching by the hand or the coming in contact of two
objects, and figuratively to indicate sexual intercourse. Thus,
the jurists were of three different opinions concernign the
meaning of the Qur’anic verse:
“… or you touched (Laamastum) women and can
not find water, then make Tayammum(Purificationwith dust in 
the absence of water) from clean earth.”
Soorah an-Nisaa (4): 43 and Sorrah a-Maaidah (5): 6.
This verse occurs in the context of the factors which
break the state of Wudoo.(A ritual state of purity stipulated as a precondition for certain acts of worship.)
(i) Ash-Shaafi’ee and most of his students ruled that Lams
meant the touch of the hand or body contact. Therefore,
if a man intentionally of accidentally touche a woman or
vice versa, skin, then both of them would lose their state
of Wudoo.
(ii) Imaam Maalik and most of his students also ruled that
Lams meant touching by the hand. However, he
stupulated that Wudoo would only be broken if the touch
were pleasurable, whether the touch were intended or
unintended, skin on skin or otherwise. This was also the
most well known position of Imaam Ahmad. They took
the position that the dciding factor was the occurrence of
pleasure due to the existance of accurate Hadeeths
stating that the Prophet (s.w.) used to touch his wife
‘Aa’eshah’s foot in order to move it out of the way when
he was making Sujood (prostration during prayer).Sahih Al-Bukhari
(iii) Imaam Abu Haneefah ruled that Lams in the verse under
consideration meant sexual intercourse and therefore,
touching a woman did not break Wudoo, whether it was
accompanied by a pleasurable feeling of not.Biddayah al-Mujtahid.
 This position was based on the previously mentioned Hadeeth
of ‘Aa’eshah as well as another from her reported by the
Sahaabee, ‘Urwah, that the prophet (s.w.) kissed some of
his wives then left for Salaah without performing
Wudoo.(Sunan Abu Dawud 
 
c) Gramatical Meanings
There were also certain grammatical constructions in Arabic,
which were ambiguous. For example, the word elaa (to)
could simply mean “up to but not including”, as in the case
of the Qur’anic verse, “And complete the fast up to (elaa) the night.” 
Soorah al-Baqarah (2): 187.
The fast is continued up to Maghrib (sunset), the beginning
of the night, but does not include the night itself. There is no
dispute about this interpretation. However, elaa also means
“up to and including” as in the Qur’anic verse,
“And We will drive the guilty up to (elaa) Hell
like a weary herd.”Soorah Maryam (19): 86.
Thus, Fiqh scholars held two opinions concerning the
meaning of the following Qur’anic verse describing an
aspect of the performance of Wudoo:
“… then wash your faces and your hands up to
(elaa) your elbows.”Soorah al-Maa’idah (5): 6.
(i) Abu Hane4efah’s student Zufar, Ibn Daawood adh-
Dhaahiree166 and some of Maalik’s students
Shaakir in Jaami’ as-Saheeh,interpreted this verse to mean “up to but not
including the elbows.”
Ibn Qudaamah’s, al-Mughneevol. 1, p. 90.
(ii) The four Imaams all ruled that the verse meant “up
to and including the elbows.”
 al-Insaaf fee Bayaan Asbaab al-Ikhtilaaf, pp. 42, 43.
This position is
supported by the description found in authentic
Hadeeths of the Prophet’s (s.w.) method of
performing Wudoo.
Nu’aym ib Abdullah al-Mujmir said, “I saw Abu Hurayrah performing
ablution. He washed his face completely, then he washed his right arm
including a portion of his upper arm…then he said: This is how I saw
Allaah’s Messenger (s.w.) make Wudoo” (collected by Muslim (English
Trans.), vol. 1, p. 156, no. 477).
 
The causes of legal differences, which developed among jurists
over the narration and application of Hadeeths may be
subdivided as follows:
a) Availability of Hadeeths
There were numerous cases where certain narrations of
Hadeeths, did not reach some of the scholars, due to the fact
that the Sahaabah who narrated them had settled in various
regions throughout the Islamic empire, and the major Madhhabs
were founded in different parts of the empire before the
comprehensive compilations of Hadeeths were made. To be
more specific, the Madh-hab of Abu Haneefah (702-767
CE), Maalik (717-855 CE), Ash-Shaafi’ee and Ahmad (778-
855 CE) were founded between the middle of the eighth
century CE and the early part of the ninth, whereas the most
authentic and comprehensive compilations of Hadeeth (the
Sound SixBukhaaree, Muslim, Abu Daawood, at-Tirmidhee,) 
were not available until the latter  part of the
ninth century and the early decades of the tenth.
(i) Abu Haneefah ruled that Istisqaa (prayer for rain) did not
include formal congregational prayer (Salaah). His
position was based on the narration of Anas ibn Maalik
in which the Prophet (s.w.), on an occasion, made a
spontaneous Du’aa (supplication) for rain without
making Salaah.Sahih Muslim
(ii) However, his students Abu Yousuf and Muhammad and
the other Imaams all agreed that Salaah for Istisqaa was
correct.al-Mughnee
Their position was based on the narration of
‘Abbaad ibn Tameem and others in which the Prophet
(s.w.)was reported to have gone out to the prayer area,
made Du’aa for rain facing the Qiblah (direction of
Makkah), reversed his cloak and led the people in two
units of Salaah.Sahih Muslim
 
b) Weak Narrations of Hadeeths
There were cases where some jurists based their rulings on
Hadeeths which were in fact Da’eef (weak and unreliable),
because they were unaware of the unreliability of those
Hadeeths or because they took the position that a weak
Hadeeth was to be preferred to their Qiyaas (analogical
deduction)al-Madkhal, p. 210.
. For example,
(i) Imaam Abu Haneefah, his companions and Imaam
Ahmad ibn Hambal all held that the state of Wudoo
is broken by vomiting basing their ruling on a
Hadeeth attributed to ‘Aa’eshah in which she
reportedly claimed that the Prophet (s.w.) had said,
“Whoever is afflicted by Qay, Ru’aaf or Qals
(different forms of vomiting) should leave (the
Salaah), make Wudoo, then continue where he left
off without speaking during it.”
 Collected by Ibn Maajah from ‘Aa’eshah and rated Da’eef (inaccurate)
by al-Albaanee in Da’eef al-Jaami’ as-Sagheer (Beirut: al-Maktab al-
Islaamee, 1079), vol. 5, p. 167, no. 5434.
(ii) Imaam ash-Shaafi’ee and Imaam Maalik ruled for
two reasons that Qay’ (vomit) did not break Wudoo:
First, the above mentioned Hadeeth was not
authentic and second , Qay’is not specifically
mentioned in other sources of Islamic law as an act
which breaks Wudoo.
 
c) Conditions for the Acceptance of Hadeeths
Other differences among jurists in the area of the Sunnah
arose from various conditions they placed on its
acceptability. For example, Imaam Abu Haneefah stipulated
that a Hadeeth had to be Mash-hoor (well known) before
being regarded as admisible evidence, whereas Imaam
Maalik stipulated that a Hadeeth must not contradict the
customs of the Madeenites in order to be admissible. On the
other had, Imaam Ahmad considered Mursal(Hadeeth reported byone of the Students of the Sahaabah without
mentioning the name of the sahabee from whom he had heard it)
Hadeeths acceptable as proof, while Imaam ash-Shaafi’ee accepted
only the Mursal Hadeeths of Sa’eed ibn al-Mussayib which
most Hadeeth scholars felt were highly authentic.
Ibn Taymeeyah, Raf’ul-Malaam ‘an al-A’immah al-A’laam, (Beirut: al-
Maktab al-Islaamee, 3rd . ed. , 1970), p. 31.
d) Resolutions of Textual conflict in Hadeeths
The founders of the Madh-habs and their students took two
main approaches in resolving apparent contradictions
between the literal meanings of some of the recorded
narrations of Hadeeth. Some jurists chose the path of
{ Hadeeth reported byone of the Students of the Sahaabah without
mentioning the name of the sahabee from whom he had heard it.}
 “Tarjeeh” which meant giving preference to some Hadeeths
while rejecting others on the same topic. On the other hand,
some of the other jurists chose the path of Jama’, which
involved combining such Hadeeths using one in one in
general sense. For example, there is an authentic Hadeeth in
which the Prophet (s.w.) forbade Salaah at certain times
saying; “No Salaah (is allowed) after fajr prayer until the
sun has rised and after ‘Asr prayer until the sun has set.”Sahih Al-Bukhari
 At the same time there are other equally authentic Hadeeths
in which certain Salaahs were recommended without time
restriction. For example, “If any of you enters a masjid, he
should pray two Raka’aat (units of prayer) before sitting
down.”Sahih Al-Bukhari
 (i) Imaam Abu Haneefah gave preference to the firstHadeeth
 and  ruled that all forms of Salaah were
forbidden during the forbidden times.
(ii) Imaam Malik, Imaam ash-Shaafi’ee and Imaam Ahmad
combined the two Hadeeths, ruling that the first Hadeeth
was general and referred to voluntary Salaah (Nafl),
whereas the second Hadeeth was specific, allowing
highly recommended Salaah (Mustahabb) even during
the generally frobidden times.
The latter position is supported by the Prophet’s (s.w.) practise of
praying missed voluntary prayers of Dhuhur after the compulsory prayers of‘Asr which was reported by Umm Salamah and collected by al-Bukhaaree
There were among the Imaams some who developed a number of
controversial principles on which they based some of their
rulings. As a result, both the rulings and the principles became
source of differences among jurists. For example, the majority of
jurists recognized the validity of Ijmaa’ among the generations
after the Sahaabah, but Imaam ash-Shaafi’ee questioned its
occurrence while Imaam Ahmad rejected it outright. Similarly
the majority of jurists rejected Imaam Maalikreliance on the
customs of the Madeenites as a source of legislation. And Imaam
Abu Haneefah’s principle of Istihsaan and Maalik’s Istislaah
were both disallowed by Imaam ash-Shaafi’ee as being too
independent of the Qur’aan, the Sunnah, and Ijmaa’. That is to
say, they relied too much, in his opinion, on human reasoning.
On the other hand, Imaam ash-Shaafi’ee felt that the opinion of
the Sahaabah had to be accepted on legal matters, while others
felt that it was only reasoning on their part which was not
binding later generations.
Asbaab Ikhtilaaf al-Fuqahaa, pp. 126-138. See also Raf ‘ul-Malaam
‘anil-A’immah al-A’laam, pp. 11-49
The various approaches which jurists took in their
application of Qiyaas were perhaps the largest source of defferences
among them. Some narrowed down the scope of Qiyaas by setting a
number of preconditions for its use, while others expanded its scope.
Because this principle was based on opinion to a greater extent than
any of the others, there were no hard and fast rules with which to
contain it, and thus a wide range of differences developed.
 al-Madkhal, pp. 209-210.
 
1. Varying rulings arose from differences in interpretation which
were themselves attributable to variations in word meanings
(shared, literal and figurative) and grammatical constructions
(e.g. Qur’, Lams and elaa).
2. In the application of Hadeeths, a variation of legal rulings
occurred depending on the degree of availability of the Hadeeths,
their authenticity, the conditions imposed for their acceptance
and the methods of resolving textual conflicts.
3. Some Imaams evolved certain secondary legal principles and
made rulings based on them. Both the priciples and the rulings
were rejected by other Imaams (e.g. Istihsaan and Ijmaa’ of the
Madeenates).
4. The secondary principle of Qiyaas was generally accepted, but
the rules governing its deductive procedures varied among
Imaams, resulting in a variation in their rulings on similar issues.


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