As-salaamu'alaykum,
I will be updating this thread Insha'Allah (which will remain closed until complete), and I think it is an important read to understand the efforts of the scholars to purify the Sunnah. It complements the other two thread's that addressed the Sunnah as a legislative authority. Allah knows best but maybe this only touches the surface of this particular knowledge. May Allah bless us with beneficial knowledge and the means to it. Ameen.
Edit: Here is the PDF for the whole book,
https://ia801605.us.archive.org/19/...leInIslamicLegislationdr.MustafaAs-sibaee.pdf
The scholars war on fabricators and fabrications
Anyone who studies the stance taken by the scholars - from the time of the companions until the recording of the Sunnah became complete - in how they fought to quell the plots of the fabricators and in how the toiled and laboured to purify the Sunnah from false narrations can only conclude that they could hardly have done more to preserve the authentic Sunnah. The methods they used to criticise and scrutinise a hadith narration were most excellent and scholarly and thus they were able to discern between authentic and the weak. We can even positively say that our scholars - may Allah have mercy on them - were the first ones of all the nations to lay down precise scholarly rules for discerning between authentic and unauthentic historical narrations. Here are some of the steps they took to save the Sunnah from the plots of liars, steps that show how they were able to cleanse the Sunnah, removing any mud that tried to attach itself to it.
First the chain of the narration
After the Messenger of Allah
died the companions took from one another without doubting in the other person's honesty and we have seen ample examples of this in previous chapters. Nor did the Tabi'oon hesitate to accept any hadith that they had had related from a companion of the Messenger of Allah. This sort of trust in society continued until the Discard (refers to the period in Islamic history immediately after the assassination of Uthman, the third of the Rightly Guided Caliphs, in which the Muslim Nation was split into factions and because plagued by internecine fighting) came to pass, and the miserable Jew, Abdullah Ibn Saba, proclaimed his evil claim, one based on extreme Shia ideas, that Ali had qualities of godhood or a deity. Generation after generation, schemes against the Sunnah began to grow and spread. At that early stage during the time of the discord scholars from the companions of the Tabi'oon began to scrutinise narrations, accepting only those narrations that contained known chains and narrators, narrators who were known for their trustworthiness and uprightness.
In the introduction of Saheeh Muslim, Imam Muslim narrated related that Ibn Seereen said,
"They would not ask for the chain (of narrators), but when the discord occurred, they said,
"Name to us your men"
They would see who was from the people of the Sunnah and take their hadith, and they would see who was from the people of innovation and not take their hadith"
Such scrutiny and investigation into the chains of narration's began in the period of the younger companions, those who lived on until after the discord occurred. Also in his introduction, Muslim related from Mujahid that Basheer al-'Adwee went to Ibn Abbas and began to relate hadith's, saying
"The Messenger of Allah said such and such…"
Ibn Abbas neither listened to his hadith nor looked at him, and Basheer said,
"O Ibn Abbas, why do I see you not listening to my hadith: I'm relating to you from the Messenger of Allah, yet you do not listen!"
Ibn Abbas answered,
"Whenever we used to hear a man say,
"The Messenger of Allah said"
- The attention of our eyes and ears would hasten to him when people started to… we began to take from people only that which we knew."
The Tabi'oon followed suit and began to demand from narrators the chains of narrations, and they tried to take as much as they could directly from the companions. Abu al-'Aliyah said,
"We used to hear narrations, the source of which were the companions, and we would not be satisfied until we rode to them and heard from them ourselves."
Ibn al-Mubarak said,
"The chain (of narrators) is part of the Religion. Were it not for the isnad (the chain), anyone who wished could say whatever he wanted."
I will be updating this thread Insha'Allah (which will remain closed until complete), and I think it is an important read to understand the efforts of the scholars to purify the Sunnah. It complements the other two thread's that addressed the Sunnah as a legislative authority. Allah knows best but maybe this only touches the surface of this particular knowledge. May Allah bless us with beneficial knowledge and the means to it. Ameen.
Edit: Here is the PDF for the whole book,
https://ia801605.us.archive.org/19/...leInIslamicLegislationdr.MustafaAs-sibaee.pdf
The scholars war on fabricators and fabrications
Anyone who studies the stance taken by the scholars - from the time of the companions until the recording of the Sunnah became complete - in how they fought to quell the plots of the fabricators and in how the toiled and laboured to purify the Sunnah from false narrations can only conclude that they could hardly have done more to preserve the authentic Sunnah. The methods they used to criticise and scrutinise a hadith narration were most excellent and scholarly and thus they were able to discern between authentic and the weak. We can even positively say that our scholars - may Allah have mercy on them - were the first ones of all the nations to lay down precise scholarly rules for discerning between authentic and unauthentic historical narrations. Here are some of the steps they took to save the Sunnah from the plots of liars, steps that show how they were able to cleanse the Sunnah, removing any mud that tried to attach itself to it.
First the chain of the narration
After the Messenger of Allah
died the companions took from one another without doubting in the other person's honesty and we have seen ample examples of this in previous chapters. Nor did the Tabi'oon hesitate to accept any hadith that they had had related from a companion of the Messenger of Allah. This sort of trust in society continued until the Discard (refers to the period in Islamic history immediately after the assassination of Uthman, the third of the Rightly Guided Caliphs, in which the Muslim Nation was split into factions and because plagued by internecine fighting) came to pass, and the miserable Jew, Abdullah Ibn Saba, proclaimed his evil claim, one based on extreme Shia ideas, that Ali had qualities of godhood or a deity. Generation after generation, schemes against the Sunnah began to grow and spread. At that early stage during the time of the discord scholars from the companions of the Tabi'oon began to scrutinise narrations, accepting only those narrations that contained known chains and narrators, narrators who were known for their trustworthiness and uprightness.In the introduction of Saheeh Muslim, Imam Muslim narrated related that Ibn Seereen said,
"They would not ask for the chain (of narrators), but when the discord occurred, they said,
"Name to us your men"
They would see who was from the people of the Sunnah and take their hadith, and they would see who was from the people of innovation and not take their hadith"
Such scrutiny and investigation into the chains of narration's began in the period of the younger companions, those who lived on until after the discord occurred. Also in his introduction, Muslim related from Mujahid that Basheer al-'Adwee went to Ibn Abbas and began to relate hadith's, saying
"The Messenger of Allah said such and such…"
Ibn Abbas neither listened to his hadith nor looked at him, and Basheer said,
"O Ibn Abbas, why do I see you not listening to my hadith: I'm relating to you from the Messenger of Allah, yet you do not listen!"
Ibn Abbas answered,
"Whenever we used to hear a man say,
"The Messenger of Allah said"
- The attention of our eyes and ears would hasten to him when people started to… we began to take from people only that which we knew."
The Tabi'oon followed suit and began to demand from narrators the chains of narrations, and they tried to take as much as they could directly from the companions. Abu al-'Aliyah said,
"We used to hear narrations, the source of which were the companions, and we would not be satisfied until we rode to them and heard from them ourselves."
Ibn al-Mubarak said,
"The chain (of narrators) is part of the Religion. Were it not for the isnad (the chain), anyone who wished could say whatever he wanted."