Javad Hashmi - Lecture 2 - Sunni Islam
Javad Hashmi - Lecture 2 - Sunni Islam
Javad Hashmi - Lecture 2 - Sunni Islam
• You can still ask questions in the Chat and may address
everyone.
• Let’s try video questions this time as well. Use Raise Hand
function, unmute yourself when called on, and ask question or
brief comment.
• 2. Religions are not ahistorical or static, but rather, they evolve and change
over time.
• 5. All knowledge claims are “situated” in that they arise out of particular
social/historical contexts and therefore represent particular rather than
universally applicable claims.
To Review…
• The pre-Islamic period was characterized by jahl — not just
ignorance but barbarity, impetuousness, & being easily
excitable… prone to fits of rage & vengeance.
• The Qur’an created the individual but also stressed the social.
• One God, one origin, one purpose, one end goal, one umma.
Outside Resources
• Lecture 1 Deep Dive: Inclusivist and ExclusiFrom Mubarak
Hasan to Everyone: (07:14 PM)vist Readings of the Quran,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UoRXjV_IgIc&t=106s
• General trend has been to take hadiths and historical reports agreed upon by
Sunnis & Shi’as; this is historically problematic.
• Abu Bakr & ‘Umar heard of this affair and rushed to the site.
• Political
• Religious
• Spiritual (charisma)
• “When the Umayyads are said to follow the sunna of David, the
Prophet, [‘Umar] Faruq or later caliphs, the message is that
• “they acted in the spirit of these people, not that they knew of
actual rulings from them, let alone transmitted from them in
Hadith.” (God’s Caliph, p. 55)
• “To say that someone followed the sunna of the Prophet was to
say that he was a good man, not to specify what he had done
in concrete terms” (Ibid., p. 64)
Sunna in the Qur’an
• Sunna mentioned in the Qur’an 14 times.
• Umm walad rule: slave woman granted freedom after giving birth, upon master’s
death. Her child is born free.
• Triple divorce.
• Suspended the hadd punishment of hand amputation for theft during a famine.
• Refused to give zakat to “those whose hearts are to be won over” as ordained in the
Qur’an.
• Established the Bayt al-mal & instituted massive welfare & social security program.
Caliphal Law
• khulafa al-rashidun al-muhtadun al-mahdiyyun
• [Q 39:23] God has sent down the most beautiful discourse (hadith), a
consistent Book…
• [Q 45:6] These are the signs of God that We recite unto you in truth. So in what
discourse (hadith) after God and His ayas do they believe?
• [Q 7:185] So in what discourse (hadith) after this (Qur’an) will they believe?
• ‘Umar considered compiling hadith but abandoned the project & banned it.
• Caliphal ban from the time of Abu Bakr to the early Umayyad period (‘Umar
II?) - roughly 100 year ban.
• Eponymous founders.
• Geographical distribution.
Malikis & the Living Tradition
• Malik b. Anas (711-795/93-179)
• “In this early period, law did not primarily derive from the reports about the
Prophet (Hadith).” (Behnam Sadeghi, Logic of Law Making, p. 3)
• “Malik considered the living tradition of his city, Medina, as a better guide
to the true normative practice of the Prophet (i.e. the sunna of the
Prophet): for example, an authentic hadith may describe a one-off practice
of the Prophet whereas community practice preserves the truly normative
practice of the Prophet.” (Ibid.)
• “The term ra’y has been interpreted variously as common sense, rationalism, or
legal opinions.” (Shamsy, p. 22)
• “It was widely acknowledged that the Companions of the Prophet had engaged in
legal reasoning, in the sense both of applying general rules to specific cases and
of extending existing rules to new situations.” (Ibid.)
• They believed that God had imbued human beings with ‘aql (reason, rationality,
common sense), which is a better guide to truth than isolated, unverifiable reports.
• They also relied on local (Iraqi) practice based on the idea that many of the
Prophet’s Companions had settled there.
Maliki & Hanafi
Approach to Hadith
• Hadith was one data point amongst many others.
• 1. Qur’an.
• 2. Sunna = Hadith.
• Qur’anic Mihna (Inquisition) was one reason for the success of traditionists and defeat of
rationalists.
• Even Mu’tazilis & skeptics of hadiths could not resist the temptation to use those ever so
helpful words, Qāla Rasūl-Allāh (The Messenger of God said)…
• Hadiths became the defining feature of Islamic law, and Islamic law became the defining
feature of Sunni Islam.
Divine Command Ethics
• Mu‘tazilis (Islamic rationalists) believed that human beings
could use their God-given human intellect (‘aql) to discern good
from bad. God’s rules would not conflict with our sense of
morality.
• “With the passage of time, [these] scholars came to call for the placement
of greater emphasis on the hadith ascribed to the Prophet. Hadith were
[thus] connected with the concept of sunna…
• Shafi’i had rejected the idea that the Hadith can abrogate
the Qur’an, but in practice, this was done.