an introduction. what are hadith? hadith represent the sunnah of the prophet (saw) the sunnah of the...

8
An Introduction

Upload: luis-nolan

Post on 26-Mar-2015

218 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: An Introduction. What Are Hadith? Hadith represent the Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) The Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) are comprised of: His Statements His

An Introduction

Page 2: An Introduction. What Are Hadith? Hadith represent the Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) The Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) are comprised of: His Statements His

What Are Hadith?Hadith represent the Sunnah of the Prophet

(saw)The Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) are

comprised of:His StatementsHis ActionsHis (tacit or silent) ApprovalsHis Personal Characteristics

Page 3: An Introduction. What Are Hadith? Hadith represent the Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) The Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) are comprised of: His Statements His

Classifying Our Actions

HaraamActions which are punishable if you engage in them; if you refrain you are

rewarded

HaraamActions which are punishable if you engage in them; if you refrain you are

rewarded

Halal Actions which

are permissible, encouraged

and rewardable

MustahabActions that

are permissible

and encouraged

and rewardable

based on your intention

MustahabActions that

are permissible

and encouraged

and rewardable

based on your intentionMandoob

These actions are

neither halal or haraam

MandoobThese

actions are neither halal or haraam

MakroohDetestable

actions which are discourag

ed

MakroohDetestable

actions which are discourag

ed

Page 4: An Introduction. What Are Hadith? Hadith represent the Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) The Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) are comprised of: His Statements His

Protecting the Hadith

"We have, without any doubt, sent down the "Dhikr;" and We will assuredly guard it (from corruption)." (Surah Al Hijr, 15:9)

Hadith have also been protected by people whom Allah has guided, such as Sh. Al-Albani and all the hufaaz (memorizers of al-Qur’an)

Page 5: An Introduction. What Are Hadith? Hadith represent the Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) The Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) are comprised of: His Statements His

Structure of Hadith

Page 6: An Introduction. What Are Hadith? Hadith represent the Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) The Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) are comprised of: His Statements His

Structure of the Isnad

Page 7: An Introduction. What Are Hadith? Hadith represent the Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) The Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) are comprised of: His Statements His

Classification of Hadithauthentic. Imam Shafi'i states the following requirements "each reporter should be trustworthy in his religion; he should be known to be truthful in his narrating, to understand what he narrates, to know how a different expression can alter the meaning, and to report the wording of the hadith verbatim, not only its meaning".

good: is the one where its source is known and its reporters are unambiguous. weak: a hadith which fails to reach the status of hasan.

Usually, the weakness is: a) one of discontinuity in the isnad, or b) one of the reporters having a disparaged character, such as due to his telling lies, excessive mistakes, opposition to the narration of more reliable sources, involvement in innovation, or ambiguity surrounding his person.

fabricated or forged: is a hadith whose text goes against the established norms of the Prophet's sayings, or its reporters include a liar. Fabricated hadith are also recognized by external evidence related to a discrepancy found in the dates or times of a particular incident.

Page 8: An Introduction. What Are Hadith? Hadith represent the Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) The Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) are comprised of: His Statements His

Hadith Qudsi The special characteristic about this type of hadith is that it has Allah

in the actual isnad. This type of revelation is kept different from Qur’an in that Hadith

Qudsi:

The Qur’an was revealed to the Prophet (saw) verbatim; that is, both its words and meanings are from Allah. The hadith qudsi was not a verbatim revelation; its words are from the Prophet (saw).

The Qur’an was revealed via Angel Jibreel while the hadith qudsi may have been inspired by other ways, such as in the form of a dream.

The words of the Qur’an are miraculous or inimitable while the words of the hadith qudsi are not of this nature.

The Qur’an is recited in formal Prayers (salah) but the hadith qudsi cannot be recited in Prayers.

On the authority of Abu Harayrah, from the Prophet (saw), who said: Allah said: “Spend (on charity), O son of Adam, and I shall spend on you. “(Bukhari and Muslim).