As Salaamu alaikum, I am so sorry that this is kind of
lengthy to read but I thought it was so awesome the way the question
was disected, put back together then answered. Very beneficial Maa sha
Allaah. Inshaa Allaah you will enjoy it as I did.
QUESTION
Please I would like to know if there is anything wrong with not subscribing to a math-hab.
I learn from both the Salafees and Sunnees (ie. I try to adhere to the
Qur'aan and the Sunnah) but I don't like to claim either of the two
because I fear that pride that might grow in me and cause me to avoid
the truth if it comes from another source. In other words, I don't want
to be like some people who follow a math-hab and don't want to change when the proof is against them. Please advise me.
ANSWER by Shaykh Muhammad 'Umar Baazmool, instructor at Umm Al-Quraa University in Makkah
This
question requires that we clarify some issues first. In the first part
of the question, it seems the questioner is asking about blindly
following math-habs. Then, the questioner refers to the following of a general manhaj, one that includes the math-habs of Fiqh and others, called the Salafee manhaj, or Sunnee (manhaj).
Then,
he makes a distinction between a Salafee and a Sunnee, while the
Salafee is the who who follows the Sunnah of the Messenger (sallallaahu 'alayhe wa sallam),
the one he was upon as understood by the Salaf, may Allaah have Mercy
on them. So every Salafee is a Sunnee, and every Sunnee is a Salafee
most definitely, if we are using the word "Sunnee" with its proper meaning.
His statement in the question, "I learn from both the Salafees and Sunnees,"
seems to make a distinction between the Salafee Muslims and the
Sunnees. It can be understood from this that the questioner does not
understand that Salafiyyah and Sunniyyah are the same thing, and that every Salafee is a Sunnee and every Sunnee is a Salafee...
[ Someone interrupts, "Or
it could be that they are learning from Sunnees, meaning the Soofees
that claim they are Sunnees, saying, 'We are Ahlus-Sunnah...'" ]
...So
there seems to be some confusion about these names... if it is the case
that some Soofees are saying that they are the Sunnees while they are
actually Soofees, then this is a big form of deception that must be
warned against. [1]
Anyway, let me rephrase the question and then answer it.
Is the Muslim obliged to follow a Fiqh math-hab? And is the Muslim obliged to follow Salafiyyah, or should he follow the manhaj of other groups and parties... like the manhaj of the Tableeghees, the Soofees, the Ikhwaanees, the Tahreerees, etc.?
So then as for the Muslim following a Fiqh math-hab, like the Hanafee math-hab, the Maalikee math-hab, the Shaafi'ee math-hab, or the Hambalee math-hab, I say: The basic ruling regarding this affair is that a Muslim is not required to follow any of these four math-habs.
The Messenger (sallallaahu 'alayhe wa sallam)
only called the people to follow the Book and the Sunnah. And he
clarified to them that they must understand the Book and the Sunnah as
he and his Companions (may Allaah be pleased with them) understood it.
He also emphasized that we follow the rightly-guided khaleefahs. This remained the case all the way to the era of the four imaams of Fiqh and others. There was never any obligation for the Muslim to follow any of these four math-habs.
So then, based on this, I say that the correct position is that Islaam does not require the Muslim to follow one of the four math-habs. And this is clear, in shaa' Allaah.
However, I say: The Muslim should evaluate himself. If he finds that he has reached the level of ijtihaad
and he can look into the evidences, then he must look into the
evidences and follow what is clear to him from the evidences, whether
the evidence contradicts the Hanafee, Maalikee, Shaafi'ee or Hambalee math-hab. There is no harm in that, as the important thing is that he follows the evidence.
However, if a Muslim is not able to look into the evidences and make ijtihaad,
then it is obligatory on him to ask the people of knowledge, those
known for their adherence to the Book and the Sunnah in light of the
understanding of the righteous Salaf. This is based on Allaah's
Statement [2]:
( Then ask the people of knowledge if you do not know )
Therefore, the common Muslim who is not able to look into the evidences and make ijtihaad
must ask the people of knowledge, and to learn the affairs of his
Religion he needs from them, without restricting himself to a specific math-hab. Thus, the scholars say, "The math-hab of the common Muslim is the math-hab of the one who gives him his fatwaa."
One
last thing before I address the other topic: In our time and in the
times before us, there are and were great scholars who ascribe to math-habs, while, in reality, they followed the evidences. Their ascription to their math-hab only came because they studied that math-hab specifically, or that it was the one that was common in their land. Thus, they have been given the ascription to the math-hab, not because they were blind followers.
So
it is said about Ibn Taymiyyah, for example, that he was a Hambalee,
and the reality was that he followed the evidences. It is said about Ibn
Al-Qayyim that he was a Hambalee, too, and the reality was that he
followed the evidences. It is also said that Ibn Hajr was a Shaafi'ee,
and the reality was that he followed the evidences. It is said about
Al-Laknawee that he was a Hanafee, and the reality was that he followed
the evidences. And it is said about Shaykh Bin Baaz and Shaykh Ibn
'Uthaymeen that they were Hambalees, and the reality is that they
followed the evidences. It is said that Shaykh Muhammad ibn Ibraaheem
was a Hambalee, and the reality is that he followed the evidences. It is
said that Shaykh Al-Fawzaan is a Hambalee, and the reality is that he
follows the evidences.
The manhaj
of all of these great scholars is to give verdicts according to the
evidence. When the evidence came to them, they followed it. If they did
not have the evidence, then they would give a verdict according to their
math-hab. They would clarify the ruling of on something based on their math-hab.
So this is a very important point to pay attention to when we talk about adhering to a math-hab.
We do not say that everyone must be mujtahids and follow the evidences. Without a doubt, the common people are not able to make ijtihaad and look into the evidences. We also do not say that everyone must follow a specific math-hab
and follow it. Rather, what we say is that whoever is able to look into
the evidences and draw his rulings from them, then he must make ijtihaad, looking into the evidences and following them.
And his status of being someone who make ijtihaad and looks into the evidences does not prevent him from being ascribed to a math-hab
that he studied, or one that was common in his land, or one that he
sees as being the closest to the truth in general when he is not able to
derive a ruling himself from the evidences. This does not harm someone
who is from those who can make ijtihaad and follow the evidences.
As for the one who does not reach this level, then he must ask the people of knowledge, as Allaah the Exalted says [2]:
( Then ask the people of knowledge if you do not know )
When
he asks, he should try his best to make sure that the one he is asking
is from the people of knowledge, and he should not specify that the one
he asks be ascribed to a certain math-hab. Rather, he must follow what the scholar giving him his verdict says, so long as he is upon evidence, and Allaah knows best.
As for the second part of the question that is related to ascribing oneself to the manhaj of one of the so-called "movements" as they are calling them, I say that the Muslim is obliged to ascribe to the Salafee/Sunnee manhaj. Moreover, I say that Islaam, true Islaam, is just that. It is to follow what the Messenger (sallallaahu 'alayhe wa sallam)
and his Companions were upon. It is to understand the Religion in light
of the understanding of the righteous predecessors. So then the Muslim
is indeed required to follow this methodology.
It is not permissible for the Muslim to abandon what the Messenger (sallallaahu 'alayhe wa sallam) and the Companions were upon for any reason whatsoever.
Therefore, this is the manhaj, the straight path by which a person reaches salvation on the Day of Standing, in shaa' Allaah. The Messenger (sallallaah 'alayhe wa sallam) said,
"The
Jews split into 71 sects, and the Christians split into 72 sects. My
nation is going to split into 73 sects, and all of them will be in the
Hellfire except one."
It was said, "Who are they, O Messenger of Allaah?" He replied,
"They those who are upon what I and my Companions are upon." [3]
This is what the Salafee manhaj is. It is the following of the Messenger (sallallaahu 'alayhe wa sallam) and his Companions. So then can we say to the new Muslim, "You are not required to follow this manhaj"? No! Rather we say, "Your
Islaam will never be true, sound Islaam, free of innovations and
mistakes, unless you follow this manhaj, unless you follow what the
Messenger (sallallaahu 'alayhe wa sallam) and his Companions were upon."
Whoever opposes what the Messenger (sallallaahu 'alayhe wa sallam)
and his Companions were upon is from the people of differing, and he is
included in the 72 groups. He is still a Muslim, however he is subject
to the threat mentioned in the hadeeth - that "All of them will be in
the Hellfire except one."
When I say, "He is subject to the threat mentioned in the hadeeth," I mean that he is subject to the Will of Allaah. If Allaah wants, He punishes them; if He wants, He forgives them.
Due to his opposition to what the Messenger (sallallaahu 'alayhe wa sallam)
and his Companions were upon, then he can only be in one of two
categories: (1) his contradiction leads him outside of the Religion,
thus he is from the disbelievers; or (2) his contradiction does not
expel him from the Religion, thus he is from the people of disobedience
and innovation, and thus from the 72 groups that are subject to
punishment, and Allaah knows best.
So, with this, we have differentiated between the issue of following a Fiqh math-hab and the issue of following the Salafee manhaj. So the Muslim is not required to follow one of the math-habs. But as for following the Salafee manhaj, meaning to understand the Religion in light of what the Messenger (sallallaahu 'alayhe wa sallam)
and his Companions were upon, to follow the way of the Salaf, I say
that this is the true Islaam. Whoever goes away from this, he only goes
away from the true Islaam. And his departure from true Islaam is either a
departure from the Religion in totality, or a deviation from the
straight path that makes him from the people of innovation,
disobedience, and error, and thus is considered to be from the 72
groups, and Allaah knows best.
FOOTNOTES
[1] And this is the case with many of the deviant groups of today. They try to make a distinction between Salafiyyah and Ahlus-Sunnah, saying that Salafiyyah is a new sect or math-hab different from Ahlus-Sunnah.
In reality, they are one in the same as the shaykh explains. This
confusion comes from many different groups, like the Tableeghees, the
Naqshabaandees, and other Soofee groups. While they claim that they are Ahlus-Sunnah, they are actually people of innovation far from the Sunnah.
[2] the meaning of Soorah An-Nahl (16):43
[3]
From an authentic hadeeth collected by Aboo Daawood, At-Tirmithee, Ibn
Maajah, and others. Al-Albaanee discusses its different chains and
wordings in Silsilatul-Ahaadeethis-Saheehah (203-204).
SOURCE
This
was translated exclusively for www.bakkah.net from a cassette recording
with the knowledge and permission of the shaykh, file no. AAMB040,
dated 1423/8/17. NOTE: His answer has been slightly abridged in places for clarity.
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