Arabic Books
فإن الشكر سبب لزيادة النعم، ودفع النقم، واستجلاب البركات، وتكثير العطيات من ربنا الواحد رب البريات، يقول ربنا جل في علاه في كتابه الكريم: {وَإِذْ تَأَذَّنَ رَبُّكُمْ لَئِن شَكَرْتُمْ لأَزِيدَنَّكُمْ وَلَئِن كَفَرْتُمْ إِنَّ عَذَابِي لَشَدِيدٌ}(إبراهيم:7).
وقد أنعم الله عز وجل علينا بسائر النعم، وأسبغ علينا نعمه ظاهرة وباطنه: {أَلَمْ تَرَوْا أَنَّ اللَّهَ سَخَّرَ لَكُمْ مَا فِي السَّمَاوَاتِ وَمَا فِي الْأَرْضِ وَأَسْبَغَ عَلَيْكُمْ نِعَمَهُ ظَاهِرَةً وَبَاطِنَةً وَمِنَ النَّاسِ مَنْ يُجَادِلُ فِي اللَّهِ بِغَيْرِ عِلْمٍ وَلَا هُدًى وَلَا كِتَابٍ مُنِيرٍ}(لقمان:20)، ومن أعظم تلك النعم، وأجزل العطايا؛ أن هدانا سواء السبيل، واختارنا واصطفانا من بين كثير من الأمم أن نكون مسلمين، وأكمل لنا هذا الدين فقال سبحانه: {الْيَوْمَ أَكْمَلْتُ لَكُمْ دِينَكُمْ وَأَتْمَمْتُ عَلَيْكُمْ نِعْمَتِي وَرَضِيتُ لَكُمُ الْإِسْلَامَ دِيناً}(المائدة:3)، ثم جعلنا أتباعاً لمحمد صلى الله عليه وسلم من الأمة المهدية المرضية، خير أمة أخرجت للناس: {كُنْتُمْ خَيْرَ أُمَّةٍ أُخْرِجَتْ لِلنَّاسِ تَأْمُرُونَ بِالْمَعْرُوفِ وَتَنْهَوْنَ عَنِ الْمُنْكَرِ وَتُؤْمِنُونَ بِاللَّهِ وَلَوْ آمَنَ أَهْلُ الْكِتَابِ لَكَانَ خَيْراً لَهُمْ مِنْهُمُ الْمُؤْمِنُونَ وَأَكْثَرُهُمُ الْفَاسِقُونَ}(آل عمران:110).
عباد الله: ألا وإن نعم الله كثيرة لا تحصى، وإحسانه وتفضله على جميع خلقه أمرٌ لا ينسى: {وَإِنْ تَعُدُّوا نِعْمَتَ اللَّهِ لَا تُحْصُوهَا إِنَّ الْإِنْسَانَ لَظَلُومٌ كَفَّارٌ}(إبراهيم:34)، {وَإِنْ تَعُدُّوا نِعْمَةَ اللَّهِ لَا تُحْصُوهَا إِنَّ اللَّهَ لَغَفُورٌ رَحِيمٌ }(النحل:18)، ومن تلك النعم نعمة اكتمال حواسنا من سمع وبصر وأفئدة:{قُلْ هُوَ الَّذِي أَنْشَأَكُمْ وَجَعَلَ لَكُمُ السَّمْعَ وَالْأَبْصَارَ وَالْأَفْئِدَةَ قَلِيلاً مَا تَشْكُرُونَ}(الملك:23)، ثم تأتي نعمتا الأمن من الخوف، والإطعام من الجوع، ولا يعرف قدر هاتين النعمتين إلا من فقدهما، ومن نظر إلى الأمم من حوله عرف معنى الكلام، فكم من حروب دمَّرت الحرث والنسل ونسفت، وكم من مجاعات أكلت كثيراً من الخلق وأبادت.
وإن شُكرَ الله تعالى على نعمِه التي لا تعَدّ ولا تُحصَى أوجبُ الواجبات، وآكَد المفروضات قال الله تعالى: {وَوَصَّيْنَا ٱلإِنْسَـٰنَ بِوٰلِدَيْهِ حَمَلَتْهُ أُمُّهُ وَهْناً عَلَىٰ وَهْنٍ وَفِصَالُهُ في عَامَيْنِ أَنِ ٱشْكُرْ لي وَلِوٰلِدَيْكَ إِلَىَّ ٱلْمَصِيرُ}(لقمان:14)، وقال تعالى: {وَٱشْكُرُواْ نِعْمَتَ ٱللَّهِ إِن كُنْتُمْ إِيَّاهُ تَعْبُدُونَ}(النحل:114)، حيث بشكره يكون الحفاظ عليها، وبدوام طاعته وعبادته والقرب منه يكون الاستمرار فيها.
وقد امتنَّ الله تعالى على كثير من عباده فأعطاهم من كريم السجايا، وعظيم الصفات؛ ما علت به أقدارهم، وسمت به منازلهم، وارتفعت به درجاتهم عند ربهم سبحانه وتعالى، ومن أجلِّ هذه الصفات قدراً، وأعظمها أثراً؛ صفة الشكر؛ وهي ظهور أثر نعمة الله على لسان عبده ثناءً واعترافاً، وعلى قلبه محبة وشهوداً، وعلى جوارحه طاعة وانقياداً، وهو دليل على كمال العقل، وصلاح القلب، وصحة النفس، وسلامة الصدر.
وأعظم الشّكرِ الإيمان بالله تعالى، وأداء فرائضه وواجباته، والبعدُ عن محرّماته، ثمَّ شكر بقيّة النّعم إجمالاً وتفصيلاً، كما أنّ أعظمَ كفرانِ النّعم؛ الكفر بالرسالةِ بالإعراض عن الإيمان بالله وحده، وترك فرائض الله وواجباتِه، وفِعل المعاصي، ثمّ كفران بقيّة النّعم.
وقد جاء في كتاب الله الأمر به؛ كما جاء النهي عن ضده أي الكفران وجحود النعم، وعدم الإقرار بها أو استعمالها فيما يكره المنعم جل وعلا فقال سبحانه: {فَاذْكُرُونِي أَذْكُرْكُمْ وَاشْكُرُواْ لِي وَلاَ تَكْفُرُونِ}(البقرة:152)، وجاء فيه أيضاً الثناء على أهل الشكر حيث وصف به أفضل خلقه فقال عن خليله إبراهيم عليه السلام: {إِنَّ إِبْرَاهِيمَ كَانَ أُمَّةً قَانِتاً لِلّهِ حَنِيفاً وَلَمْ يَكُ مِنَ الْمُشْرِكِينَ * شَاكِراً لِّأَنْعُمِهِ اجْتَبَاهُ وَهَدَاهُ إِلَى صِرَاطٍ مُّسْتَقِيمٍ}(النحل:120-121)، وقال عن نوح عليه السلام: {إِنَّهُ كَانَ عَبْداً شَكُوراً}(الإسراء:3)، أي كثير الشكر يحمد الله على كل حال.
والشكر لله تعالى أمره عظيم، وثوابه جزيل، ينجي الله به من العقوبات، ويدفع الله به المكروهات قال الله تعالى: {مَا يَفْعَلُ اللَّهُ بِعَذَابِكُمْ إِنْ شَكَرْتُمْ وَآمَنْتُمْ وَكَانَ اللَّهُ شَاكِراً عَلِيماً}(النساء:147)، وقال سبحانه:{كَذَّبَتْ قَوْمُ لُوطٍ بِالنُّذُرِ * إِنَّا أَرْسَلْنَا عَلَيْهِمْ حَاصِباً إِلَّا آلَ لُوطٍ نَجَّيْنَاهُمْ بِسَحَرٍ * نِعْمَةً مِنْ عِنْدِنَا كَذَلِكَ نَجْزِي مَنْ شَكَرَ}(القمر:33-35)، وبه تزيد النعم، وتدفع النقم قال تعالى: {وَإِذْ تَأَذَّنَ رَبُّكُمْ لَئِنْ شَكَرْتُمْ لَأَزِيدَنَّكُمْ}(إبراهيم:7) يقول سفيان بن عيينة رحمه الله: "{لَئِنْ شَكَرْتُمْ لأزِيدَنَّكُمْ}: لئن شكرتم نعمتي لأزيدنكم طاعتي التي تقودكم إلى جنتي"1، وقال العلامة ابن سعدي رحمه الله: "{لَئِنْ شَكَرْتُمْ لأزِيدَنَّكُمْ} من نعمي {وَلَئِنْ كَفَرْتُمْ إِنَّ عَذَابِي لَشَدِيدٌ} ومن ذلك أن يزيل عنهم النعمة التي أنعم بها عليهم، والشكر: هو اعتراف القلب بنعم الله، والثناء على الله بها، وصرفها في مرضاة الله تعالى، وكفر النعمة ضد ذلك"2، ولن يستطيع أحد أن يشكر ربه حق شكره
وما كان شكري وافياً بنوالكم ولكنني حاولت في الجهد مذهباً
وأخبر سبحانه أن المنتفع بآيات الله وآلائه الكونية والشرعية هم الشاكرون فقال سبحانه: {أَلَمْ تَرَ أَنَّ الْفُلْكَ تَجْرِي فِي الْبَحْرِ بِنِعْمَتِ اللَّهِ لِيُرِيَكُم مِّنْ آيَاتِهِ إِنَّ فِي ذَلِكَ لَآيَاتٍ لِّكُلِّ صَبَّارٍ شَكُورٍ}(لقمان:31)، وقال عز وجل: {إِن يَشَأْ يُسْكِنِ الرِّيحَ فَيَظْلَلْنَ رَوَاكِدَ عَلَى ظَهْرِهِ إِنَّ فِي ذَلِكَ لَآيَاتٍ لِّكُلِّ صَبَّارٍ شَكُورٍ}(الشورى:33).
والشكر ثلاثة أضراب:
الأول: شكر القلب، وهو تصور النعمة وتيقنها أنها منه سبحانه.
والثاني: شكر اللسان: وهو الثناء على المنعم بما هو أهله.
والثالث: شكر الجوارح: وهو مكافأة النعمة بقدر استحقاقه، وذلك بالقيام بحقه، والاجتهاد في طاعته، وإخلاص العمل من أجله قال الله عز وجل: {اعْمَلُوا آلَ دَاوُودَ شُكْراً وَقَلِيلٌ مِّنْ عِبَادِيَ الشَّكُورُ}(سبأ:13)، وقال القائل:
أفادتكم النعماء مني ثلاثـة يدي ولساني والضمير المحجبا
وعن عائشة رضي الله عنها: "أن نبي الله صلى الله عليه وسلم كان يقوم من الليل حتى تتفطر قدماه، فقالت عائشة: لم تصنع هذا يا رسول الله وقد غفر الله لك ما تقدم من ذنبك وما تأخر؟ قال: ((أفلا أحب أن أكون عبداً شكوراً))" رواه البخاري برقم (4557) ومسلم برقم (2820)، فدل على أن العمل بالطاعة شكر لله عز وجل.
واسمع إلى كلام الغزالي رحمه الله حيث يقول: "الشكر ينتظم من علم وحال وعمل، فالعلم هو الأصل فيورث الحال، والحال يورث العمل، فأما العلم فهو معرفة النعمة من المنعم، والحال هو الفرح الحاصل بإنعامه، والعمل هو القيام بما هو مقصود المنعم ومحبوبه، وهذا العمل يتعلق بالقلب وباللسان وبالجوارح، أما بالقلب فقصد الخير، وإضماره لكافة الخلق، وأما باللسان فإظهار الشكر لله تعالى بالتحميدات الدالة عليه، وأما بالجوارح فاستعمال نعم الله تعالى في طاعته، والتوقي من الاستعانة بها على معصيته"3 .
وقد مضى رسول الله صلى الله عليه وسلم على نهج سلفه من أنبياء الله ورسله عليهم الصلاة والسلام في ملازمة الشكر على كل حال، فها هو يسأل ربه عز وجل أن يجعله كثير الشكر، مداوماً عليه فعن عبد الله بن عباس رضي الله عنهما: "أن رسول الله صلى الله عليه وسلم كان يدعو: ((رب أعني ولا تعن عليَّ، وانصرني ولا تنصر عليَّ، وامكر لي ولا تمكر عليَّ، واهدني ويسر الهدى إليَّ، وانصرني على من بغى عليَّ، رب اجعلني لك شكاراً، لك ذكاراً، لك رهاباً، لك مطواعاً، إليك مخبتاً، لك أواهاً منيباً، رب تقبل توبتي، واغسل حوبتي، وأجب دعوتي، وثبت حجتي، واهد قلبي، وسدد لساني، واسلل سخيمة قلبي))"4.
ويوصي النبي عليه الصلاة والسلام معاذ بن جبل رضي الله عنه بالشكر وملازمته يقول معاذ: "أخذ بيدي رسول الله صلى الله عليه وسلم فقال: ((إني لأحبك يا معاذ))، فقلت: وأنا أحبك يا رسول الله، فقال رسول الله صلى الله عليه وسلم: ((فلا تدع أن تقول في كل صلاة: رب أعني على ذكرك، وشكرك، وحسن عبادتك))"5.
عباد الله: واعملوا أن من أسباب وقوع العذاب، وحلول النقمة والعقوبة على الأفراد والمجتمعات؛ كفر نعم الله تعالى، وعدم شكرها والرضا بها، وجحودها وإنكارها كما قص الله علينا هذا في قوله تعالى: {وَضَرَبَ اللّهُ مَثَلاً قَرْيَةً كَانَتْ آمِنَةً مُّطْمَئِنَّةً يَأْتِيهَا رِزْقُهَا رَغَداً مِّن كُلِّ مَكَانٍ فَكَفَرَتْ بِأَنْعُمِ اللّهِ فَأَذَاقَهَا اللّهُ لِبَاسَ الْجُوعِ وَالْخَوْفِ بِمَا كَانُواْ يَصْنَعُونَ}(النحل:112) قال العلامة ابن سعدي رحمه الله: "وهذه القرية هي مكة المشرفة التي كانت آمنة مطمئنة لا يهاج فيها أحد، وتحترمها الجاهلية الجهلاء، حتى إن أحدهم يجد قاتل أبيه وأخيه فلا يهيجه مع شدة الحمية فيهم، والنعرة العربية، فحصل لها من الأمن التام ما لم يحصل لسواها، وكذلك الرزق الواسع، كانت بلدة ليس فيها زرع، ولا شجر، ولكن يسر الله لها الرزق يأتيها من كل مكان، فجاءهم رسول منهم يعرفون أمانته وصدقه، يدعوهم إلى أكمل الأمور، وينهاهم عن الأمور السيئة؛ فكذبوه وكفروا بنعمة الله عليهم، فأذاقهم الله ضد ما كانوا فيه، وألبسهم لباس الجوع الذي هو ضد الرغد، والخوف الذي هو ضد الأمن، وذلك بسبب صنيعهم وكفرهم، وعدم شكرهم"6.
وما قصة أهل سبأ عنكم ببعيد قال الحق تبارك وتعالى: {لَقَدْ كَانَ لِسَبَإٍ فِي مَسْكَنِهِمْ آيَةٌ جَنَّتَانِ عَن يَمِينٍ وَشِمَالٍ كُلُوا مِن رِّزْقِ رَبِّكُمْ وَاشْكُرُوا لَهُ بَلْدَةٌ طَيِّبَةٌ وَرَبٌّ غَفُورٌ * فَأَعْرَضُوا فَأَرْسَلْنَا عَلَيْهِمْ سَيْلَ الْعَرِمِ وَبَدَّلْنَاهُم بِجَنَّتَيْهِمْ جَنَّتَيْنِ ذَوَاتَى أُكُلٍ خَمْطٍ وَأَثْلٍ وَشَيْءٍ مِّن سِدْرٍ قَلِيلٍ * ذَلِكَ جَزَيْنَاهُم بِمَا كَفَرُوا وَهَلْ نُجَازِي إِلَّا الْكَفُورَ * وَجَعَلْنَا بَيْنَهُمْ وَبَيْنَ الْقُرَى الَّتِي بَارَكْنَا فِيهَا قُرًى ظَاهِرَةً وَقَدَّرْنَا فِيهَا السَّيْرَ سِيرُوا فِيهَا لَيَالِيَ وَأَيَّاماً آمِنِينَ * فَقَالُوا رَبَّنَا بَاعِدْ بَيْنَ أَسْفَارِنَا وَظَلَمُوا أَنفُسَهُمْ فَجَعَلْنَاهُمْ أَحَادِيثَ وَمَزَّقْنَاهُمْ كُلَّ مُمَزَّقٍ إِنَّ فِي ذَلِكَ لَآيَاتٍ لِّكُلِّ صَبَّارٍ شَكُورٍ}(سبأ:15-19) قال الحافظ ابن كثير رحمه الله: "كانت سبأ ملوك اليمن وأهلها، وكانت التبابعة منهم، وبلقيس صاحبة سليمان منهم، وكانوا في نعمة وغبطة في بلادهم، وعيشهم واتساع أرزاقهم، وزروعهم وثمارهم، وبعث الله إليهم الرسل تأمرهم أن يأكلوا من رزقه، ويشكروه بتوحيده وعبادته؛ فكانوا كذلك ما شاء الله، ثم أعرضوا عما أمروا به، فعوقبوا بإرسال السيل، والتفرق في البلاد شذر مذر"7
علامة شكر المرء إعلان شكره ومن شكر المعروف منه فما كفر
واعلموا "أنه لم يقصر بالخلق عن شكر النعمة إلا الجهل والغفلة، فإنهم منعوا بالجهل والغفلة عن معرفة النعم، ولا يتصور شكر النعمة إلا بعد معرفتها، ثم إنهم إن عرفوا نعمة ظنوا أن الشكر عليها أن يقول بلسانه: الحمد لله، الشكر لله، ولم يعرفوا أن معنى الشكر أن يستعمل النعمة في إتمام الحكمة التي أريدت بها وهى طاعة الله عز وجل، فلا يمنع من الشكر بعد حصول هاتين المعرفتين إلا غلبة الشهوة، واستيلاء الشيطان"8.
عباد الله: استقيموا على صراط الله، واتبعوا سنة نبيكم الموصوف بالخُلُقِ العظيم، واحذروا الشيطان والهوى فإنه يريد أن يجعل الأعمال الصالحة هباءً منثوراً، فاستعينوا عليه بالله، وردّوه خائباً مدحوراً بالمداومة على الطاعة، والبعد عن كل معصية قال الله تعالى: {يٰأَيُّهَا ٱلَّذِينَ ءامَنُواْ أَطِيعُواْ اللَّهَ وَأَطِيعُواْ ٱلرَّسُولَ وَلاَ تُبْطِلُواْ أَعْمَـٰلَكُمْ}(محمد:33)، وقال تعالى: {يٰأَيُّهَا ٱلنَّاسُ إِنَّ وَعْدَ ٱللَّهِ حَقٌّ فَلاَ تَغُرَّنَّكُمُ ٱلْحَيَوٰةُ ٱلدُّنْيَا وَلاَ يَغُرَّنَّكُمْ بِٱللَّهِ ٱلْغَرُورُ *إِنَّ ٱلشَّيْطَـٰنَ لَكُمْ عَدُوٌّ فَٱتَّخِذُوهُ عَدُوّاً إِنَّمَا يَدْعُو حِزْبَهُ لِيَكُونُواْ مِنْ أَصْحَـٰبِ ٱلسَّعِيرِ}(فاطر:5-6)، واعلموا أنكم على ربكم تعرضون، وبأعمالكم مجزيّون، وعلى زمن الإمهال والتفريط نادمون فعن معاذ رضي الله تعالى عنه قال: قال رسول الله صلى الله عليه وسلم: ((اتق الله حيثما كنت، وأتبع السيئة الحسنة تمحُها، وخالقِ الناس بخلق حسن))9.
عباد الله: إن الله أمركم بأمر بدأ فيه بنفسه، وثنى بملائكته المسبحة بقدسه، وثلث بخلقه من جنه وإنسه فقال تعالى: {إِنَّ اللَّهَ وَمَلَائِكَتَهُ يُصَلُّونَ عَلَى النَّبِيِّ يَا أَيُّهَا الَّذِينَ آمَنُوا صَلُّوا عَلَيْهِ وَسَلِّمُوا تَسْلِيماً}(الأحزاب:56)، ألا فصلوا وسلموا على محمد وعلى آله وصحبه أجمعين.
11 شعب الإيمان برقم (4531).
2 تيسير الكريم الرحمن في تفسير كلام المنان للعلامة السعدي (1/422).
3 إحياء علوم الدين (4/81-84) لمحمد بن محمد الغزالي أبو حامد، دار االمعرفة - بيروت.
4 رواه أحمد برقم (1998)، جاء في تحقيق الأرناؤوط وآخرين: إسناده صحيح، وانظر مسند الإمام أحمد بن حنبل (3/452) لأحمد بن حنبل، المحقق: شعيب الأرناؤوط وعادل مرشد وآخرون، إشراف: د عبد الله بن عبد المحسن التركي، مؤسسة الرسالة، ط. الأولى (1421هـ-2001م).
66 تيسير الكريم الرحمن في تفسير كلام المنان للعلامة السعدي (1/451).
7 تفسير ابن كثير (6/504).
8 إحياء علوم الدين (4/ 123).
9 سنن الترمذي برقم (1987)، وحسنه الألباني في صحيح الجامع برقم (97).
The Concept of Bid’ah in the Shari’ah
In the Name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful.
Muhammad ibn al-Muthanna narrated to me: ‘Abd al-Wahhab ibn ‘Abd al-Majid narrated to us: from Ja’far ibn
Muhammad: from his father: from Jabir ibn ‘Abd Allah, he said:
When Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) would deliver a sermon, his eyes became
red, his voice rose, and his anger intensified, so it was as though he was warning against an army, saying,
“The [enemy] has made a morning attack on you and an evening attack on you.” He would say: “The Hour
and I have been sent like these two” and would join his forefinger and middle finger. And he would say: “As
for what follows. The best of speech is the Book of Allah, and the best of guidance is the guidance of
Muhammad. And the most evil of affairs are their innovations; and every bid’ah is misguidance.” He would
further say: “I am dearer to a Muslim than his self. And one who left behind property, that is for his family. And
he who left a debt or children, that is [given] to me and [their responsibility] is on me.” (Sahih Muslim)
[Those who Categorise Bid'ah into Good and Evil]
[In regards to] his statement “every bid’ah is misguidance”, ‘Ali al-Qari’ said: In al-Azhar it says, “This means
every evil bid’ah is misguidance, due to his (upon him blessing and peace) statement ‘One who establishes
a good practice (sunnatan hasana) in Islam, he will have its reward and the reward of those who practice it.’
[1] Abu Bakr and ‘Umar collected the Qur’an, Zayd wrote it in the mushaf and it was reworked in the time of
‘Uthman.”[2]
Al-Nawawi said: “Bid’ah is everything done without a prior example and, in the Shari’ah, it is an invention of
that which did not exist in the era of Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace). And his
statement, ‘Every bid’ah is misguidance’ is a general [statement that is] qualified (‘amm makhsus).
Shaykh ‘Izz al-Din ibn ‘Abd al-Salam said at the end of Kitab al-Qawa’id: ‘Bid’ah is either obligatory (wajib)
like learning Nahw to understand the words of Allah and His Messenger, the composition of Usul al-Fiqh
and the discourse of narrator-criticism (al-jarh wa l-ta’dil); or prohibited (haram) like the path of the
Jabariyyah, the Qadariyyah, the Murji’ah, the Mujassimah, and refuting these groups is from the obligatory
bid’ahs because the protection of the Shari’ah from these bid’ahs is a communal obligation (fard kifayah); or
recommended (mandub) like creating an endowment or [creating] schools, and every performance of a good
deed not known in the early period, and like Tarawih i.e. in a general congregation, and the discourse of the
minutiae of the Sufis; or disliked (makruh) like decorating mosques and adorning mushafs [meaning
according to Shafi'is, as according to Hanafis it is permissible]; or permissible (mubah) like shaking hands
after Subh and ‘Asr [i.e. also according to Shafi'is for otherwise according to Hanafis it is disliked], increasing
delicacies in food and drink and making houses spacious, and extending [one's] sleeves. And some of
these have been disputed [i.e. as we previously set forth].’
Al-Shafi’i said, ‘That which is invented from whatever conflicts with the Book, the Sunnah, the narration
(athar) or ijma’, is misguidance, and that which is invented of good from whatever does not conflict with any
of these, it is not blameworthy.’ ‘Umar (Allah be pleased with him) said about the standing [in prayer] during
Ramadan ‘a wonderful bid’ah!’” This is the end of the statement of Shaykh [al-Nawawi] in Tahdhib al-Asma’
wa l-Lughat.
It was narrated from ibn Mas’ud: “Whatever the Muslims deem to be good is good according to Allah.” And in
a marfu’ hadith [it states]: “My Ummah will not agree on misguidance.” [All] this was [mentioned] in [al-Qari's]
Mirqat.
[Imam Al-Shatibi's Response to the Categorisers]
The Muhaqqiq [verifier] al-Shatibi, in the third chapter of the first volume of Kitab al-I’tisam, discussed the
statement of Shaykh ‘Izz al-Din and his student al-Qarafi in categorising bid’ah, that “this is not indicated by a
proof from the Shari’ah, neither from the texts of the Shari’ah nor from its principles, since if something from
the Shari’ah proved the obligation, recommendation or permissibility [of an act] it would not then be a bid’ah.
It would be an act included in the generality of actions that are prescribed, or those in which an option is
given. Thus, combining in these matters between bid’ah and the evidences proving their obligation,
recommendation or permissibility is a combination between two mutually exclusive things. As for the
disliked (makruh) from the divisions and the prohibited (haram), it is conceded from one perspective that
they are [divisions of] bid’ah, [but] not from another perspective, since if an evidence were to prove that an act
is prohibited or disliked that would not substantiate it being a bid’ah, due to the possibility that it is a sin (ma’
siyah) like murder, theft, drinking wine etc., so this [kind of] division is not considered in bid’ah; however, [the
division of] disliked and prohibited [is acceptable in bid'ah] according to how it is cited in a particular topic.
Hence, what al-Qarafi mentioned from the scholars regarding agreement on the condemnation of bid’ahs is
correct, and the manner in which he divided it is incorrect.
“Astonishingly, he related agreement [on this division] despite having encountered opposition and despite
his knowledge of what this entails in breaking ijma’. It appears as though he only followed in this division his
teacher without deliberation, since ibn ‘Abd al-Salam, as is apparent from him, designated al-masalih al-
mursalah (public interests lacking specific proofs) as bid’ahs, building on [the premise], and Allah knows
best, that they are not included in their individual parts under specific texts, although it agrees with the
principles of the Shari’ah. Hereof, he made the principles as the signifiers of them [i.e. al-masalih al-
mursalah] being approved by designating them using the term “bid’ahs” and this is from the perspective of
the absence of specific evidence on the issue and approval of them from the perspective of their inclusion
under principles [of public interest]. And since he built [this] on [the premise] of depending on those
principles, they are equal according to him to actions included under specific texts, and he became one of
those expressing [the principle of] al-masalih al-mursalah, but he called them bid’ahs in phraseology just as
‘Umar (Allah be pleased with him) designated the gathering for standing [in prayer] during Ramadan in the
mosque as a bid’ah, [the explanation of] which is to come if Allah (Most High) wills.[3]
“As for al-Qarafi, he has no excuse in transmitting these divisions in a manner not intended by his teacher or
[in a manner] intended by people, because he opposed everybody in that division. Thus, he became one
who opposed ijma’.”
Al-Shatibi verified in this book of his all that pertains to the exposition of the definitions of bid’ah, its types, its
rules and its being blameworthy deviance, and he removed every doubt the innovators attach to it in a
manner not [requiring] any addition to it.[4] So all praise belongs to Allah and all reward is from Him.
Verification of the Meaning of Bid’ah and its Definitions: A Brief Study
The weak servant (Allah pardon him) concluded from the words of our teachers and their instructions that:
The starting point in legal bid’ah (bid’ah shar’iyyah) is the statement of the Prophet (Allah bless him and
grant him peace), “he who innovates in this matter of ours what is not from it, is rejected.” The meaning of
“matter” as they expressed it is that [bid'ah] is not used unconditionally except for matters invented in the
religion, not for every matter that is invented.[5] As such, the likes of increasing dishes, vehicles and other
such things from permissible matters, are excluded. Rather, some of the formalities which people do not do
in order to seek nearness [to Allah] and seek reward are also [excluded] from the definition of legal bid’ah
(bid’ah shar’iyyah), although it is included in linguistic bid’ah (bid’ah lughwiyyah), since these acts are not
carried out by those who carry them out while believing and intending them to be from the religion. Thus, they
are not at all from inventions in the religion. Likewise, his (Allah bless him and grant him peace) statement
“what is not from it” indicates that the matters which have a basis in the Book or his (Allah bless him and
grant him peace) sunnah or from the example of the rightly guided caliphs, or from the normal activities of
the generality of the predecessors (salaf) (Allah be pleased with them), or the valid legal judgement (al-
ijtihad al-mu’tabar) with its preconditions based on the texts are not designated as innovations or legal bid’
ah, since these sources are all from the religion textually (tansisan) or by inference (ta’lilan), as has been
stipulated in its place.
[The Innovations of the Caliphs]
Al-Shatibi said, “From the speech of the rightly guided caliph ‘Umar ibn ‘Abd al-’Aziz (Allah have mercy on
him) which the ‘ulama took an interest in and preserved and [which] would please Malik (Allah have mercy
on him) much is that he said ‘Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) and the rulers after
him introduced [many] practices (sunan). Adopting them is a confirmation of the Book of Allah and
completion of obedience to Allah and strength in the religion of Allah. No one has [the right] to change and
alter them or consider something contradicting them. He who acts upon them is guided and he who seeks
assistance by means of them will be helped, and he who opposes them follows other than the way of the
believers and Allah will turn him to that which he has turned and make him enter hell; and it is an evil resort
[based on Qur'an 4:115].’ It is deserving that this [statement] be pleasing to them [i.e. the 'ulama], for it is a
brief statement combining beautiful principles from the sunnah.
“From these [beautiful principles] is what we are [discussing] here because his statement ‘No one has [the
right] to change and alter them or consider something contradicting them’ is decisive about the entire matter
of innovation. His statement ‘He who acts upon them is guided…’ to the end of the statement, is praise for
the adherent of the sunnah and condemnation of one who opposes it, using as a proof that which indicates
this, that is Allah’s statement (Glorified is He) ‘And whoever acts hostilely to the Messenger after that
guidance has become manifest to him, and follows other than the way of the believers, We will turn him to
that to which he has (himself) turned and make him enter hell; and it is an evil resort.’ (4:115)
“From these [principles] is that which the rulers over the matter [of Islam] practiced after the Prophet (Allah
bless him and grant him peace), it is a sunnah, containing no bid’ah at all, even if a specific text from the
Book of Allah and the sunnah of His Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) is unknown, since what
proves it [being sunnah and not bid'ah] in general has been transmitted, that is the text of the hadith of al-’
Irbad ibn Sariyyah (Allah be pleased with him) where he said therein: ‘Adhere to my sunnah and the sunnah
of the rightly guided Caliphs and cling to it with your molars. Be wary of newly-invented matters.’ Hence, he
(upon him be peace), as you see, yoked together the sunnah of the righteous caliphs and his sunnah and
[said] that part of adherence to his sunnah is adherence to their sunnah, that innovations are contrary to this
and are not from them at all. [This is] because they (Allah be pleased with them), in what they practiced, were
either following the sunnah of their Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) itself or following what
they understood from his sunnah in general and the elaboration of the manner [of this understanding] is
hidden to others. This kind of [action] is not an increase on [the sunnah], and its clarification is to come, by
the power of Allah. [The clarification] of [which is]: Abu ‘Abd Allah al-Hakim transmitted from Yahya ibn Adam
about the statement of the pious predecessors ‘the sunnah of Abu Bakr and Umar’ that the meaning of it is
that the Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) died while he was on that sunnah and that the
statement of another is not required along with the statement of the Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him
peace). What he said is correct in itself for it is from that which the hadith of al-’Irbad (Allah be pleased with
him) bears out. There is, therefore, no excess to what has been established in the Prophetic sunnah, but
[since] it is feared that it may be abrogated by another sunnah, the ‘ulama depend on the consideration of
the actions of the caliphs after him to know that that is the [sunnah] which the Prophet (Allah bless him and
grant him peace) died upon and nothing abrogated it, because they would take the latest matter from his
command.” [Here] ends [the quote from al-Shatibi].
[The Meaning of Legal Bid'ah]
The upshot is that legal bid’ah is an invented matter which does not have substantiation from the four
sources of the religion, while believing it to be from the religion, and something in which one expects to be
rewarded from Allah and gain good deeds. According to this, whatever the Lawgiver commanded as an
obligation or recommendation of seeking knowledge, memorising it, spreading it, supporting the religion,
defending it, purifying the souls and refining them[6], if its compliance in this age is dependent on acquiring
the ways and means which the predecessors (salaf) could do without, due to reasons and states specific to
them, like the composition of the sciences and compilation of books, building schools in specific ways etc.
taking up these means is not from legal bid’ah. It is established in Usul al-Fiqh that that which an obligation
is not completed except by means of it, it is itself obligatory and whatever something prescribed depends on,
it too is prescribed, so it is a part of the religion by judgement, and is not from innovation in the religion of that
which is not from it.[7]
This is similar to a doctor instructing a patient to use a certain ointment which is not found in the market, so
the patient took all of its ingredients without excess or shortage and proportioned it into a good standing
ointment by himself. Preoccupation with the principles of proportioning and working the mind to [acquire] its
methods, although it is not part of what the doctor explicitly instructed, it is nonetheless included in it by
judgement, as is clear. Yes, if he increased in the mixture of the medicine or decreased from it, or changed
the medicine for another medicine or changed the times of its use or freely chose its measurements, for
example, in spite of the instruction of the doctor treating [him], then in this there is opposition to his
instruction and interference in his job which is not for others to interfere in.
This is the condition of the laws of the Shari’ah: it is not permitted to add to them or decrease from them, or
take them out of their times and limits, or restrict something general or generalise something restricted, or
specify its modalities and modes by mere opinion and guesswork.
[The Etymology of Bid'ah]
The Muhaqqiq al-Shatibi said in al-I’tisam, “The root [meaning] of the root [letters] b-d-‘ is to invent something
without a past precedent. Hereof is His statement, (Most High) ‘Originator (badi’) of the Heavens and earth.
When He decrees a thing, He says unto it only: Be! and it is.’ (2:117, 6:101) i.e. their inventor without a past
precedent, and His statement (Most High) ‘Say: I am no new thing (bid’) among the messengers (of Allah)’
(46:9) i.e. I was not the first to come with a message from Allah to [His] servants, rather many Messengers
came before me. It is said ’such and such a person innovated a bid’ah’ i.e. he invented a method not
preceded by one who preceded [him]; and it is said ‘this is a novel (badi’) matter’ in regards to something
considered good which has no precedent in [its] goodness, so it is as though nothing that is similar to it or
resembling it preceded it. From this meaning, bid’ah was called bid’ah. Thus, its extraction in order to
practice it is an innovation (ibtida’), its mode is a bid’ah, and the action done in this way is called bid’ah. In
this sense, the action which has no evidence in the Shari’ah is called bid’ah which is the generalised usage
of a linguistically more restricted [meaning] in accordance with how it is mentioned by the power of Allah.”
Then he said, “Bid’ah is, therefore, an invented method in the religion which resembles [the prescribed law
of] the Shari’ah, by the performance of which is sought an excess in devotion to Allah (Glorified and Exalted
is He).”
[Relative Bid'ah (al-bida' al-idafiyyah)][8]
Then he said in another place, “Often an action is originally licit but begins to take the course of bid’ah. The
explanation of this is that an action that is recommended, for example, and a performer performs it in the
privacy of his own [space] upon its first assignment of recommendation. If the performer restricts [himself] to
this degree there is no harm and it takes its course [of recommendation] when he remains on this in his
private [space] without persistently exhibiting it. Rather, when he exhibits it, he does not exhibit it as the ruling
of the persistent acts like the regular sunnahs and the compulsory obligations. This, then, is sound and
there is no problem in it. The basis of this is the recommendation of Allah’s Messenger of concealing
supererogatory [prayers] and performing [them] within the houses. His statement, “The best of prayers is
your prayer in your houses besides the prescribed [prayers]” limits exhibition [of prayer] to the obligations, as
you see, even if this was in his mosque, in the Sacred Mosque or in the mosque of Jerusalem to [the extent
that] they [i.e. the jurists] said that supererogatory [prayer] in the house is better than it is in one of these three
mosques as is required by the outward [meaning] of the hadith. The sunnahs like the two Ids, the Eclipse
Prayer (al-khusuf), the Rain Prayer (al-istisqa) and those resembling them take the course of the obligatory
prayers in exhibition. The ruling of concealment remains in [prayers] besides these, and hereof the pious
predecessors (Allah be pleased with them) persevered in the concealment of [good] deeds in what they
were able as it was easy for them to follow [his] tradition and his practice (upon him be peace) because he
is the example and the standard.”
He said, “The reason for innovation being included here is that all that Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him
and grant him peace) persisted in of supererogatory [prayers] and exhibited them in congregations, they are
sunnah, so performing a supererogatory [prayer] which is not sunnah in the manner a sunnah is performed
is removal of the supererogatory [prayer] from the place specified for it in the Shari’ah. Moreover, as a
consequence of this, the laity and those who have no knowledge about it believe that it is a sunnah and this
is a great iniquity, because believing of what is not a sunnah [to be a sunnah] and performing it to the degree
a sunnah is performed is akin to changing the Shari’ah, just as if it is believed about an obligation that it is
not an obligation or what is not an obligation that it is an obligation and then this is practiced in accordance
with one’s belief, for indeed that is an iniquity. Thus, an action originally begins correctly, then its removal
from its place by belief and practice is a kind of corruption of the laws of the Shari’ah.”
He said in another place, “Of the relative bid’ahs (al-bida’ al-idafiyya) which are close to actual [bid'ah] is that
the origin of the [act of] worship is licit but it is removed from its original legislation without evidence,
imagining that it remains upon its original [ruling] under the requirement of the evidence, and that [i.e. relative
bid'ah] is by restricting the generality of these [rulings, based] on opinion or generalising its restriction. In
sum, it is removed from its limit to [another] limit.”
He said, “From this [kind of bid'ah] is specifying virtuous days with various types of worship which have not
been specifically legislated like specifying a certain day with such and such rak’ats or with such and such
charity or a specific night with standing such and such rak’ats or completing the Qur’an in it or whatever
resembles that, since that specification and acting upon it, when it is not because of the rule of expediency or
by an objective the like of which is intended by those of intellect, free-time and activity, it is an excess
legislation. There is no proof in support of it in saying that the virtue of this time is established over other than
it so it is good to place rituals in it because we say: Is this goodness established on a sound basis or not? If
it is established, then that is our opinion just as it is established in the standing of the nights of Ramadan
and the fasting of the three days of every month and fasting Monday and Thursday, and if it is not
established, then what are you relying on in this? The intellect does not deem [something] good or bad and
the Shari’ah does not support it, so nothing remains but it being an innovation in that specification.”
[Implications of Tark (not doing something)]
He said in another place, “Here is a principle on this matter [of tark], may Allah benefit by it those who are just
to themselves, which is that silence of the Lawgiver on the ruling of an issue or leaving something is of two
types:
“One of them is that he remains silent about it or leaves it because there is no incentive to it, requiring it; [and
there is] no necessitating [factor] due to which it was assigned and a cause for it being assigned did not
occur. [This is] akin to the legal cases (nawazil) that occurred after the death of the Prophet (Allah bless him
and grant him peace) because they were non-existent. Moreover, he remained silent about them despite
their coming into existence, as they only occurred [as legal cases] after that [i.e. his death]. Thus, the
scholars of Shari’ah need to examine them and apply them in accordance with what is evident from the
universals by which the religion was perfected. All that the pious predecessors deliberated on of that which
is not from the Messenger of Allah’s (Allah bless him and grant him peace) practice, in a specific [manner] of
which the meaning is intelligible, refers to this type. When the causes of this type occur, it is necessary to
look into it and apply it in accordance with its principles if it is from the customs, or from the rituals which
cannot be limited to what was transmitted, like the rules of forgetfulness (al-sahw wa l-nisyan) in the
performance of rituals. There is no problem in this type because the principles of the Shari’ah are available
and the underlying causes of these rules were not there in the age of revelation so silence about them
specifically is not a ruling requiring permission to leave [the act] or anything else. Rather, when the cases
are presented it is referred back to its principles and it will be found by means of them. None besides a
mujtahid can find it and only the mujtahids characterised by knowledge of Usul al-Fiqh can find it.
“And the second type is that the Lawgiver is silent about a specific ruling or leaves a matter from the matters,
and its necessitating factor that requires it is present, and its underlying cause in the age of revelation and in
the time after it was existent and established, but an additional command to what is the general law in the
likes of it was not specified therein and there was no decrease from it. Since the factor necessitating the
legalisation of the specific rational ruling was existent and then it was not legislated and no attention was
paid to its extraction, it would be clear that any excess to what is established here is a superfluous bid’ah
and contrary to the intent of the Lawgiver, since it is understood that he intended to halt at what is defined [in
the Shari'ah] with no addition to it and no subtraction from it.”
Then he said, “Indeed, here, silence over the ruling of the performance of an act or leaving [it] when the factor
demanding it is present, is [equivalent to] the consensus of all who are silent that there is no excess to what
was, since if that [excess] was suitable according to the Shari’ah or permissible they would have done it, and
they would be more deserving of comprehending it and beating [us] in practicing it, because it is not correct
that the legal cause was ineffective in the time of the Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) and the
caliphs after him and then it came into effect . For this [reason] Malik said, ‘Do you believe people today are
more desirous of good than those who have passed?’”[9]
In sum, all good is in the sunnah and following the pious predecessors who are stars of guidance and
signposts of integrity. “After the Truth what is there saving error? How then are ye turned away?” (10:32)
[The Hadith "Whatever the Muslims deem to be good is good according to Allah"]
[It is mentioned in Majalis al-Abrar:] [In the subject] of innovation, [according] to a learned scholar (fadil): It
remains for us to verify [the narration] ‘whatever the Muslims deem to be good…’ to its end, since many
people have become accustomed to adducing this narration as proof for the non-detestability of what they
have become accustomed to of bid’ahs. This deduction is incorrect. The hadith is against them, not for them,
because it is part of a hadith halted at ibn Mas’ud (mawquf ‘ala bni mas’ud), narrated by Ahmad, al-Bazzar,
al-Tabrani and others as such: “Indeed Allah (Most High) looked at the hearts of the servants and chose
Muhammad and sent him with His message. Then he looked at the hearts of the servants and chose for him
companions and made them helpers and supporters of his religion, so whatever the Muslims deem to be
good, it is good according to Allah, and whatever the Muslims deem to be bad, it is bad according to Allah.”
There is no doubt that the definite particle (lam) in “the Muslims” is not for the entirety of the genus, so it is
not contrary to his (Allah bless him and grant him peace) statement “My nation will divide into 73 groups all of
which are in the Fire except one” because every group from the Muslim nation believe its religious character
is good, by which it is necessitated that no group of them will be in the Fire, and likewise some Muslims
deem something good while others deem it bad, so it results in good being indistinguishable from bad.
Thus, [the definite particle] is either for particularity (‘ahd) and the particularised object (ma’hud) is what he
mentioned in his statement “and chose for him companions”, in which case the intended meaning would be
the Muslims from the Companions only; or for encompassment (istighraq) of the special features (khasa’is)
of that genus so by Muslims is meant the people of sound judgement (ijtihad) who have perfected the
attribute of Islam, turning the general (mutlaq) into the perfect (kamil) because the general in the absence of
a qualifier turns into the perfect particular (fard kamil) which is the mujtahid [in this case], thus it becomes
‘whatever the Companions or the people of sound judgement deem to be good is good according to Allah
and whatever the Companions or the people of sound judgement deem to be bad is bad according to Allah’;
and it is possible that [the definite particle] is for actual encompassment so the meaning becomes ‘whatever
all the Muslims deem to be good or bad is as such according to Allah’, and whatever is disputed, attention
then is given to the three generations whose greatness has been corroborated [in the hadiths]. [End of quote
from Majalis al-Abrar]
[Hafiz Al-Lakhnawi wrote after quoting the above:] The most obvious and correct of the three interpretations of
the definite particle is the first interpretation as indicated by the fa (so) prefixed to “whatever the Muslims
deem to be good.” The latter two interpretations would be considered if the speech was without fa or was
with waw (and) as is commonly used on their tongues, and since [this is] not [the case, that is] not
[considered].
A group have attributed this hadith to the Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) and said Allah’s
Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) said “Whatever the Muslims deem to be good is good
according to Allah.” From them is Imam al-Razi in al-Tafsir al-Kabir and al-’Ayni in Sharh al-Hidayah and
others from its commentators. However, ibn Nujaym said in al-Ashbah wa l-Naza’ir: Al-’Ala’i said, “I did not
find a basis for it in marfu’ form in any of the books of hadiths or with a weak chain after lengthy research and
much investigation and inquiry, and it is only one of the sayings of ibn Mas’ud halted at him (mawquf
‘alayhi).” [Here] ends a summarised [passage on the discussion of this narration] from Tuhfat al-Akhyar by al-
Hafiz al-Lakhnawi.[10]
And from what we transmitted to you about this narration you know that the supporters of bid’ahs adhering to
it is not justified because it is a narration halted at ibn Mas’ud, and acting on the statement of a Companion
and the obligation of practicing it is disputed. Furthermore, the purpose behind it [i.e. the statement] is:
whatever they, either all the Muslims or the Companions in particular, agreed upon, is good, as you now
from what has preceded. Preserve this for it is beneficial. Allah (Glorified and Exalted is He) knows best.
[Conclusion]
By this account which we reviewed from the instructions of our praiseworthy teacher [Shaykh al-Hind
Mawlana Mahmud al-Hasan] and others of the ‘ulama of this field (Allah have mercy on them), it [should] be
clear to you, if Allah (Most High) wills, legal bid’ah in its entirety is evil and blameworthy and is not divided
into good and bad, or obligatory, recommended and disliked, and other divisions. So his (Allah bless him
and grant him peace) statement in the hadith of the chapter “every bid’ah is misguidance” is understood by
us as general.
Those who specify it as evil bid’ah and divide bid’ah into types seem not to have been over particular about
the use of this word and they shifted from the legal definition to the linguistic definition and construed it as
legal[11], as the statement of al-Zurqani in Sharh al-Mawahib indicates where he said: “It is linguistically
what is done without a past precedent and is used in the Shar’iah in this sense also. It divides into obligatory
[bid'ah] like knowledge of the evidences of the dialectical theologians (mutakallimin) to refute the atheists
and innovators; recommended, like compiling books, building schools and endowments; permissible, like
expanding foods and drinks; prohibited, like errors produced in [the recitation of] the Qur’an; and disliked,
like the effect of something the detestability of which is proven textually.” Al-Nawawi said, “the hadith is from
the general [statement that is] qualified and this is not negated by its emphasis on ‘all’, because that does
not prevent qualification as [in] His statement (Most High) ‘Destroying all things by commandment of its Lord’
(46:25)[12].” And Allah (Glorified and High is He) knows best what is right.
Fath al-Mulhim, vol 5, pp. 328-336
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The hadith in Sahih Muslim, Kitab al-’Ilm is as follows: Some desert Arabs clad in woollen clothes came to
Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace). He saw them in sad plight as they had been hard
pressed by need. He exhorted people to give charity, but they showed some reluctance until [displeasure]
could be seen on his face. Then a person from the Ansar came with a purse containing silver. Then came
another person and then other persons followed them in succession until happiness could be seen on his
face. Thereupon Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) said, “It will be written for the one
who introduced a good practice in Islam which was practiced after him the reward of those who practiced it,
without their rewards being diminished in any respect. And it will be written for the one who introduced some
evil practice in Islam which had been practiced subsequently the sin of those who practiced it, without their
sins being diminished in any respect.”
Mufti Taqi Usmani said under the commentary of this hadith, “In it is [an indication] of the great reward [given]
to one who performs a good [deed] the first time and is then followed by others. This is concerning the
goodness of that which has been established in the Qur’an and sunnah but people have abandoned it or do
not pay attention to one of its particulars as has occurred here, since the virtue of charity has been
established in the Qur’an and sunnah, but the one who paid attention to it in regard to this particular [cause]
and produced charity for it the first time and thus became an inviter to others, this reward is established for
him. As for that which is not established as a good deed in the Qur’an, nor in the sunnah, the invention of
such a practice, is an innovation that has no relation to this hadith. And Allah (Glorified is He) knows best.”
(Takmilah Fath al-Mulhim, vol. 5, p. 407) ↩
The Spanish Maliki legal theorist Abu Ishaq al-Shatibi (d. 790/1388) wrote in the eighth chapter of his work al-
I’tisam while discussing examples of al-masalih al-mursalah (matters of public interest introduced without
specific evidences from the Qur’an or Sunnah), which he takes as the only exception to innovations in
religion: “We will restrict ourselves to ten examples of al-masalih al-mursalah. The first of them is that the
Companions of the Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) agreed upon the compilation of the
mushaf, while there is no direct text [instructing] its composition and also its writing, rather one of them [i.e.
the Companions] said ‘How can we do something which Allah’s Messenger did not do (Allah bless him and
grant him peace)?’
“Thus, it was narrated from Zayd ibn Thabit (Allah be pleased with him) [that] he said: Abu Bakr (Allah be
pleased with him) sent for me after the [heavy] casualties in [the battle of] Yamama while ‘Umar (Allah be
pleased with him) was with him. He said: ‘Umar came to me and said, ‘The people have suffered heavy
casualties among the reciters on the day of Yamama, and I am afraid that there will be more casualties
among the reciters at other battle-fields, whereby a large part of the Qur’an may be lost, unless you compile
it, so I am of the opinion that you should instruct the collection of the Qur’an.’ He said: I said to him, ‘How can
I do something which Allah’s Messenger did not do?’ ‘Umar said to me, ‘By Allah, it is good.’ So ‘Umar kept
on pressing me till Allah opened my bosom to it and I saw in it what ‘Umar saw in it.’ Zayd said: Then Abu
Bakr said, ‘Indeed you are a wise young man and we do not suspect you. Indeed you used to write the
revelation for Allah’s Messenger. Therefore, trace the Qur’an and collect it.’ Zayd said: By Allah, if they had
charged me to shift a mountain from the mountains it would not have been heavier on me than that. Then I
said, ‘How can you do a thing which the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him and grant him peace) did not
do?’ So Abu Bakr said, ‘By Allah, it is good.’ So he kept pressing me till Allah opened my bosom to that which
He had opened their bosoms. So I traced the Qur’an, collecting it from parchments, scapula, leaf-stalks of
date palms and from the breasts of men.’ [Transmitted in Sahih al-Bukhari, Kitab al-Tafsir] Hence, this is a
deed in which no dispute has been transmitted from the Companions.
“Moreover, it was narrated from Anas ibn Malik that it was [the time when] the people of Sham and the people
of Iraq were waging war to conquer Armenia and Azerbaijan and Hudyahfah ibn al-Yaman was afraid of their
differences in [the recitation of] the Qur’an, so he said to ‘Uthman, ‘O leader of the faithful! Take hold of this
nation before they differ about the Book as the Jews and the Christians differed before.’ So ‘Uthman sent [a
message] to Hafsah, ‘Send me the manuscripts [of the Qur'an]. We will copy them into mushafs and then
return them to you.’ So Hafsah sent the manuscripts to ‘Uthman. ‘Uthman then sent [them] to Zayd ibn
Thabit, ‘Abd Allah ibn al-Zubayr, Sa’id ibn al-’As and ‘Abd al-Rahman ibn al-Harith ibn Hisham and he
commanded them to copy them into mushafs. Then he said to the three Qurayshi men, ‘In whatever you
disagree with Zayd ibn Thabit about, write it in the dialect of Quraysh since it was revealed in their tongue.’
He said: ‘They did so, and when they had copied the manuscripts into mushafs, ‘Uthman sent to every
province one mushaf from those mushafs they copied. Then he ordered that all readings other than this, in
manuscript [form] or in mushafs, be burnt.’ [Transmitted in Sahih al-Bukhari, Kitab Fada'il al-Qur'an] Hence,
this too is a consensus on [the legitimacy of] its writing and uniting people on one reading whereby
differences in large part will not result, because they did not differ except in the readings, according to what
the ‘ulama specialised in this field transmitted.
“Moreover, none opposed the matter except ‘Abd Allah ibn Mas’ud because he prohibited the disposal of that
which he possessed of [manuscripts containing] readings different to the mushafs of ‘Uthman and he said:
‘O people of ‘Iraq!’ or ‘O people of Kufa! Conceal the mushafs that you have and embezzle them for indeed
Allah (Most High) has said “Whoso embezzles will bring what he embezzled with him on the Day of
Resurrection” (3:161) so meet Allah with the mushafs’ [Abu 'Ubayd transmitted it in Fada'il al-Qur'an]. Look
carefully at his words because he did not oppose its compilation and he only opposed another matter.
Despite this, ibn Shihab said: ‘It reached me that men from the most virtuous of the Companions of Allah’s
Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) disliked this [because] of the statement of ibn Mas’ud’. A
text has not been narrated from the Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) about that which they did,
but they considered it a benefit (maslahah) that is absolutely in line with the regulations of the Shari’ah
(tasarrufat al-shar’), because it derives from the [need to] preserve the Shari’ah, and the command to protect
it is acknowledged; and [the command] to prevent the means to disputation about its source which is the Qur’
an, and the prohibition of disputation over it is known to a degree not [requiring] more [detail].
“Once this principle is established, extend it to writing knowledge of the traditions and other than them when
their effacement is feared, adding to what has come in the hadiths of the command to write knowledge. I
wish that the writing of this book which I put my hands to is from this viewpoint because I saw that the topic of
bid’ahs was greatly neglected in the speech of the ‘ulama, except for minor transmissions as ibn Waddah
transmitted or [various] points of discussion are produced that will not satisfy the one thirsty for complete
understanding of it as is required. I did not find, despite my intense search for it, except what Abu Bakr al-
Turtushi wrote about it, but it is too brief with regard to what is needed about it, and if it was not [needed]
people would not fall into seventy two sects. It [i.e. al-Turtushi's work] is a chapter of the chapters on the
subject and a section of its sections. So I took up the [task] myself to pay the attention to it [that it deserves].
May Allah benefit thereby its writer, its reader, its distributer, its copyist, the one seeking benefit from it and all
Muslims. Verily He is the Guardian of that and the Executer of it by the vastness of His mercy.” (Kitab al-I’
tisam, Vol 3, pp. 12-17)
Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti (d. 911/1505) wrote in his celebrated work on the sciences of the Qur’an: “Al-Khattabi
said: Indeed he (Allah bless him and grant him peace) did not compile the Qur’an into a mushaf because he
anticipated the revelation of something that will abrogate one of its laws or parts of its recitation. Then, when
its revelation ended with his death, Allah inspired this [task] to the rightly guided caliphs, fulfilling His truthful
oath guaranteeing its preservation for the entire ummah [in Qur'an 15:9]. Thus, the beginning of this
[compilation] was at the hand of al-Siddiq upon consulting with ‘Umar. As for what Muslim transmitted from
the hadith of Abu Sa’id that he said: Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) said ‘Write not
from me [anything] besides the Qur’an…’ [to the end of] the hadith, this does not negate that, because the
discussion is about a specific writing in a specific way. Indeed, the entire Qur’an was written in the era of
Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) but was not collected into one place, and the
chapters (suwar) were not sequenced.” (Al-Itqan fi ‘Ulum al-Qur’an, p. 129) ↩
Al-Shatibi discusses Tarawih and ‘Umar’s statement in the third chapter of al-I’tisam. He writes “As for the
category of recommendation (mandub), it is not from bid’ahs in any situation. This may be clarified by
considering the examples used in support of it, like Salat al-Tarawih during Ramadan in congregation in the
mosque, since the Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) established it and the people gathered
behind him.
“Abu Dawud transmitted from Abu Dharr [that] he said: We fasted with the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless
him and grant him peace) during Ramadan, but he did not stand with us [in prayer] in any part of the month
till seven [nights] remained; then he stood with us till a third of the night had passed. When the sixth
[remaining night] came, he did not stand with us. When the fifth [remaining night] came, he stood with us till
a half of the night passed. So we said, ‘We wish you had led us in supererogatory prayers during the whole
of tonight.’ He said, ‘When a man prays with an imam till he goes, he is reckoned as having spent a whole
night in prayer.’ When the fourth [remaining night] came he did not stand with us. When the third [remaining
night] came, he gathered his family, his wives, and the people and prayed with us till we were afraid we
should miss success (falah). [The sub-narrator] asked: ‘What is success?’ He said: ‘Suhur (the predawn
meal). Then he did not stand with us for the remainder of the month.’ Al-Tirmidhi [narrated something]
similar to this and he said in it ’sound and authentic (hasan sahih).’
“However when he (Allah bless him and grant him peace) feared it would become obligatory on the ummah
he withheld from it. Thus, in the Sahih [it is narrated] from ‘A’ishah (Allah be pleased with her) that one night
Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) prayed in the mosque and the people followed
him in prayer. The next night he also prayed and the people increased. On the third or fourth night they
gathered, but Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) did not come out to them. When
morning came he said, ‘I saw what you were doing and nothing but the fear that it might be enjoined on you,
stopped me from coming.’ And that was in the month of Ramadan. Malik also transmitted it in al-Muwatta.
“Pay careful attention, for in this hadith is that which proves it is sunnah since his standing [in prayer] with
them first is a proof for the standing in the mosque in congregation during Ramadan and his prohibition to
come out after that, for fear of it becoming obligatory, does not prove it is absolutely prohibited because his
age was the age of revelation and legislation, so it was possible revelation would come to him if he
practiced it with the people with persistence. Thus when the cause of legislation disappeared with the death
of Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace), the matter returned to its origin, and the
permissibility is established, as nothing abrogated it.
“Abu Bakr did not establish it for one of two reasons: either because he saw people standing in the last part
of the night and what they were on was better according to him than their gathering under an imam in the first
part of the night - this was mentioned by al-Turtushi; or because of the shortness of his time to look into
these peripheral matters along with his preoccupations with the apostates and other than that which was
more pressing than Salat al-Tarawih. And when Islam became established in the time of ‘Umar (Allah be
pleased with him) and he saw people in the mosque scattered, as has come in the narration, he said, ‘it
would better if these [people] gathered under one reciter’ and when that was done for him, he drew attention
to the prayer in the last part of the night being better. Then the predecessors agreed on the correctness of
this and its approval, and the ummah does not agree on misguidance. Legal theorists (usuliyyun) have
explicated that ijma’ is not but a [result] of evidence from the Shari’ah.
“If it is said that Umar (Allah be pleased with him) called it a bid’ah and deemed it good by his statement
‘what a blessed bid’ah this is’ so when one bid’ah is deemed good in the Shar’iah, the general [principle] of
deeming bid’ah good is established. The response is: ‘Umar only called it bid’ah by consideration of the
apparent situation from the perspective that Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) left it
and it so happened that it did not occur in the time of Abu Bakr (Allah be pleased with him), not that it is bid’
ah in the [proper] sense. Thus, whoever calls it bid’ah by this consideration there is no fundamental quarrel,
and thereupon it is not permissible to adduce this as proof for the permissibility of innovation in the sense
discussed [previously], because that is a kind of distortion of words from their [proper] contexts.” (Kitab al-I’
tisam, Vol 1, pp. 323-327) ↩
’Allamah Anwar Shah al-Kashmiri said, “Bid’ah is that which is not found in the Book, the Sunnah and the
ijtihad of a mujtahid whose ijtihad is accepted. Moreover, if it is from that which is not confused with matters
of the Shari’ah like a groom riding on a horse on the day of his marriage, this is not bid’ah although the
matter may be futile (laghw); and if it is from that which is confused with matters of the Shari’ah like [taking]
the third and fortieth [day for reciting the Qur'an] after the death of a deceased individual, this is a bid’ah.
[Several] works have been compiled on the refutation of bid’ahs. From the works of the Malikis is Ibn al-Hajj’
s Madkhal and from the Hanbalis are the works of Ibn Taymiyyah who was the standard bearer in refuting bid’
ah and from the Hanafis is [Ahmad al-Rumi's] Majalis al-Abrar and some of the works of ‘Allamah Qasim ibn
Qutlubugha. And the pithiest and greatest [work] to know the foundations of refuting bid’ahs is al-I’tisam bi l-
Kitabi wa l-Sunnah by al-Shatibi the Maliki in two volumes.” (Al-’Arf al-Shadhi, vol. 4, pp. 135-6) ↩
On bid’ah referring specifically to innovations in the religion, the Indian Hanafi mystic Ahmad al-Sirhindi (d.
1034/1624) said “The practice of the Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) is of two types: an action
by way of worship, and an action by way of custom and habit. Thus, the action that proceeds from him by way
of worship, we believe anything contrary to it is a condemned bid’ah and we stress its prohibition because it
is innovation in the religion which is rejected. And the action that proceeds from him by way of custom and
habit, we do not believe anything contrary to it is a condemned bid’ah and we do not stress its prohibition
because it does not pertain to the religion.” (Al-Maktubat Vol 1, Letter 233). He also said “From where do they
judge that bid’ah, newly-invented in the perfect religion and the desired Islam, is good after the perfection of
the blessing [of Islam]?” (Al-Maktubat Vol 2, Letter 20)
The Persian theologian Sa’d al-Din al-Taftazani (d. 793/1390) said “Blameworthy bid’ah is a newly-invented
matter in the religion that was not present in the era of the Companions and the Successors and a proof
from the Shari’ah does not establish it.” (Sharh al-Maqasid Vol 5 p 232)
The Egyptian traditionist and jurist Ibn Daqiq al-’Id (d. 702/1302) said “Do you not see that when we consider
the bid’ahs pertaining to the affairs of the world, they are not equal to bid’ahs pertaining to matters of the
peripheral laws? Perhaps they, I mean the bid’ahs pertaining to the matters of the world, are, in essence, not
detestable, rather in many of them there is firm resolve of their non-detestability. And when we consider the
bid’ahs pertaining to the peripheral laws, they are not equal to bid’ahs pertaining to the fundamentals of
beliefs.” (Ihkam al-Ahkam Sharh Umdah al-Ahkam, Vol. 1 p. 171) ↩
Al-Shatibi said while refuting ‘Izz al-Din’s usage of the term bid’ah for discussion about the minutiae of
tasawwuf: “As for discussion about the minutiae of tasawwuf, it is not designated as bid’ah and it is not
something that can be used as proof for this designation. Rather, the matter depends [on what is meant by
"tasawwuf"]. It is necessary to firstly clarify the term tasawwuf so judgement is made on a concept that is
understood, because it is an ambiguous concept according to these successors (muta’akhkhirin), so we
ought to refer to what was said about it by the predecessors (mutaqaddimun).
“The outcome of what the term “tasawwuf” refers to, according to them, is [one of] two meanings: first,
adopting all good character traits and removing all lowly character traits; and second, annihilation (fana) of
one’s self and subsisting (baqa) with one’s Lord. Upon verification they both derive from the same meaning,
although the first better describes the beginning [stages of tasawwuf] and the second better describes the
end [stages of tasawwuf]. Both of them are assimilation (ittisaf) [i.e. acquisition of new attributes], although
the first does not require states (hal) while the second does require states. These can be looked at in
another way, so the first [refers to] the obligatory practices and the second [to] its results, and the first is
assimilation of the external and the second is assimilation of the internal, and both of them are tasawwuf.
“Once this is established, discussion about tasawwuf in the first definition [above] is not bid’ah, because it
derives from a deep understanding, on which actions, elaboration of its slips and obstacles, the ways to
correct the corruption that arises therein by reformation, is based, which is true understanding (fiqh). Its
principles are clear in the Book and the sunnah. It cannot be said about the like of this that it is bid’ah, just
like the corollaries of the chapters of deferred goods (salam), rents (ijarat), injury (jarah) and the issues of
forgetfulness, retraction of witnesses, commercial transactions, etc.
“It is not from the honour of the ‘ulama to designate derivative corollary [matters], which were non-existent
previously, as bid’ah, even if its points are intricate. Similarly, it is not said about the intricacies of the
corollaries of external and internal character traits, that they are bid’ah, because they all derive from the
principles of Shari’ah.” (Kitab al-I’tisam, Vol. 1 p 348-9) ↩
Shaykh ‘Abd al-Ghani al-Dahlawi (d. 1293/1876), who taught hadith to the founders of the Deoband
seminary, wrote in his commentary of Sunan ibn Majah: “[In regards to] his statement, ‘he who innovates in
this matter of ours’, [it refers to] that which is not from the matter of religion, like food, drink and clothes, since
people are given an option in all that is available in these things, although adherence to him (upon him be
peace) is better than everything [else].
“[As for] his statement, ‘that which is not from it’, i.e. that which is not from its means, because means are
included in [the matter of religion]. This is why Shaykh Mujaddid [al-Alf al-Thani] (Allah be pleased with him)
said that the sciences which are a means to conduct religiously sanctioned matters, like Sarf and Nahw, are
included in the sunnah and the designation of bid’ah is not used for them, because according him (Allah be
pleased with him) there is no good in bid’ah at all. Therefore, he said, ‘We abstain from good bid’ah, even if
its light is like the break of dawn, because bid’ah inevitably removes a sunnah. If one does something which
he (upon him be peace) did not do, he is in opposition to him in this [practice], and if he did not do
something that he (Allah bless him and grant him peace) did do, that is also the case.’ As a consequence,
he (Allah be pleased with him) prohibited uttering one’s intention (niyyah) at the beginning of prayer because
it is not established from him (Allah bless him and grant him peace), nor from the Companions, nor from
any of the mujtahids.
“Some ‘ulama divide bid’ah into good and evil. Nonetheless, our ‘ulama said that performing one sunnah,
even if it is a light matter like entering the lavatory with the left foot first, is better than a good bid’ah, even if it
is a splendid matter, like building schools (madaris).” (Shuruh Sunan Ibn Majah, p. 60, quoting from Injah al-
Hajah) ↩
In chapter five of Al-I’tisam, al-Shatibi divides bid’ah into actual bid’ah (bid’ah haqiqiyyah) and relative bid’ah
(bid’ah idafiyyah). He defines the first as “that which is not indicated by a proof from the Shari’ah, neither from
the Book, nor from the Sunnah, nor from Consensus, nor a deduction that is valid (mu’tabar) according to the
people of knowledge, neither in general nor in detail.” He defined relative bid’ah as “that which has two
components: the first of them has a connection to the evidences so from this perspective it is not bid’ah. And
the other [component] has no connection [to the evidences] but like [that of] actual bid’ah. Since the deed that
has these two components is not purely one of the two sides [of sunnah and bid'ah], we assign for it this
name i.e. relative bid’ah because in relation to one of the two perspectives it is sunnah and in relation to the
other of the two perspectives it is bid’ah.” ↩
On this note, the Damascene exegete and historian, Ibn Kathir (d. 774/1373) wrote: “As for the Ahl al-Sunnah
wa l-Jama’ah, they say with regards to every action and statement not established from the Companions: it
is bid’ah, because had there been [any] good [besides what is established from them], they would have beat
us to it, as they did not leave a trait from the good qualities, except they hastened to it.” (Tafsir ibn Kathir, p.
1703) ↩
Hafiz al-Lakhnawi (d. 1304/1887) in this work offered his own opinion on the issue of the definition of bid’ah.
He wrote: “If you ask: how can the performance of Tarawih in congregation in the mosques be a sunnah
when ‘Umar (Allah be pleased with him) himself said in regards to it ‘What a blessed bid’ah this is’, and a
bid’ah cannot be a sunnah, rather every bid’ah is misguidance and every misguidance is in the Fire as
[mentioned] in the hadith?
“I say: the ‘ulama have differed in this subject according to two opinions. The first is that the hadith ‘every bid’
ah is misguidance’ is a general [statement] qualified by part of it (‘amm makhsus al-ba’d) and its intent is:
‘evil bidah.’ They divided bid’ah into obligatory (wajib), recommended (mandub), disliked (makruh),
prohibited (muharram) and permissible (mubah). This is [the view] that Abu Nu’aym narrated in his Hilyat al-
Awliya from Imam al-Shafi’i that he said ‘Newly-invented matters are two types. The first of them is what was
invented of that which conflicts with the Book, the sunnah, the narration or consensus. This bid ah is
misguidance. The second is that which was invented of good and this is not blameworthy and indeed ‘Umar
(Allah be pleased with him) said about the standing in the month of Ramadan, “what a blessed bid’ah this
is,” meaning, that it was newly-invented and was non-existent.’ This [opinion] was expressed by Shaykh ‘Izz
al-Din ibn ‘Abd al-Salam in Kitab al-Qawa’id, al-Nawawi in Tahdhib al-Asma wa l-Lughat, ‘Ali al-Qari in Sharh
al-Mishkat, ibn al-Malik in Mabariq al-Azhar Sharh Maqasid al-Anwar, al-Suyuti in his treatise Husn al-
Maqsad fi ‘Amal al-Mawlid and his treatise al-Masabih fi Salat al-Tarawih, al-Qastallani in Irshad al-Sari
Sharh Sahih al-Bukhari, al-Zurqani in Sharh al-Muwatta, Hafiz Abu Shamah in his book al-Ba’ith ‘ala Inkar al-
Bida’ wa l-Hawadith, al-Halabi in al-Insan al-’Uyun fi Sirat al-Nabi al-Mamun and others. Hence, [based] on
this opinion, the bid’ah that is the opposite of sunnah is detestable and prohibited bid’ah, and as regards to
all that is besides them of bid’ahs, they are not evil.
“The second opinion, and upon critical analysis this is the more accurate, is that the hadith ‘every bid’ah is
misguidance’ remains general and that the intended [meaning] of legal bid’ah is that which is not found in
the generations whose greatness has been corroborated [in the hadiths] and a [sound] basis from the
principles of the Shari’ah is not found in favour of it, and it is acknowledged everything that has this quality is
absolutely misguided. Al-Sayyid al-Sind in Sharh al-Mishkat, Hafiz ibn Hajar in Al-Hady al-Sari Muqaddamatu
Fath al-Bari and in Fath al-Bari, ibn Hajar al-Haythami al-Makki in Fath al-Mubin Sharh al-Arba’in and others
inclined to this view. Hence, [based] on this opinion, Tarawih is not legal bid’ah so as to become
misguidance and the opposite of sunnah, and ‘Umar only called it a bid’ah by consideration of its linguistic
meaning because it is from that which he innovated after it was non-existent in the first era and the era of the
first caliph. He alluded to this by the addition of the word ‘brilliant’, meaning that that which we innovated is
not a legal bid’ah so as not to be good, rather it is a legal sunnah, although it is a linguistic bid’ah.” (Tuhfat al-
Akhyar bi Ihya Sunnati Sayyid al-Abrar, p. 26) ↩
The Ottoman Hanafi moralist al-Birgivi (d. 981/1573) said “If it is asked how is his (upon him be blessings
and peace) statement ‘every bid’ah is misguidance’ reconciled with the statement of the fuqaha that bid’ah
is occasionally permissible (mubah) like using a sieve and the perpetuity of eating the wheat kernel and
being satiated thereby; occasionally preferable (mustahabb) like erecting minarets, schools and the
compilation of literary works; rather it sometimes becomes obligatory (wajib) like the furnishing of proofs to
refute the doubts of the heretics and their like?
“We say: bid’ah has a linguistic general sense irrespective of it [being related to] custom or worship,
because it is a noun [derived] from ibtida’ with the meaning of innovation…This is the categorisation in the
vernacular of the fuqaha. They mean by it anything introduced after the first period…
“And [bid'ah] has a legal qualified sense which is to increase in the religion or decrease from it after the
Companions without the permission of the Lawgiver, neither verbally nor in practice, and neither explicitly nor
allusively. So it does not in principle include customs, rather it is restricted to beliefs…and certain forms of
worship. This is his (Allah bless him and grant him peace) intent in his statement ‘every bid’ah is
misguidance.’ [That legal bid'ah does not include customs is proven] by the indication of his (Allah bless him
and grant him peace) statement ‘adhere to my sunnah and the sunnah of the rightly guided caliphs’, ‘you are
more knowledgeable in your worldly matters’ and ‘whoever innovates anything into this matter of ours shall
be rejected’” (Al-Tariqat al-Muhammadiyyah, Vol. 1 p. 120) ↩
As the verse goes on to say that the houses were not destroyed despite the use of the word “all” [kull].
Needless to say, the author, ‘Allamah Shabbir Ahmad al-’Uthmani, does not agree with al-Nawawi and al-
Zurqani that the hadith is “qualified” in its legal application, but as he said “it is understood by us as
general”. ↩
In the Name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful.
Muhammad ibn al-Muthanna narrated to me: ‘Abd al-Wahhab ibn ‘Abd al-Majid narrated to us: from Ja’far ibn
Muhammad: from his father: from Jabir ibn ‘Abd Allah, he said:
When Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) would deliver a sermon, his eyes became
red, his voice rose, and his anger intensified, so it was as though he was warning against an army, saying,
“The [enemy] has made a morning attack on you and an evening attack on you.” He would say: “The Hour
and I have been sent like these two” and would join his forefinger and middle finger. And he would say: “As
for what follows. The best of speech is the Book of Allah, and the best of guidance is the guidance of
Muhammad. And the most evil of affairs are their innovations; and every bid’ah is misguidance.” He would
further say: “I am dearer to a Muslim than his self. And one who left behind property, that is for his family. And
he who left a debt or children, that is [given] to me and [their responsibility] is on me.” (Sahih Muslim)
[Those who Categorise Bid'ah into Good and Evil]
[In regards to] his statement “every bid’ah is misguidance”, ‘Ali al-Qari’ said: In al-Azhar it says, “This means
every evil bid’ah is misguidance, due to his (upon him blessing and peace) statement ‘One who establishes
a good practice (sunnatan hasana) in Islam, he will have its reward and the reward of those who practice it.’
[1] Abu Bakr and ‘Umar collected the Qur’an, Zayd wrote it in the mushaf and it was reworked in the time of
‘Uthman.”[2]
Al-Nawawi said: “Bid’ah is everything done without a prior example and, in the Shari’ah, it is an invention of
that which did not exist in the era of Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace). And his
statement, ‘Every bid’ah is misguidance’ is a general [statement that is] qualified (‘amm makhsus).
Shaykh ‘Izz al-Din ibn ‘Abd al-Salam said at the end of Kitab al-Qawa’id: ‘Bid’ah is either obligatory (wajib)
like learning Nahw to understand the words of Allah and His Messenger, the composition of Usul al-Fiqh
and the discourse of narrator-criticism (al-jarh wa l-ta’dil); or prohibited (haram) like the path of the
Jabariyyah, the Qadariyyah, the Murji’ah, the Mujassimah, and refuting these groups is from the obligatory
bid’ahs because the protection of the Shari’ah from these bid’ahs is a communal obligation (fard kifayah); or
recommended (mandub) like creating an endowment or [creating] schools, and every performance of a good
deed not known in the early period, and like Tarawih i.e. in a general congregation, and the discourse of the
minutiae of the Sufis; or disliked (makruh) like decorating mosques and adorning mushafs [meaning
according to Shafi'is, as according to Hanafis it is permissible]; or permissible (mubah) like shaking hands
after Subh and ‘Asr [i.e. also according to Shafi'is for otherwise according to Hanafis it is disliked], increasing
delicacies in food and drink and making houses spacious, and extending [one's] sleeves. And some of
these have been disputed [i.e. as we previously set forth].’
Al-Shafi’i said, ‘That which is invented from whatever conflicts with the Book, the Sunnah, the narration
(athar) or ijma’, is misguidance, and that which is invented of good from whatever does not conflict with any
of these, it is not blameworthy.’ ‘Umar (Allah be pleased with him) said about the standing [in prayer] during
Ramadan ‘a wonderful bid’ah!’” This is the end of the statement of Shaykh [al-Nawawi] in Tahdhib al-Asma’
wa l-Lughat.
It was narrated from ibn Mas’ud: “Whatever the Muslims deem to be good is good according to Allah.” And in
a marfu’ hadith [it states]: “My Ummah will not agree on misguidance.” [All] this was [mentioned] in [al-Qari's]
Mirqat.
[Imam Al-Shatibi's Response to the Categorisers]
The Muhaqqiq [verifier] al-Shatibi, in the third chapter of the first volume of Kitab al-I’tisam, discussed the
statement of Shaykh ‘Izz al-Din and his student al-Qarafi in categorising bid’ah, that “this is not indicated by a
proof from the Shari’ah, neither from the texts of the Shari’ah nor from its principles, since if something from
the Shari’ah proved the obligation, recommendation or permissibility [of an act] it would not then be a bid’ah.
It would be an act included in the generality of actions that are prescribed, or those in which an option is
given. Thus, combining in these matters between bid’ah and the evidences proving their obligation,
recommendation or permissibility is a combination between two mutually exclusive things. As for the
disliked (makruh) from the divisions and the prohibited (haram), it is conceded from one perspective that
they are [divisions of] bid’ah, [but] not from another perspective, since if an evidence were to prove that an act
is prohibited or disliked that would not substantiate it being a bid’ah, due to the possibility that it is a sin (ma’
siyah) like murder, theft, drinking wine etc., so this [kind of] division is not considered in bid’ah; however, [the
division of] disliked and prohibited [is acceptable in bid'ah] according to how it is cited in a particular topic.
Hence, what al-Qarafi mentioned from the scholars regarding agreement on the condemnation of bid’ahs is
correct, and the manner in which he divided it is incorrect.
“Astonishingly, he related agreement [on this division] despite having encountered opposition and despite
his knowledge of what this entails in breaking ijma’. It appears as though he only followed in this division his
teacher without deliberation, since ibn ‘Abd al-Salam, as is apparent from him, designated al-masalih al-
mursalah (public interests lacking specific proofs) as bid’ahs, building on [the premise], and Allah knows
best, that they are not included in their individual parts under specific texts, although it agrees with the
principles of the Shari’ah. Hereof, he made the principles as the signifiers of them [i.e. al-masalih al-
mursalah] being approved by designating them using the term “bid’ahs” and this is from the perspective of
the absence of specific evidence on the issue and approval of them from the perspective of their inclusion
under principles [of public interest]. And since he built [this] on [the premise] of depending on those
principles, they are equal according to him to actions included under specific texts, and he became one of
those expressing [the principle of] al-masalih al-mursalah, but he called them bid’ahs in phraseology just as
‘Umar (Allah be pleased with him) designated the gathering for standing [in prayer] during Ramadan in the
mosque as a bid’ah, [the explanation of] which is to come if Allah (Most High) wills.[3]
“As for al-Qarafi, he has no excuse in transmitting these divisions in a manner not intended by his teacher or
[in a manner] intended by people, because he opposed everybody in that division. Thus, he became one
who opposed ijma’.”
Al-Shatibi verified in this book of his all that pertains to the exposition of the definitions of bid’ah, its types, its
rules and its being blameworthy deviance, and he removed every doubt the innovators attach to it in a
manner not [requiring] any addition to it.[4] So all praise belongs to Allah and all reward is from Him.
Verification of the Meaning of Bid’ah and its Definitions: A Brief Study
The weak servant (Allah pardon him) concluded from the words of our teachers and their instructions that:
The starting point in legal bid’ah (bid’ah shar’iyyah) is the statement of the Prophet (Allah bless him and
grant him peace), “he who innovates in this matter of ours what is not from it, is rejected.” The meaning of
“matter” as they expressed it is that [bid'ah] is not used unconditionally except for matters invented in the
religion, not for every matter that is invented.[5] As such, the likes of increasing dishes, vehicles and other
such things from permissible matters, are excluded. Rather, some of the formalities which people do not do
in order to seek nearness [to Allah] and seek reward are also [excluded] from the definition of legal bid’ah
(bid’ah shar’iyyah), although it is included in linguistic bid’ah (bid’ah lughwiyyah), since these acts are not
carried out by those who carry them out while believing and intending them to be from the religion. Thus, they
are not at all from inventions in the religion. Likewise, his (Allah bless him and grant him peace) statement
“what is not from it” indicates that the matters which have a basis in the Book or his (Allah bless him and
grant him peace) sunnah or from the example of the rightly guided caliphs, or from the normal activities of
the generality of the predecessors (salaf) (Allah be pleased with them), or the valid legal judgement (al-
ijtihad al-mu’tabar) with its preconditions based on the texts are not designated as innovations or legal bid’
ah, since these sources are all from the religion textually (tansisan) or by inference (ta’lilan), as has been
stipulated in its place.
[The Innovations of the Caliphs]
Al-Shatibi said, “From the speech of the rightly guided caliph ‘Umar ibn ‘Abd al-’Aziz (Allah have mercy on
him) which the ‘ulama took an interest in and preserved and [which] would please Malik (Allah have mercy
on him) much is that he said ‘Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) and the rulers after
him introduced [many] practices (sunan). Adopting them is a confirmation of the Book of Allah and
completion of obedience to Allah and strength in the religion of Allah. No one has [the right] to change and
alter them or consider something contradicting them. He who acts upon them is guided and he who seeks
assistance by means of them will be helped, and he who opposes them follows other than the way of the
believers and Allah will turn him to that which he has turned and make him enter hell; and it is an evil resort
[based on Qur'an 4:115].’ It is deserving that this [statement] be pleasing to them [i.e. the 'ulama], for it is a
brief statement combining beautiful principles from the sunnah.
“From these [beautiful principles] is what we are [discussing] here because his statement ‘No one has [the
right] to change and alter them or consider something contradicting them’ is decisive about the entire matter
of innovation. His statement ‘He who acts upon them is guided…’ to the end of the statement, is praise for
the adherent of the sunnah and condemnation of one who opposes it, using as a proof that which indicates
this, that is Allah’s statement (Glorified is He) ‘And whoever acts hostilely to the Messenger after that
guidance has become manifest to him, and follows other than the way of the believers, We will turn him to
that to which he has (himself) turned and make him enter hell; and it is an evil resort.’ (4:115)
“From these [principles] is that which the rulers over the matter [of Islam] practiced after the Prophet (Allah
bless him and grant him peace), it is a sunnah, containing no bid’ah at all, even if a specific text from the
Book of Allah and the sunnah of His Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) is unknown, since what
proves it [being sunnah and not bid'ah] in general has been transmitted, that is the text of the hadith of al-’
Irbad ibn Sariyyah (Allah be pleased with him) where he said therein: ‘Adhere to my sunnah and the sunnah
of the rightly guided Caliphs and cling to it with your molars. Be wary of newly-invented matters.’ Hence, he
(upon him be peace), as you see, yoked together the sunnah of the righteous caliphs and his sunnah and
[said] that part of adherence to his sunnah is adherence to their sunnah, that innovations are contrary to this
and are not from them at all. [This is] because they (Allah be pleased with them), in what they practiced, were
either following the sunnah of their Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) itself or following what
they understood from his sunnah in general and the elaboration of the manner [of this understanding] is
hidden to others. This kind of [action] is not an increase on [the sunnah], and its clarification is to come, by
the power of Allah. [The clarification] of [which is]: Abu ‘Abd Allah al-Hakim transmitted from Yahya ibn Adam
about the statement of the pious predecessors ‘the sunnah of Abu Bakr and Umar’ that the meaning of it is
that the Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) died while he was on that sunnah and that the
statement of another is not required along with the statement of the Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him
peace). What he said is correct in itself for it is from that which the hadith of al-’Irbad (Allah be pleased with
him) bears out. There is, therefore, no excess to what has been established in the Prophetic sunnah, but
[since] it is feared that it may be abrogated by another sunnah, the ‘ulama depend on the consideration of
the actions of the caliphs after him to know that that is the [sunnah] which the Prophet (Allah bless him and
grant him peace) died upon and nothing abrogated it, because they would take the latest matter from his
command.” [Here] ends [the quote from al-Shatibi].
[The Meaning of Legal Bid'ah]
The upshot is that legal bid’ah is an invented matter which does not have substantiation from the four
sources of the religion, while believing it to be from the religion, and something in which one expects to be
rewarded from Allah and gain good deeds. According to this, whatever the Lawgiver commanded as an
obligation or recommendation of seeking knowledge, memorising it, spreading it, supporting the religion,
defending it, purifying the souls and refining them[6], if its compliance in this age is dependent on acquiring
the ways and means which the predecessors (salaf) could do without, due to reasons and states specific to
them, like the composition of the sciences and compilation of books, building schools in specific ways etc.
taking up these means is not from legal bid’ah. It is established in Usul al-Fiqh that that which an obligation
is not completed except by means of it, it is itself obligatory and whatever something prescribed depends on,
it too is prescribed, so it is a part of the religion by judgement, and is not from innovation in the religion of that
which is not from it.[7]
This is similar to a doctor instructing a patient to use a certain ointment which is not found in the market, so
the patient took all of its ingredients without excess or shortage and proportioned it into a good standing
ointment by himself. Preoccupation with the principles of proportioning and working the mind to [acquire] its
methods, although it is not part of what the doctor explicitly instructed, it is nonetheless included in it by
judgement, as is clear. Yes, if he increased in the mixture of the medicine or decreased from it, or changed
the medicine for another medicine or changed the times of its use or freely chose its measurements, for
example, in spite of the instruction of the doctor treating [him], then in this there is opposition to his
instruction and interference in his job which is not for others to interfere in.
This is the condition of the laws of the Shari’ah: it is not permitted to add to them or decrease from them, or
take them out of their times and limits, or restrict something general or generalise something restricted, or
specify its modalities and modes by mere opinion and guesswork.
[The Etymology of Bid'ah]
The Muhaqqiq al-Shatibi said in al-I’tisam, “The root [meaning] of the root [letters] b-d-‘ is to invent something
without a past precedent. Hereof is His statement, (Most High) ‘Originator (badi’) of the Heavens and earth.
When He decrees a thing, He says unto it only: Be! and it is.’ (2:117, 6:101) i.e. their inventor without a past
precedent, and His statement (Most High) ‘Say: I am no new thing (bid’) among the messengers (of Allah)’
(46:9) i.e. I was not the first to come with a message from Allah to [His] servants, rather many Messengers
came before me. It is said ’such and such a person innovated a bid’ah’ i.e. he invented a method not
preceded by one who preceded [him]; and it is said ‘this is a novel (badi’) matter’ in regards to something
considered good which has no precedent in [its] goodness, so it is as though nothing that is similar to it or
resembling it preceded it. From this meaning, bid’ah was called bid’ah. Thus, its extraction in order to
practice it is an innovation (ibtida’), its mode is a bid’ah, and the action done in this way is called bid’ah. In
this sense, the action which has no evidence in the Shari’ah is called bid’ah which is the generalised usage
of a linguistically more restricted [meaning] in accordance with how it is mentioned by the power of Allah.”
Then he said, “Bid’ah is, therefore, an invented method in the religion which resembles [the prescribed law
of] the Shari’ah, by the performance of which is sought an excess in devotion to Allah (Glorified and Exalted
is He).”
[Relative Bid'ah (al-bida' al-idafiyyah)][8]
Then he said in another place, “Often an action is originally licit but begins to take the course of bid’ah. The
explanation of this is that an action that is recommended, for example, and a performer performs it in the
privacy of his own [space] upon its first assignment of recommendation. If the performer restricts [himself] to
this degree there is no harm and it takes its course [of recommendation] when he remains on this in his
private [space] without persistently exhibiting it. Rather, when he exhibits it, he does not exhibit it as the ruling
of the persistent acts like the regular sunnahs and the compulsory obligations. This, then, is sound and
there is no problem in it. The basis of this is the recommendation of Allah’s Messenger of concealing
supererogatory [prayers] and performing [them] within the houses. His statement, “The best of prayers is
your prayer in your houses besides the prescribed [prayers]” limits exhibition [of prayer] to the obligations, as
you see, even if this was in his mosque, in the Sacred Mosque or in the mosque of Jerusalem to [the extent
that] they [i.e. the jurists] said that supererogatory [prayer] in the house is better than it is in one of these three
mosques as is required by the outward [meaning] of the hadith. The sunnahs like the two Ids, the Eclipse
Prayer (al-khusuf), the Rain Prayer (al-istisqa) and those resembling them take the course of the obligatory
prayers in exhibition. The ruling of concealment remains in [prayers] besides these, and hereof the pious
predecessors (Allah be pleased with them) persevered in the concealment of [good] deeds in what they
were able as it was easy for them to follow [his] tradition and his practice (upon him be peace) because he
is the example and the standard.”
He said, “The reason for innovation being included here is that all that Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him
and grant him peace) persisted in of supererogatory [prayers] and exhibited them in congregations, they are
sunnah, so performing a supererogatory [prayer] which is not sunnah in the manner a sunnah is performed
is removal of the supererogatory [prayer] from the place specified for it in the Shari’ah. Moreover, as a
consequence of this, the laity and those who have no knowledge about it believe that it is a sunnah and this
is a great iniquity, because believing of what is not a sunnah [to be a sunnah] and performing it to the degree
a sunnah is performed is akin to changing the Shari’ah, just as if it is believed about an obligation that it is
not an obligation or what is not an obligation that it is an obligation and then this is practiced in accordance
with one’s belief, for indeed that is an iniquity. Thus, an action originally begins correctly, then its removal
from its place by belief and practice is a kind of corruption of the laws of the Shari’ah.”
He said in another place, “Of the relative bid’ahs (al-bida’ al-idafiyya) which are close to actual [bid'ah] is that
the origin of the [act of] worship is licit but it is removed from its original legislation without evidence,
imagining that it remains upon its original [ruling] under the requirement of the evidence, and that [i.e. relative
bid'ah] is by restricting the generality of these [rulings, based] on opinion or generalising its restriction. In
sum, it is removed from its limit to [another] limit.”
He said, “From this [kind of bid'ah] is specifying virtuous days with various types of worship which have not
been specifically legislated like specifying a certain day with such and such rak’ats or with such and such
charity or a specific night with standing such and such rak’ats or completing the Qur’an in it or whatever
resembles that, since that specification and acting upon it, when it is not because of the rule of expediency or
by an objective the like of which is intended by those of intellect, free-time and activity, it is an excess
legislation. There is no proof in support of it in saying that the virtue of this time is established over other than
it so it is good to place rituals in it because we say: Is this goodness established on a sound basis or not? If
it is established, then that is our opinion just as it is established in the standing of the nights of Ramadan
and the fasting of the three days of every month and fasting Monday and Thursday, and if it is not
established, then what are you relying on in this? The intellect does not deem [something] good or bad and
the Shari’ah does not support it, so nothing remains but it being an innovation in that specification.”
[Implications of Tark (not doing something)]
He said in another place, “Here is a principle on this matter [of tark], may Allah benefit by it those who are just
to themselves, which is that silence of the Lawgiver on the ruling of an issue or leaving something is of two
types:
“One of them is that he remains silent about it or leaves it because there is no incentive to it, requiring it; [and
there is] no necessitating [factor] due to which it was assigned and a cause for it being assigned did not
occur. [This is] akin to the legal cases (nawazil) that occurred after the death of the Prophet (Allah bless him
and grant him peace) because they were non-existent. Moreover, he remained silent about them despite
their coming into existence, as they only occurred [as legal cases] after that [i.e. his death]. Thus, the
scholars of Shari’ah need to examine them and apply them in accordance with what is evident from the
universals by which the religion was perfected. All that the pious predecessors deliberated on of that which
is not from the Messenger of Allah’s (Allah bless him and grant him peace) practice, in a specific [manner] of
which the meaning is intelligible, refers to this type. When the causes of this type occur, it is necessary to
look into it and apply it in accordance with its principles if it is from the customs, or from the rituals which
cannot be limited to what was transmitted, like the rules of forgetfulness (al-sahw wa l-nisyan) in the
performance of rituals. There is no problem in this type because the principles of the Shari’ah are available
and the underlying causes of these rules were not there in the age of revelation so silence about them
specifically is not a ruling requiring permission to leave [the act] or anything else. Rather, when the cases
are presented it is referred back to its principles and it will be found by means of them. None besides a
mujtahid can find it and only the mujtahids characterised by knowledge of Usul al-Fiqh can find it.
“And the second type is that the Lawgiver is silent about a specific ruling or leaves a matter from the matters,
and its necessitating factor that requires it is present, and its underlying cause in the age of revelation and in
the time after it was existent and established, but an additional command to what is the general law in the
likes of it was not specified therein and there was no decrease from it. Since the factor necessitating the
legalisation of the specific rational ruling was existent and then it was not legislated and no attention was
paid to its extraction, it would be clear that any excess to what is established here is a superfluous bid’ah
and contrary to the intent of the Lawgiver, since it is understood that he intended to halt at what is defined [in
the Shari'ah] with no addition to it and no subtraction from it.”
Then he said, “Indeed, here, silence over the ruling of the performance of an act or leaving [it] when the factor
demanding it is present, is [equivalent to] the consensus of all who are silent that there is no excess to what
was, since if that [excess] was suitable according to the Shari’ah or permissible they would have done it, and
they would be more deserving of comprehending it and beating [us] in practicing it, because it is not correct
that the legal cause was ineffective in the time of the Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) and the
caliphs after him and then it came into effect . For this [reason] Malik said, ‘Do you believe people today are
more desirous of good than those who have passed?’”[9]
In sum, all good is in the sunnah and following the pious predecessors who are stars of guidance and
signposts of integrity. “After the Truth what is there saving error? How then are ye turned away?” (10:32)
[The Hadith "Whatever the Muslims deem to be good is good according to Allah"]
[It is mentioned in Majalis al-Abrar:] [In the subject] of innovation, [according] to a learned scholar (fadil): It
remains for us to verify [the narration] ‘whatever the Muslims deem to be good…’ to its end, since many
people have become accustomed to adducing this narration as proof for the non-detestability of what they
have become accustomed to of bid’ahs. This deduction is incorrect. The hadith is against them, not for them,
because it is part of a hadith halted at ibn Mas’ud (mawquf ‘ala bni mas’ud), narrated by Ahmad, al-Bazzar,
al-Tabrani and others as such: “Indeed Allah (Most High) looked at the hearts of the servants and chose
Muhammad and sent him with His message. Then he looked at the hearts of the servants and chose for him
companions and made them helpers and supporters of his religion, so whatever the Muslims deem to be
good, it is good according to Allah, and whatever the Muslims deem to be bad, it is bad according to Allah.”
There is no doubt that the definite particle (lam) in “the Muslims” is not for the entirety of the genus, so it is
not contrary to his (Allah bless him and grant him peace) statement “My nation will divide into 73 groups all of
which are in the Fire except one” because every group from the Muslim nation believe its religious character
is good, by which it is necessitated that no group of them will be in the Fire, and likewise some Muslims
deem something good while others deem it bad, so it results in good being indistinguishable from bad.
Thus, [the definite particle] is either for particularity (‘ahd) and the particularised object (ma’hud) is what he
mentioned in his statement “and chose for him companions”, in which case the intended meaning would be
the Muslims from the Companions only; or for encompassment (istighraq) of the special features (khasa’is)
of that genus so by Muslims is meant the people of sound judgement (ijtihad) who have perfected the
attribute of Islam, turning the general (mutlaq) into the perfect (kamil) because the general in the absence of
a qualifier turns into the perfect particular (fard kamil) which is the mujtahid [in this case], thus it becomes
‘whatever the Companions or the people of sound judgement deem to be good is good according to Allah
and whatever the Companions or the people of sound judgement deem to be bad is bad according to Allah’;
and it is possible that [the definite particle] is for actual encompassment so the meaning becomes ‘whatever
all the Muslims deem to be good or bad is as such according to Allah’, and whatever is disputed, attention
then is given to the three generations whose greatness has been corroborated [in the hadiths]. [End of quote
from Majalis al-Abrar]
[Hafiz Al-Lakhnawi wrote after quoting the above:] The most obvious and correct of the three interpretations of
the definite particle is the first interpretation as indicated by the fa (so) prefixed to “whatever the Muslims
deem to be good.” The latter two interpretations would be considered if the speech was without fa or was
with waw (and) as is commonly used on their tongues, and since [this is] not [the case, that is] not
[considered].
A group have attributed this hadith to the Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) and said Allah’s
Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) said “Whatever the Muslims deem to be good is good
according to Allah.” From them is Imam al-Razi in al-Tafsir al-Kabir and al-’Ayni in Sharh al-Hidayah and
others from its commentators. However, ibn Nujaym said in al-Ashbah wa l-Naza’ir: Al-’Ala’i said, “I did not
find a basis for it in marfu’ form in any of the books of hadiths or with a weak chain after lengthy research and
much investigation and inquiry, and it is only one of the sayings of ibn Mas’ud halted at him (mawquf
‘alayhi).” [Here] ends a summarised [passage on the discussion of this narration] from Tuhfat al-Akhyar by al-
Hafiz al-Lakhnawi.[10]
And from what we transmitted to you about this narration you know that the supporters of bid’ahs adhering to
it is not justified because it is a narration halted at ibn Mas’ud, and acting on the statement of a Companion
and the obligation of practicing it is disputed. Furthermore, the purpose behind it [i.e. the statement] is:
whatever they, either all the Muslims or the Companions in particular, agreed upon, is good, as you now
from what has preceded. Preserve this for it is beneficial. Allah (Glorified and Exalted is He) knows best.
[Conclusion]
By this account which we reviewed from the instructions of our praiseworthy teacher [Shaykh al-Hind
Mawlana Mahmud al-Hasan] and others of the ‘ulama of this field (Allah have mercy on them), it [should] be
clear to you, if Allah (Most High) wills, legal bid’ah in its entirety is evil and blameworthy and is not divided
into good and bad, or obligatory, recommended and disliked, and other divisions. So his (Allah bless him
and grant him peace) statement in the hadith of the chapter “every bid’ah is misguidance” is understood by
us as general.
Those who specify it as evil bid’ah and divide bid’ah into types seem not to have been over particular about
the use of this word and they shifted from the legal definition to the linguistic definition and construed it as
legal[11], as the statement of al-Zurqani in Sharh al-Mawahib indicates where he said: “It is linguistically
what is done without a past precedent and is used in the Shar’iah in this sense also. It divides into obligatory
[bid'ah] like knowledge of the evidences of the dialectical theologians (mutakallimin) to refute the atheists
and innovators; recommended, like compiling books, building schools and endowments; permissible, like
expanding foods and drinks; prohibited, like errors produced in [the recitation of] the Qur’an; and disliked,
like the effect of something the detestability of which is proven textually.” Al-Nawawi said, “the hadith is from
the general [statement that is] qualified and this is not negated by its emphasis on ‘all’, because that does
not prevent qualification as [in] His statement (Most High) ‘Destroying all things by commandment of its Lord’
(46:25)[12].” And Allah (Glorified and High is He) knows best what is right.
Fath al-Mulhim, vol 5, pp. 328-336
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The hadith in Sahih Muslim, Kitab al-’Ilm is as follows: Some desert Arabs clad in woollen clothes came to
Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace). He saw them in sad plight as they had been hard
pressed by need. He exhorted people to give charity, but they showed some reluctance until [displeasure]
could be seen on his face. Then a person from the Ansar came with a purse containing silver. Then came
another person and then other persons followed them in succession until happiness could be seen on his
face. Thereupon Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) said, “It will be written for the one
who introduced a good practice in Islam which was practiced after him the reward of those who practiced it,
without their rewards being diminished in any respect. And it will be written for the one who introduced some
evil practice in Islam which had been practiced subsequently the sin of those who practiced it, without their
sins being diminished in any respect.”
Mufti Taqi Usmani said under the commentary of this hadith, “In it is [an indication] of the great reward [given]
to one who performs a good [deed] the first time and is then followed by others. This is concerning the
goodness of that which has been established in the Qur’an and sunnah but people have abandoned it or do
not pay attention to one of its particulars as has occurred here, since the virtue of charity has been
established in the Qur’an and sunnah, but the one who paid attention to it in regard to this particular [cause]
and produced charity for it the first time and thus became an inviter to others, this reward is established for
him. As for that which is not established as a good deed in the Qur’an, nor in the sunnah, the invention of
such a practice, is an innovation that has no relation to this hadith. And Allah (Glorified is He) knows best.”
(Takmilah Fath al-Mulhim, vol. 5, p. 407) ↩
The Spanish Maliki legal theorist Abu Ishaq al-Shatibi (d. 790/1388) wrote in the eighth chapter of his work al-
I’tisam while discussing examples of al-masalih al-mursalah (matters of public interest introduced without
specific evidences from the Qur’an or Sunnah), which he takes as the only exception to innovations in
religion: “We will restrict ourselves to ten examples of al-masalih al-mursalah. The first of them is that the
Companions of the Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) agreed upon the compilation of the
mushaf, while there is no direct text [instructing] its composition and also its writing, rather one of them [i.e.
the Companions] said ‘How can we do something which Allah’s Messenger did not do (Allah bless him and
grant him peace)?’
“Thus, it was narrated from Zayd ibn Thabit (Allah be pleased with him) [that] he said: Abu Bakr (Allah be
pleased with him) sent for me after the [heavy] casualties in [the battle of] Yamama while ‘Umar (Allah be
pleased with him) was with him. He said: ‘Umar came to me and said, ‘The people have suffered heavy
casualties among the reciters on the day of Yamama, and I am afraid that there will be more casualties
among the reciters at other battle-fields, whereby a large part of the Qur’an may be lost, unless you compile
it, so I am of the opinion that you should instruct the collection of the Qur’an.’ He said: I said to him, ‘How can
I do something which Allah’s Messenger did not do?’ ‘Umar said to me, ‘By Allah, it is good.’ So ‘Umar kept
on pressing me till Allah opened my bosom to it and I saw in it what ‘Umar saw in it.’ Zayd said: Then Abu
Bakr said, ‘Indeed you are a wise young man and we do not suspect you. Indeed you used to write the
revelation for Allah’s Messenger. Therefore, trace the Qur’an and collect it.’ Zayd said: By Allah, if they had
charged me to shift a mountain from the mountains it would not have been heavier on me than that. Then I
said, ‘How can you do a thing which the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him and grant him peace) did not
do?’ So Abu Bakr said, ‘By Allah, it is good.’ So he kept pressing me till Allah opened my bosom to that which
He had opened their bosoms. So I traced the Qur’an, collecting it from parchments, scapula, leaf-stalks of
date palms and from the breasts of men.’ [Transmitted in Sahih al-Bukhari, Kitab al-Tafsir] Hence, this is a
deed in which no dispute has been transmitted from the Companions.
“Moreover, it was narrated from Anas ibn Malik that it was [the time when] the people of Sham and the people
of Iraq were waging war to conquer Armenia and Azerbaijan and Hudyahfah ibn al-Yaman was afraid of their
differences in [the recitation of] the Qur’an, so he said to ‘Uthman, ‘O leader of the faithful! Take hold of this
nation before they differ about the Book as the Jews and the Christians differed before.’ So ‘Uthman sent [a
message] to Hafsah, ‘Send me the manuscripts [of the Qur'an]. We will copy them into mushafs and then
return them to you.’ So Hafsah sent the manuscripts to ‘Uthman. ‘Uthman then sent [them] to Zayd ibn
Thabit, ‘Abd Allah ibn al-Zubayr, Sa’id ibn al-’As and ‘Abd al-Rahman ibn al-Harith ibn Hisham and he
commanded them to copy them into mushafs. Then he said to the three Qurayshi men, ‘In whatever you
disagree with Zayd ibn Thabit about, write it in the dialect of Quraysh since it was revealed in their tongue.’
He said: ‘They did so, and when they had copied the manuscripts into mushafs, ‘Uthman sent to every
province one mushaf from those mushafs they copied. Then he ordered that all readings other than this, in
manuscript [form] or in mushafs, be burnt.’ [Transmitted in Sahih al-Bukhari, Kitab Fada'il al-Qur'an] Hence,
this too is a consensus on [the legitimacy of] its writing and uniting people on one reading whereby
differences in large part will not result, because they did not differ except in the readings, according to what
the ‘ulama specialised in this field transmitted.
“Moreover, none opposed the matter except ‘Abd Allah ibn Mas’ud because he prohibited the disposal of that
which he possessed of [manuscripts containing] readings different to the mushafs of ‘Uthman and he said:
‘O people of ‘Iraq!’ or ‘O people of Kufa! Conceal the mushafs that you have and embezzle them for indeed
Allah (Most High) has said “Whoso embezzles will bring what he embezzled with him on the Day of
Resurrection” (3:161) so meet Allah with the mushafs’ [Abu 'Ubayd transmitted it in Fada'il al-Qur'an]. Look
carefully at his words because he did not oppose its compilation and he only opposed another matter.
Despite this, ibn Shihab said: ‘It reached me that men from the most virtuous of the Companions of Allah’s
Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) disliked this [because] of the statement of ibn Mas’ud’. A
text has not been narrated from the Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) about that which they did,
but they considered it a benefit (maslahah) that is absolutely in line with the regulations of the Shari’ah
(tasarrufat al-shar’), because it derives from the [need to] preserve the Shari’ah, and the command to protect
it is acknowledged; and [the command] to prevent the means to disputation about its source which is the Qur’
an, and the prohibition of disputation over it is known to a degree not [requiring] more [detail].
“Once this principle is established, extend it to writing knowledge of the traditions and other than them when
their effacement is feared, adding to what has come in the hadiths of the command to write knowledge. I
wish that the writing of this book which I put my hands to is from this viewpoint because I saw that the topic of
bid’ahs was greatly neglected in the speech of the ‘ulama, except for minor transmissions as ibn Waddah
transmitted or [various] points of discussion are produced that will not satisfy the one thirsty for complete
understanding of it as is required. I did not find, despite my intense search for it, except what Abu Bakr al-
Turtushi wrote about it, but it is too brief with regard to what is needed about it, and if it was not [needed]
people would not fall into seventy two sects. It [i.e. al-Turtushi's work] is a chapter of the chapters on the
subject and a section of its sections. So I took up the [task] myself to pay the attention to it [that it deserves].
May Allah benefit thereby its writer, its reader, its distributer, its copyist, the one seeking benefit from it and all
Muslims. Verily He is the Guardian of that and the Executer of it by the vastness of His mercy.” (Kitab al-I’
tisam, Vol 3, pp. 12-17)
Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti (d. 911/1505) wrote in his celebrated work on the sciences of the Qur’an: “Al-Khattabi
said: Indeed he (Allah bless him and grant him peace) did not compile the Qur’an into a mushaf because he
anticipated the revelation of something that will abrogate one of its laws or parts of its recitation. Then, when
its revelation ended with his death, Allah inspired this [task] to the rightly guided caliphs, fulfilling His truthful
oath guaranteeing its preservation for the entire ummah [in Qur'an 15:9]. Thus, the beginning of this
[compilation] was at the hand of al-Siddiq upon consulting with ‘Umar. As for what Muslim transmitted from
the hadith of Abu Sa’id that he said: Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) said ‘Write not
from me [anything] besides the Qur’an…’ [to the end of] the hadith, this does not negate that, because the
discussion is about a specific writing in a specific way. Indeed, the entire Qur’an was written in the era of
Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) but was not collected into one place, and the
chapters (suwar) were not sequenced.” (Al-Itqan fi ‘Ulum al-Qur’an, p. 129) ↩
Al-Shatibi discusses Tarawih and ‘Umar’s statement in the third chapter of al-I’tisam. He writes “As for the
category of recommendation (mandub), it is not from bid’ahs in any situation. This may be clarified by
considering the examples used in support of it, like Salat al-Tarawih during Ramadan in congregation in the
mosque, since the Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) established it and the people gathered
behind him.
“Abu Dawud transmitted from Abu Dharr [that] he said: We fasted with the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless
him and grant him peace) during Ramadan, but he did not stand with us [in prayer] in any part of the month
till seven [nights] remained; then he stood with us till a third of the night had passed. When the sixth
[remaining night] came, he did not stand with us. When the fifth [remaining night] came, he stood with us till
a half of the night passed. So we said, ‘We wish you had led us in supererogatory prayers during the whole
of tonight.’ He said, ‘When a man prays with an imam till he goes, he is reckoned as having spent a whole
night in prayer.’ When the fourth [remaining night] came he did not stand with us. When the third [remaining
night] came, he gathered his family, his wives, and the people and prayed with us till we were afraid we
should miss success (falah). [The sub-narrator] asked: ‘What is success?’ He said: ‘Suhur (the predawn
meal). Then he did not stand with us for the remainder of the month.’ Al-Tirmidhi [narrated something]
similar to this and he said in it ’sound and authentic (hasan sahih).’
“However when he (Allah bless him and grant him peace) feared it would become obligatory on the ummah
he withheld from it. Thus, in the Sahih [it is narrated] from ‘A’ishah (Allah be pleased with her) that one night
Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) prayed in the mosque and the people followed
him in prayer. The next night he also prayed and the people increased. On the third or fourth night they
gathered, but Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) did not come out to them. When
morning came he said, ‘I saw what you were doing and nothing but the fear that it might be enjoined on you,
stopped me from coming.’ And that was in the month of Ramadan. Malik also transmitted it in al-Muwatta.
“Pay careful attention, for in this hadith is that which proves it is sunnah since his standing [in prayer] with
them first is a proof for the standing in the mosque in congregation during Ramadan and his prohibition to
come out after that, for fear of it becoming obligatory, does not prove it is absolutely prohibited because his
age was the age of revelation and legislation, so it was possible revelation would come to him if he
practiced it with the people with persistence. Thus when the cause of legislation disappeared with the death
of Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace), the matter returned to its origin, and the
permissibility is established, as nothing abrogated it.
“Abu Bakr did not establish it for one of two reasons: either because he saw people standing in the last part
of the night and what they were on was better according to him than their gathering under an imam in the first
part of the night - this was mentioned by al-Turtushi; or because of the shortness of his time to look into
these peripheral matters along with his preoccupations with the apostates and other than that which was
more pressing than Salat al-Tarawih. And when Islam became established in the time of ‘Umar (Allah be
pleased with him) and he saw people in the mosque scattered, as has come in the narration, he said, ‘it
would better if these [people] gathered under one reciter’ and when that was done for him, he drew attention
to the prayer in the last part of the night being better. Then the predecessors agreed on the correctness of
this and its approval, and the ummah does not agree on misguidance. Legal theorists (usuliyyun) have
explicated that ijma’ is not but a [result] of evidence from the Shari’ah.
“If it is said that Umar (Allah be pleased with him) called it a bid’ah and deemed it good by his statement
‘what a blessed bid’ah this is’ so when one bid’ah is deemed good in the Shar’iah, the general [principle] of
deeming bid’ah good is established. The response is: ‘Umar only called it bid’ah by consideration of the
apparent situation from the perspective that Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and grant him peace) left it
and it so happened that it did not occur in the time of Abu Bakr (Allah be pleased with him), not that it is bid’
ah in the [proper] sense. Thus, whoever calls it bid’ah by this consideration there is no fundamental quarrel,
and thereupon it is not permissible to adduce this as proof for the permissibility of innovation in the sense
discussed [previously], because that is a kind of distortion of words from their [proper] contexts.” (Kitab al-I’
tisam, Vol 1, pp. 323-327) ↩
’Allamah Anwar Shah al-Kashmiri said, “Bid’ah is that which is not found in the Book, the Sunnah and the
ijtihad of a mujtahid whose ijtihad is accepted. Moreover, if it is from that which is not confused with matters
of the Shari’ah like a groom riding on a horse on the day of his marriage, this is not bid’ah although the
matter may be futile (laghw); and if it is from that which is confused with matters of the Shari’ah like [taking]
the third and fortieth [day for reciting the Qur'an] after the death of a deceased individual, this is a bid’ah.
[Several] works have been compiled on the refutation of bid’ahs. From the works of the Malikis is Ibn al-Hajj’
s Madkhal and from the Hanbalis are the works of Ibn Taymiyyah who was the standard bearer in refuting bid’
ah and from the Hanafis is [Ahmad al-Rumi's] Majalis al-Abrar and some of the works of ‘Allamah Qasim ibn
Qutlubugha. And the pithiest and greatest [work] to know the foundations of refuting bid’ahs is al-I’tisam bi l-
Kitabi wa l-Sunnah by al-Shatibi the Maliki in two volumes.” (Al-’Arf al-Shadhi, vol. 4, pp. 135-6) ↩
On bid’ah referring specifically to innovations in the religion, the Indian Hanafi mystic Ahmad al-Sirhindi (d.
1034/1624) said “The practice of the Prophet (Allah bless him and grant him peace) is of two types: an action
by way of worship, and an action by way of custom and habit. Thus, the action that proceeds from him by way
of worship, we believe anything contrary to it is a condemned bid’ah and we stress its prohibition because it
is innovation in the religion which is rejected. And the action that proceeds from him by way of custom and
habit, we do not believe anything contrary to it is a condemned bid’ah and we do not stress its prohibition
because it does not pertain to the religion.” (Al-Maktubat Vol 1, Letter 233). He also said “From where do they
judge that bid’ah, newly-invented in the perfect religion and the desired Islam, is good after the perfection of
the blessing [of Islam]?” (Al-Maktubat Vol 2, Letter 20)
The Persian theologian Sa’d al-Din al-Taftazani (d. 793/1390) said “Blameworthy bid’ah is a newly-invented
matter in the religion that was not present in the era of the Companions and the Successors and a proof
from the Shari’ah does not establish it.” (Sharh al-Maqasid Vol 5 p 232)
The Egyptian traditionist and jurist Ibn Daqiq al-’Id (d. 702/1302) said “Do you not see that when we consider
the bid’ahs pertaining to the affairs of the world, they are not equal to bid’ahs pertaining to matters of the
peripheral laws? Perhaps they, I mean the bid’ahs pertaining to the matters of the world, are, in essence, not
detestable, rather in many of them there is firm resolve of their non-detestability. And when we consider the
bid’ahs pertaining to the peripheral laws, they are not equal to bid’ahs pertaining to the fundamentals of
beliefs.” (Ihkam al-Ahkam Sharh Umdah al-Ahkam, Vol. 1 p. 171) ↩
Al-Shatibi said while refuting ‘Izz al-Din’s usage of the term bid’ah for discussion about the minutiae of
tasawwuf: “As for discussion about the minutiae of tasawwuf, it is not designated as bid’ah and it is not
something that can be used as proof for this designation. Rather, the matter depends [on what is meant by
"tasawwuf"]. It is necessary to firstly clarify the term tasawwuf so judgement is made on a concept that is
understood, because it is an ambiguous concept according to these successors (muta’akhkhirin), so we
ought to refer to what was said about it by the predecessors (mutaqaddimun).
“The outcome of what the term “tasawwuf” refers to, according to them, is [one of] two meanings: first,
adopting all good character traits and removing all lowly character traits; and second, annihilation (fana) of
one’s self and subsisting (baqa) with one’s Lord. Upon verification they both derive from the same meaning,
although the first better describes the beginning [stages of tasawwuf] and the second better describes the
end [stages of tasawwuf]. Both of them are assimilation (ittisaf) [i.e. acquisition of new attributes], although
the first does not require states (hal) while the second does require states. These can be looked at in
another way, so the first [refers to] the obligatory practices and the second [to] its results, and the first is
assimilation of the external and the second is assimilation of the internal, and both of them are tasawwuf.
“Once this is established, discussion about tasawwuf in the first definition [above] is not bid’ah, because it
derives from a deep understanding, on which actions, elaboration of its slips and obstacles, the ways to
correct the corruption that arises therein by reformation, is based, which is true understanding (fiqh). Its
principles are clear in the Book and the sunnah. It cannot be said about the like of this that it is bid’ah, just
like the corollaries of the chapters of deferred goods (salam), rents (ijarat), injury (jarah) and the issues of
forgetfulness, retraction of witnesses, commercial transactions, etc.
“It is not from the honour of the ‘ulama to designate derivative corollary [matters], which were non-existent
previously, as bid’ah, even if its points are intricate. Similarly, it is not said about the intricacies of the
corollaries of external and internal character traits, that they are bid’ah, because they all derive from the
principles of Shari’ah.” (Kitab al-I’tisam, Vol. 1 p 348-9) ↩
Shaykh ‘Abd al-Ghani al-Dahlawi (d. 1293/1876), who taught hadith to the founders of the Deoband
seminary, wrote in his commentary of Sunan ibn Majah: “[In regards to] his statement, ‘he who innovates in
this matter of ours’, [it refers to] that which is not from the matter of religion, like food, drink and clothes, since
people are given an option in all that is available in these things, although adherence to him (upon him be
peace) is better than everything [else].
“[As for] his statement, ‘that which is not from it’, i.e. that which is not from its means, because means are
included in [the matter of religion]. This is why Shaykh Mujaddid [al-Alf al-Thani] (Allah be pleased with him)
said that the sciences which are a means to conduct religiously sanctioned matters, like Sarf and Nahw, are
included in the sunnah and the designation of bid’ah is not used for them, because according him (Allah be
pleased with him) there is no good in bid’ah at all. Therefore, he said, ‘We abstain from good bid’ah, even if
its light is like the break of dawn, because bid’ah inevitably removes a sunnah. If one does something which
he (upon him be peace) did not do, he is in opposition to him in this [practice], and if he did not do
something that he (Allah bless him and grant him peace) did do, that is also the case.’ As a consequence,
he (Allah be pleased with him) prohibited uttering one’s intention (niyyah) at the beginning of prayer because
it is not established from him (Allah bless him and grant him peace), nor from the Companions, nor from
any of the mujtahids.
“Some ‘ulama divide bid’ah into good and evil. Nonetheless, our ‘ulama said that performing one sunnah,
even if it is a light matter like entering the lavatory with the left foot first, is better than a good bid’ah, even if it
is a splendid matter, like building schools (madaris).” (Shuruh Sunan Ibn Majah, p. 60, quoting from Injah al-
Hajah) ↩
In chapter five of Al-I’tisam, al-Shatibi divides bid’ah into actual bid’ah (bid’ah haqiqiyyah) and relative bid’ah
(bid’ah idafiyyah). He defines the first as “that which is not indicated by a proof from the Shari’ah, neither from
the Book, nor from the Sunnah, nor from Consensus, nor a deduction that is valid (mu’tabar) according to the
people of knowledge, neither in general nor in detail.” He defined relative bid’ah as “that which has two
components: the first of them has a connection to the evidences so from this perspective it is not bid’ah. And
the other [component] has no connection [to the evidences] but like [that of] actual bid’ah. Since the deed that
has these two components is not purely one of the two sides [of sunnah and bid'ah], we assign for it this
name i.e. relative bid’ah because in relation to one of the two perspectives it is sunnah and in relation to the
other of the two perspectives it is bid’ah.” ↩
On this note, the Damascene exegete and historian, Ibn Kathir (d. 774/1373) wrote: “As for the Ahl al-Sunnah
wa l-Jama’ah, they say with regards to every action and statement not established from the Companions: it
is bid’ah, because had there been [any] good [besides what is established from them], they would have beat
us to it, as they did not leave a trait from the good qualities, except they hastened to it.” (Tafsir ibn Kathir, p.
1703) ↩
Hafiz al-Lakhnawi (d. 1304/1887) in this work offered his own opinion on the issue of the definition of bid’ah.
He wrote: “If you ask: how can the performance of Tarawih in congregation in the mosques be a sunnah
when ‘Umar (Allah be pleased with him) himself said in regards to it ‘What a blessed bid’ah this is’, and a
bid’ah cannot be a sunnah, rather every bid’ah is misguidance and every misguidance is in the Fire as
[mentioned] in the hadith?
“I say: the ‘ulama have differed in this subject according to two opinions. The first is that the hadith ‘every bid’
ah is misguidance’ is a general [statement] qualified by part of it (‘amm makhsus al-ba’d) and its intent is:
‘evil bidah.’ They divided bid’ah into obligatory (wajib), recommended (mandub), disliked (makruh),
prohibited (muharram) and permissible (mubah). This is [the view] that Abu Nu’aym narrated in his Hilyat al-
Awliya from Imam al-Shafi’i that he said ‘Newly-invented matters are two types. The first of them is what was
invented of that which conflicts with the Book, the sunnah, the narration or consensus. This bid ah is
misguidance. The second is that which was invented of good and this is not blameworthy and indeed ‘Umar
(Allah be pleased with him) said about the standing in the month of Ramadan, “what a blessed bid’ah this
is,” meaning, that it was newly-invented and was non-existent.’ This [opinion] was expressed by Shaykh ‘Izz
al-Din ibn ‘Abd al-Salam in Kitab al-Qawa’id, al-Nawawi in Tahdhib al-Asma wa l-Lughat, ‘Ali al-Qari in Sharh
al-Mishkat, ibn al-Malik in Mabariq al-Azhar Sharh Maqasid al-Anwar, al-Suyuti in his treatise Husn al-
Maqsad fi ‘Amal al-Mawlid and his treatise al-Masabih fi Salat al-Tarawih, al-Qastallani in Irshad al-Sari
Sharh Sahih al-Bukhari, al-Zurqani in Sharh al-Muwatta, Hafiz Abu Shamah in his book al-Ba’ith ‘ala Inkar al-
Bida’ wa l-Hawadith, al-Halabi in al-Insan al-’Uyun fi Sirat al-Nabi al-Mamun and others. Hence, [based] on
this opinion, the bid’ah that is the opposite of sunnah is detestable and prohibited bid’ah, and as regards to
all that is besides them of bid’ahs, they are not evil.
“The second opinion, and upon critical analysis this is the more accurate, is that the hadith ‘every bid’ah is
misguidance’ remains general and that the intended [meaning] of legal bid’ah is that which is not found in
the generations whose greatness has been corroborated [in the hadiths] and a [sound] basis from the
principles of the Shari’ah is not found in favour of it, and it is acknowledged everything that has this quality is
absolutely misguided. Al-Sayyid al-Sind in Sharh al-Mishkat, Hafiz ibn Hajar in Al-Hady al-Sari Muqaddamatu
Fath al-Bari and in Fath al-Bari, ibn Hajar al-Haythami al-Makki in Fath al-Mubin Sharh al-Arba’in and others
inclined to this view. Hence, [based] on this opinion, Tarawih is not legal bid’ah so as to become
misguidance and the opposite of sunnah, and ‘Umar only called it a bid’ah by consideration of its linguistic
meaning because it is from that which he innovated after it was non-existent in the first era and the era of the
first caliph. He alluded to this by the addition of the word ‘brilliant’, meaning that that which we innovated is
not a legal bid’ah so as not to be good, rather it is a legal sunnah, although it is a linguistic bid’ah.” (Tuhfat al-
Akhyar bi Ihya Sunnati Sayyid al-Abrar, p. 26) ↩
The Ottoman Hanafi moralist al-Birgivi (d. 981/1573) said “If it is asked how is his (upon him be blessings
and peace) statement ‘every bid’ah is misguidance’ reconciled with the statement of the fuqaha that bid’ah
is occasionally permissible (mubah) like using a sieve and the perpetuity of eating the wheat kernel and
being satiated thereby; occasionally preferable (mustahabb) like erecting minarets, schools and the
compilation of literary works; rather it sometimes becomes obligatory (wajib) like the furnishing of proofs to
refute the doubts of the heretics and their like?
“We say: bid’ah has a linguistic general sense irrespective of it [being related to] custom or worship,
because it is a noun [derived] from ibtida’ with the meaning of innovation…This is the categorisation in the
vernacular of the fuqaha. They mean by it anything introduced after the first period…
“And [bid'ah] has a legal qualified sense which is to increase in the religion or decrease from it after the
Companions without the permission of the Lawgiver, neither verbally nor in practice, and neither explicitly nor
allusively. So it does not in principle include customs, rather it is restricted to beliefs…and certain forms of
worship. This is his (Allah bless him and grant him peace) intent in his statement ‘every bid’ah is
misguidance.’ [That legal bid'ah does not include customs is proven] by the indication of his (Allah bless him
and grant him peace) statement ‘adhere to my sunnah and the sunnah of the rightly guided caliphs’, ‘you are
more knowledgeable in your worldly matters’ and ‘whoever innovates anything into this matter of ours shall
be rejected’” (Al-Tariqat al-Muhammadiyyah, Vol. 1 p. 120) ↩
As the verse goes on to say that the houses were not destroyed despite the use of the word “all” [kull].
Needless to say, the author, ‘Allamah Shabbir Ahmad al-’Uthmani, does not agree with al-Nawawi and al-
Zurqani that the hadith is “qualified” in its legal application, but as he said “it is understood by us as
general”. ↩