The Sunnah, according to the scholars of hadeeth, is
everything that has been related from the Messenger, may the mercy and
blessings of God be upon him, of his statements, actions, tacit approvals,
personality, physical description, or biography. It does not matter
whether the information being related refers to something before the beginning
of his prophetic mission, or after it.
Explanation of this definition:
The statements of the Prophet include everything the Prophet
said for various reasons on different occasions. For example, he said:
“Verily deeds are but by intentions, and every person will
have only what he intended.”
The actions of the Prophet include everything that the
Prophet did that was related to us by his Companions. This includes how he
made ablutions, how he performed his prayers, and how he made the Hajj
pilgrimage.
The tacit approvals of the Prophet includes everything that
his Companions said or did that he either showed his favor towards or at least
did not object to. Anything that had the tacit approval of the Prophet is
as valid as anything that he said or did himself.
An example of this is the approval that was given to the
Companions when they used their discretion in deciding when to pray during the
Battle of Bani Quraydhah. God’s Messenger had said to them:
“None of you should perform your afternoon prayers until you
arrive at Bani Quraydhah.”
The Companions did not arrive at Bani Quraydhah until after
sunset. Some of them took the Prophet’s words literally and postponed the
afternoon prayer, saying: “We will not pray until we get there.” Others
understood that the Prophet was only indicating to them that they should hurry
on their journey, so they stopped and prayed the afternoon prayer on time.
The Prophet learned about what the two groups had decided,
but did not criticize either of them.
As for the Prophet’s personality, this would include the
following statement of Aishah (may God be pleased with her):
“God’s Messenger was never indecent or vulgar, nor was he
loud at the marketplace. He would never respond to the abuse of others
with abuses of his own. Instead, he would be tolerant and forgiving.”
The physical description of the Prophet is found in
statements like the one related by Anas (may God be pleased with him):
“God’s Messenger was neither overly tall nor was he
short. He was neither exceedingly white nor black. His hair was
neither excessively curly nor lank.”
The Relationship between the Sunnah and Revelation
The Sunnah is revelation from God to His Prophet. God
says in the Quran:
“…We have sent down to him the Book and the Wisdom…” (Quran
2:231)
The Wisdom refers to the Sunnah. The great jurist
al-Shafi’i said: “God mentions the Book, which is the Quran. I have heard
from people who I consider authorities on the Quran that the Wisdom is the
Sunnah of God’s Messenger.” God says:
Indeed, God conferred a great favor on the believers when He
sent among them a Messenger from among themselves, reciting to them His signs
and purifying them and instructing them in the Book and the Wisdom.
It is clear from the preceding verses that God revealed to
His Prophet both the Quran and the Sunnah, and that He commanded him to convey
both to the people. The Prophetic hadeeth also attest to the fact that
the Sunnah is revelation. It is related from Mak’hool that God’s
Messenger said:
“God gave me the Quran and what is like it from the Wisdom.”
Al-Miqdam b. Ma’dee Karab relates that God’s Messenger said:
“I have been given the Book and with it something like it.”
Hisan b. Atiyyah relates that Gabriel used to come the
Prophet with the Sunnah just like he would come to him with the Quran.
An opinion from the Prophet was not merely his own thoughts
or deliberations on a matter; it was what God revealed to him. In this
way, the Prophet was different from other people. He was supported by
revelation. When he exercised his own reasoning and was correct, God
would confirm it, and if he ever made a mistake in his thinking, God would
correct it and guide him to the truth.
For this reason, it is related that the Caliph Umar said
from the pulpit: “O people! The opinions of God’s Messenger were correct
only because God would reveal them to him. As for our opinions, they are
nothing but thoughts and conjecture.”
The revelation that the Prophet received was of two types:
A. Informative revelation: God would
inform him of something by means of revelation in one form or another as
mentioned in the following Quranic verse:
“It is not for a human being that God should speak to him
except as revelation or from behind a barrier, or by sending a Messenger who
reveals by His leave whatever He wishes. Verily, He is Exalted,
All-Wise.” (Quran 42:51)
Aishah related that al-Harith b. Hisham asked the Prophet
how revelation came to him, and the Prophet answered:
“Sometimes, the angel comes to me like the clanging of a
bell, and this is the most difficult for me. It weighs upon me and I commit to
memory what he says. And sometimes the angel comes to me in the form of a
man and speaks to me and I commit to memory what he says.”
Aishah said:
“I had seen him when the revelation came to him on an
extremely cold day. When it was over, his brow was full of perspiration.”
Sometimes, he would be asked about something, but he would
remain silent until revelation came to him. For example, the Meccan
pagans asked him about the soul, but the Prophet remained silent until God
revealed:
They ask you concerning the soul. Say: ‘The soul is
from the affairs of my Lord, and of knowledge you have but little’. (Quran
17:85)
He had also been asked about how inheritance was to be
divided, but he did not answer until God revealed:
“God commands you regarding your children…” (Quran 4:11)
B. Affirmative revelation: This is
where the Prophet exercised his own judgment in a matter. If his opinion
was correct, revelation would come to him affirming it, and if it was
incorrect, revelation would come to correct him, making it just like any other
informative revelation. The only difference here is that the revelation
came as a result of an action that the Prophet first did on his own.
In such instances, the Prophet was left to use his own
discretion in a matter. If he chose what was right, then God would
confirm his choice through revelation. If he chose wrong, God would
correct him to protect the integrity of the faith. God would never allow
His Messenger to convey an error to other people, because this would cause his
followers to fall into error as well. This would contravene the wisdom
behind sending Messengers, which was that the people henceforth would have no
argument against God. In this way, the Messenger was protected from
falling into error, for if he ever erred, revelation would come to correct him.
The Prophet’s Companions knew that the tacit approval of the
Prophet was actually the approval of God, because if they ever did something
contrary to Islam during the Prophet’s lifetime, revelation would come down
condemning what they did.
Jabir said: “We used to practice coitus interruptus[1] back when God’s Messenger
was alive.” Sufyan, one of the narrators of this hadeeth, commented: “If
something like this was forbidden, the Quran would have prohibited it.”
Footnotes:
[1] Coitus
Interruptus: Withdrawal of the penis before emission of sperm during sex. –
IslamReligion.com
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