Shariah - The Essence of Islamic Law

Category: Americas, Faith & Spirituality, Featured Topics: Islamic Law (Sharia) Values: Integrity Views: 13903
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1) The Nature of Islamic Law

Islamic law, known as the shari 'ah, is the framework of ultimate reality and the ethical guidance that Muslim scholars have derived from the direct Revelation of God to man. Although God reveals the pattern of ultimate truth indirectly through the workings of the physical universe and in the observable nature of man, the ultimate source of knowledge about both physical and metaphysical reality - and therefore the ultimate source of the shari'ah - is the Qur'an. This divine text was revealed directly in human language to the Prophet Muhammad , and is exemplified in the sunnah, which reports the Prophet's understanding of this Final Revelation as shown through his words and deeds.

All Revelation to the Jewish Prophets and to Jesus is binding on Muslims unless specifically abrogated in the Qur'an. The shari'ah is a specific form of the shar' or path to God which the Qur'an states was revealed to all the prophets of the Abrahamic succession.

Since the major purpose of Islamic law is to guide man's search for truth, shari'ah touches on both transcendent and material experience. All aspects of every person's spiritual understandings and undertakings, which come under the rubric of purification, or tazki 'yah, should be consciously subject to the reality-check of Islamic law. This deeply spiritual nature of the shari' ah provides the perspective for understanding and acting in accordance with the ethical or moral standards that the creator has provided to guide every person's and community's relations with other humans and with the rest of Creation. The shari'ah therefore provides the ultimate criteria for judgment on every aspect of one's individual and social life.

2) The Methodology of Islamic Law

The process of gaining knowledge of Islam through jurisprudence, and the body of legal advisements so derived, is known as fiqh. The shari'ah consists both of specific rules and regulations, known as ahkam, which are the subject of istifta, or fiqh analysis, and of general principles induced by scholars over many centuries from study of the Qur'an, sunnah, and their application in everyday life.

The specific directives in the Qur'an focus primarily on the elements of formal worship known as the five pillars of Islam, because man cannot reason to this knowledge alone. These elements consist of the profession of faith, including the 'aqidah or articles of faith common to all Abrahamic religions; and the rules for the five daily prayers, charity, fasting, and pilgrimage.

The general principles of Islamic law, also known as universals (kulliyat), essentials (dururiyat), and goals (maqasid), are derived by a system of reasoning known as istislah, which focuses on the common good of mankind. This system of thought, in turn, is part of the broader field of study known as usul alfiqh, or study of the sources of fiqh Analysis of the general principles of Islarnic law through the use of intellectual effort, known as ijtihad, gives meaning to the specific directives and also provides guidance on all aspects of Muslim life in the variable contexts of time and place. Islamic law thereby gives living expression to an elaborate science and art of interpreting and applying the injunctions of the Qur'an and the guidance of the Prophet Muhammad . The development of an integrated and adaptable legal system which focuses on what is best for mankind as a whole is one of the most outstanding achievements of Muslim jurists. The methodology of Islamic jurisprudence asserts that any ruling in the fiqh has meaning only to the extent that we can understand its rationale or higher purpose.

3) Human Responsibilities

The dignity of man derives from his acceptance, before the Creator of the Universe, of the responsibility to know right from wrong and to be a steward of the universe charged with caring for it and guiding it in accordance with the Divine Will. No beings in either the physical or metaphysical worlds have such a sublime responsibility.

The rights of the human person and community derive from this responsibility, because every person and community must be free to carry out this stewardship. Every man and every woman, every Arab and every Jew, and every rich person and every poor person are equal in their responsibility to God and therefore in their dignity and in their human rights.

Islamic law focuses on human responsibility, because a focus on human rights can devolve into the selfishness of seeking to maximize one's own freedom to do whatever one wants at the expense of others. If everyone would fulfill all of his or her responsibilities, individually and collectively, then everyone would be accorded the full range of human rights.

The scholars of Islam, have identified a half dozen overarching responsibilities, though some scholars will condense these to five or expand the number by elevating a secondary responsibility to the level of the universal or essential. The first three concern the essentials of life itself, whereas the next three concern the quality of life.

The first three essential areas of responsibility or duty in Islamic law are:

a) Respect for life, or "the right to life" known as haqq al haya This requires not merely respect for the unborn after the spirit or ruh has been breathed into the fetus, but also such social duties as respect for non-belligerents in war and the use of dispute settling mechanisms whenever possible to avoid violence that might threaten the lives of oneself or others. Respect for life requires most basically an understanding that lasting peace can result only from justice, and that therefore stability should be sought as the by-product of sound foreign policy rather than as its direct aim. Similarly, crime should be combated primarily by addressing the causes rather than the results of the criminal mentality.

b) Respect for community, or right to one's identity as a member of a family, community, or nation, known as haqq al nasl. This focus on the family, and more broadly on expanding circles of community to include mankind and even all sentient beings in the universe, is unique to Islamic law, because it implies that sovereignty lies not in the extent of a country's or a government's power, as it does in Euro-American international law, but in the inherent dignity of the human person in community. This acknowledgment of the inherent right of the person to live in a series of legally recognized communities permits several levels of sovereignty, all subject to the highest sovereignty of God, and contrasts with the concept of exclusive sovereignty found in the so-called "nation-state" of the mid-twentieth century.

c) Respect for free, private enterprise, with broad capital ownership, known as haqq al mal. The principle of freedom for individual persons to own the means of production has been basic in all Islamic scholarship until the twentieth century. Unfortunately, the principle of equal opportunities to own capital or the tools of production has been largely ignored for over a thousand years because various "rulers" understood that concentrated political power requires concentrated property ownership. Denial of access to capital ownership in a capital-intensive economy can amount to the denial of the right to life itself. Therefore all institutions that work in practice to concentrate ownership, including the financing of economic growth through the use of interest rather than by risk-sharing in joint-ownership, are "illegal," that is, morally illegitimate, in Islamic law.

The next three of the universals, essentials, or purposes of Islamic law, which concern the quality of life, are:

d) Political self-determination, or haqq al hurriyah. This is usually known as "the right to political freedom." Islamically, however, this term emphasizes the responsibility of both the ruled and the rulers to establish permanent institutions designed to facilitate broad-based political participation by every member of a polity in its governance so that they can help determine their own immediate well-being and long-run destiny.

This universal, like each of the other five, contains a second-order level of responsibilities that serve to elucidate and carry out the primary responsibility. In the context of political self- determination, this next lower level of responsibility, known as hadyiyat, consists of ijma, which is the duty of the governed to reach consensus on critical issues, and shurah, which is the duty of the ruler to be responsive to this consensus. In a complex society, this might be accomplished best by using a concept of a hierarchy of assemblies that culminate in a national parliament.

The third necessary element in the system of government prescribed in Islamic law, in addition to the executive and legislative, is an independent judiciary charged with applying the principles of Islamic law, especially as they are spelled out in a formal constitution covering the organs, methods, and principles of governance chosen by the legislature. The judicial area of government is designed to limit both the ruled and the ruler so that the ultimate sovereign, both in theory and in fact, will be God.

e) Dignity, known as haqq al karama. The duty to respect human dignity is at the core of all Islamic law, because the essential purpose of the shari'ah is to help persons acknowledge and deepen their relationship to God and express this higher level of being especially in their relationships with each other. There are two major parts of this fifth universal principle of Islamic law.

The most important aspect of the principle of dignity is the duty to respect each person's need to seek and worship God in his or her own way. This is known in Western thought as "freedom of religion." In both traditional Islamic and traditional American thought, this most essential element of the dignity of man requires that the government avoid any sectarian bias in carrying out its duty to facilitate freedom of religion in public affairs.

Another aspect of this principle of dignity, which is second in importance only because it is so often ignored, is "gender equality." Whereas the Prophet Muharnmad and the Islamic teachings of the prophetic period were breathtakingly revolutionary in recognizing the divinely ordained rights and responsibilities of women in society, the practice of later Muslims degenerated to the level of their neighbors and has largely remained at this level while the rest of the world has begun to understand and share the sophistication of the original Islamic heritage.

Islamic law recognizes a greater responsibility of wife and mother to care for the home and children, and a greater responsibility of the husband and father to support the family. The family, however, is a mutual support group, whereby all responsibilities are held in common through the principle of collective responsibility, or fard kifaya. It follows from this that if any duty is not being adequately met, each member has a personal responsibility, or fard 'ain, to do whatever is required to fulfill that duty, whether it be the husband washing dishes or the wife working outside the home.

Similarly, to the extent that home duties and the work of financial support for the family have been satisfactorily accomplished, both husband and wife have equal responsibility to participate in social and political leadership when needed for the good of the community and even to accept the highest judicial, legislative, executive, or entrepreneurial position in the land if it is offered. There the criterion for judgment is not women's rights or men's rights, but individual responsibility. Gender is irrelevant when the issue is personal responsibility to meet the needs of society in accordance with the requirements of Islamic law.

f) Knowledge, or haqq al 'ilm. A key to success in every aspect of private and public life is the duty to pursue knowledge. Since the highest purpose of every person is spiritual understanding, freedom to pursue the path of spiritual knowledge is paramount. We were created, however, as humans not as angels, so we have a duty to pursue whatever knowledge is useful to us individually and collectively in carrying out our responsibilities: to help the marginalized in society, to promote justice among people and nations, to multiply the material bounties of God, to work constructively in the political process, to participate with people of other faiths in addressing all the problems of society, and otherwise fulfilling all the requirements placed upon us by Islamic law.

The duty to respect knowledge goes beyond the negative task of protecting freedom of thought and expression, limited only by the duties to respect human dignity, and extends to the positive obligation of every person to learn as much as one can throughout one' s life in order to fulfill the purpose for which one was created.

The nature and specific obligations inherent in Islamic law make it not only unique among mankind's legal systems but the best suited as the paradigm of thought within which all religions and all peoples can cooperate in building a better world.

Dr. Robert Dickson Crane is the former adviser to the late President of the United States Richard Nixon, and is former Deputy Director (for Planning) of the U.S. National Security Council. He has authored or co-authored more than a dozen books and over 50 professional articles on comparative legal systems, global strategy, and information management.


  Category: Americas, Faith & Spirituality, Featured
  Topics: Islamic Law (Sharia)  Values: Integrity
Views: 13903

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Older Comments:
YOHAN FROM BHUTAN said:
"All Revelation to the Jewish Prophets and to Jesus is binding on Muslims unless specifically abrogated in the Qur'an" reports the Author

Given the freedom to vote, proud man will lay red carpet for Satan to office on his head in the name of the good of change from monotony from the dominion of God.

My point here is "There is no place for abrogation, nor authority to any for such decrees either causing deviation from the straight path". Straight path does not have branches, it is single and alone. Straight path has no co-equals promising the same destiny. The straight path is unique and complete in itself. Men partake in the path by following sincerely and not by beginning a new one from certain point of the straight path.

I frankly respect the views of all the posters in this forum and share the view of Ahmed Asgher with glee.
2008-02-20

H.A. FROM YATHRIB said:
LIFE WITHOUT SHARIA LAWS IS LIKE:
1.Freedom Fries without Added Salt
2. Bars without Civilized Fluid (aka Booze)
3. Artificial pacemaker (needed for heart to work normally when yours is damaged due to eating too much French Fries) without the crucial batteries
4. Bush Presidency without Vice President Cheyney
5. Mistaking your Best Friend for the bird called QUAIL while going bird hunting in broad daylight
6. Becoming the most devout atheist by quitting Hinduism (i.e.-Ramesh Chander, who is too busy donating to U.S. politicians, instead of donating his WEALTH to poor Indians, b/c he is too smart)

In conclusion, DON'T LET THE SLUTTY CELEBS OF THE WEST COMPLETE YOUR LIFE. LET THE SHARIA LAWS COMPLETE YOUR LIFE. IT'S AN ABSOLUTE NECESSITY. IT MUST BE IMPOSED EVERYWHERE.

If anyone is afraid of sharia laws, That's just TOO BAD. IF you can't continue your slutty ways b/s of sharia laws...TOO BAD!!!

Pardon my language but to drive to points homes sometimes its a necessity exactly as Sharia Laws are essential to clean your SICK SOCIETY and preventing your sons and daughters from turning into SUBHUMANS in the name of high spirit, modernity, and self-expression.




2008-02-16

M.H.BURALEH FROM AUSTRALIA said:
Thank you for your insight and honest study.
Now the real task to you and alike, is to convey this message and make fully understood , respected and adopted.
2008-02-16

ABIOLA FROM USA said:
RE: SHAKIR & TASNEEM.
It doesnt matter where Shariah Law begins as long as it's followed. As for my other brother there are definately Shariah Law in the Qur'an as we can see in many different chapters. There many ways where Allah tells us the ....." this is the legal limit set by Allah and whosoever transgress this limit.........." and many more like that. However, Shariah Law is a complete, separate and broad subject that has to be studied from both Quran and the Sunna. Salam alaykun
2008-02-14

AHMED ASGHER FROM BAHRAIN said:
This is great but I do not want sharia law in my country or anywhere else if it is interpreted by some mulla with the power of life or death over anyone. Sharia law interpreted by some is totally opposite to what is presented in this article.

There in one principle that this article touches on and it should be at the core of any law. That is Human Dignity. Any law that strips any person form their human dignity has no place in any society. Any law that does not promote the welfare benefit of its collective adherents should never be introduced.

God's majesty is not increased nor decreased by our religious duties. All such laws are for our own benefit as humans. Freedom of choice, respect for all life, equality, justice, right to life, etc, are all divine rights purely because God wants us to discover HIM when we have sufficient knowledge, comfort and freedom. A persecuted and hungry person wants food and shelter. They do not want preaching.

Under such peaceful environment, God wants us to turn to HIM giving thanks first for what we have then giving that freedom back to him.

Anyone who stands in the way of any person achieving their peace and freedom has made a grievous error against humanity and thus by default against God.

Having said that, then blessed are those who discover God whilst in hunger, pain and prison. Those who hold on to their faith under severe conditions are truly blessed. Yet whose who have all the wealth are the first to forget God.

Life seems like a testing ground but it should not be. When we seek equality of all life and within all races, when we understand mankind's unity and the immense blessings it can bring to all of us; only then we can understand God's Unity. Only then we would know what the word Islam means. We would then understand that this is the beginning of our journey towards Allah.

None of us would know that until we live by the rule: love for others what we love for ourselves.
2008-02-13

SHAKIR FROM NA said:
ONE QURAN OVER 1400 YEARS NEVER CHANGE
ALL SHARIA LAWS IS NOT IN QURAN
EACH COUNTRY HAVE DIFFERENT SHARIA LAWS
SHOULD IT NOT BE THE SAME IF IT IS FROM QURAN
2008-02-13

TASNEEM FROM USA said:
Great Article and how sad that we do not have any
Muslim country following our shariah..It has to start from one of the Muslim countries rather than any European countries..don't u think ???
2008-02-13