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Need for Hadith

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Asim-2 View Drop Down
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    Posted: 17 November 2006 at 1:24am

You may be interested in the Hadith evaluation resources and links available at 

www.geocities.com/asimiqbal2nd/hadeeth.htm and it also gives many Qur'anic Ayaat on the issue with clear highlighting, and clear arrangement according to subject.

Also check out about a dozen links including some books on this issue.

and on predictions etc... check out :

www.geocities.com/asimiqbal2nd

Asim Iqbal 2nd :
http://asimiqbal.2.googlepages.com
http://asimiqbal.2.googlepages.com/hadeeth.htm
http://asimiqbal.2.googlepages.com/hadith2.htm

and more Masha'ALLAH!

asimiqbal2nd
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Alwardah Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 31 October 2006 at 7:02am
As Salamu Alaikum  

During the last days of Ramadan, a friend invited us over for Iftar (breakfast).  We decided to watch the Tarawih in the Grand Masjid in Makkah on TV. It was the night the Imam completed the Qur'an. Subhanallah! Alhamdulillah! Allahu Akbar! Most incredible Scene! An Ocean of Worshipers! This is Islamic Brotherhood, Islamic Unity and the Beauty of Islam.

 

It was then that I thought about my cyber brothers and sisters on IC and other groups, who claim that there is no need for Hadith. There were millions of worshipers that night from every corner of the globe.  Every country was represented at that gathering. Can you imagine the chaos if each group followed their own consensus and not the Sunnah?

 

This Harmony and Serenity can only be achieved by practicing Islam according to the Glorious Qur'an and Sunnah.

 

Yes I agree that we do not need to implement each and every Hadith/Sunnah in our daily life but without the Sunnah we cannot worship Allah Subhanahu wa Taala the way HE commanded us to worship HIM. Not implementing some Sunnah in our daily life is one thing saying that there is NO NEED for the Sunnah is something else.  We need to differentiate the the Fard (Obligatory) Sunnah and those that are Wajib (highly recommended) and Mustahabb (encouraged)

 

I am sure many members from IC were part of the congregation in the Masjid Al-Haram during Ramadan. Insha Allah I pray we can all perform Umrah in Ramadan some time during our lifetime as an Umrah performed during Ramadan is like performing Haj. (Al-Bukhari Vol 3 No10)

 

O Allah Keep our feet firm on Your path, the Path followed by Your Last Prophet (Sallallahu Alayhi wa Sallam) and his Companions and all righteous Muslims Ameen!

 

Wa Alaikum Salam

 

 

�Verily your Lord is quick in punishment; yet He is indeed Oft-Forgiving Most Merciful (Surah Al-An�am 6:165)
"Indeed, we belong to Allah and to Him is our return" (Surah Baqarah 2: 155)
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Andalus Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 11 October 2006 at 7:20pm
Originally posted by B.H. B.H. wrote:

Now let�s look at my interpretation.

The believers were supposed to abstain from relations from their spouses on the nights of Ramadan. Some were having trouble with this, and so that had relations anyway, ���All�h knows that you used to deceive yourselves�� Knowing they were wrong and in error, they turned to Allah to seek His forgiveness, ��so He turned to you (accepted your repentance) and forgave you�. As a mercy to these people, Allah then allowed believers to partake in relations and drink and eat freely without stipulation at night, �So now have sexual relations with them and seek that which All�h has ordained for you (offspring), and eat and drink until the white thread (light) of dawn appears to you distinct from the black thread (darkness of night), then complete your Saum (fast) till the nightfall��.

Since the Quran does not contain any details about this event, and there is no mention of any restrictions on the nights of Ramadan, one must ask the question: Who gave the order? The answer is, Allah gave the order, and the Prophet (saw) spoke it, and because it was not a part of the recited revelation, does not take away from its place in religious law. If not this scenario, then who, Abu Jahl, or Abu sufyan? Or maybe Zaid? Who? Who else would the Muslims have listened to? And is it the case that the believers had trouble being tempted with abstinence? And then had a hard time with intimacy and required Allah to step in and tell them that this was an act they should be doing?

I believe you will find any reason to object, even if it requires funny interpretations, simply to save that one guiding principle your group follows blindly: Only in the Quran. That principle gives a great deal of freedom to interpret the Quran in a very loose way, and that is part of the secret of that �tautological like� feature.  

Kindest Regards

 

You have stated your opinion and I have stated mine. I stand by the position that some of the early Muslims somehow got the false idea they could not have sex with their wives during the nights of Ramadan and Allah, seeing that they were cheating themselves, instructed the Prophet to tell them that it was permissable.

One may develope numerous interpretations, and you may feel free to maintain your position. The difference is that my position falls upon sound evidence from a contextual view, a common sense view (people tempted into abstinence?), and grammatical.

I believe you are only sticking to your position, even if you use words such as , "somehow", only to validate your groups erroneous beliefs, regardless of the cost. Just my observation.

Kindest regards

A feeling of discouragement when you slip up is a sure sign that you put your faith in deeds. -Ibn 'Ata'llah
http://www.sunnipath.com
http://www.sunniforum.com/forum/
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Andalus Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 11 October 2006 at 7:08pm
Originally posted by B.H. B.H. wrote:

I find that your group has an endearing feature that deserves mention. It is a �tautological� like positioning built into its core which craftily will preserve its ideology without effort. It goes like this:

1) The Quran is the only authority

2) We follow only what is in the Quran

3) The Prophet has no relevance or authority on our religion in terms of law or religious positions unless they are found in the Quran (which goes back to 1, and makes the Prophet irrelevant) and we do not recognize a �Sunnah�, because of 1.

So for proof that the Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) had authority, one would have to show an example where his authority was considered law by Allah. But any example of his authority that is in conjunction to the Quran, would not be in the Quran. Therefore, we do not recognize it.

 

If you wish you can bring forward arguments that you feel refute this doctrine.

What I gave was an argument. You can disagree, or agree, or show why it is wrong.

The last time I checked, your school of thought is "anti-scholarship", and as of to date, there is not solid, guiding, uniform doctrine.

Kindest regards

A feeling of discouragement when you slip up is a sure sign that you put your faith in deeds. -Ibn 'Ata'llah
http://www.sunnipath.com
http://www.sunniforum.com/forum/
http://www.pt-go.com/
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote B.H. Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 10 October 2006 at 10:37pm

Now let�s look at my interpretation.

The believers were supposed to abstain from relations from their spouses on the nights of Ramadan. Some were having trouble with this, and so that had relations anyway, ���All�h knows that you used to deceive yourselves�� Knowing they were wrong and in error, they turned to Allah to seek His forgiveness, ��so He turned to you (accepted your repentance) and forgave you�. As a mercy to these people, Allah then allowed believers to partake in relations and drink and eat freely without stipulation at night, �So now have sexual relations with them and seek that which All�h has ordained for you (offspring), and eat and drink until the white thread (light) of dawn appears to you distinct from the black thread (darkness of night), then complete your Saum (fast) till the nightfall��.

Since the Quran does not contain any details about this event, and there is no mention of any restrictions on the nights of Ramadan, one must ask the question: Who gave the order? The answer is, Allah gave the order, and the Prophet (saw) spoke it, and because it was not a part of the recited revelation, does not take away from its place in religious law. If not this scenario, then who, Abu Jahl, or Abu sufyan? Or maybe Zaid? Who? Who else would the Muslims have listened to? And is it the case that the believers had trouble being tempted with abstinence? And then had a hard time with intimacy and required Allah to step in and tell them that this was an act they should be doing?

I believe you will find any reason to object, even if it requires funny interpretations, simply to save that one guiding principle your group follows blindly: Only in the Quran. That principle gives a great deal of freedom to interpret the Quran in a very loose way, and that is part of the secret of that �tautological like� feature.  

Kindest Regards

 

You have stated your opinion and I have stated mine. I stand by the position that some of the early Muslims somehow got the false idea they could not have sex with their wives during the nights of Ramadan and Allah, seeing that they were cheating themselves, instructed the Prophet to tell them that it was permissable.



Edited by B.H.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote B.H. Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 10 October 2006 at 10:32pm

I find that your group has an endearing feature that deserves mention. It is a �tautological� like positioning built into its core which craftily will preserve its ideology without effort. It goes like this:

1) The Quran is the only authority

2) We follow only what is in the Quran

3) The Prophet has no relevance or authority on our religion in terms of law or religious positions unless they are found in the Quran (which goes back to 1, and makes the Prophet irrelevant) and we do not recognize a �Sunnah�, because of 1.

So for proof that the Sunnah of the Prophet (saw) had authority, one would have to show an example where his authority was considered law by Allah. But any example of his authority that is in conjunction to the Quran, would not be in the Quran. Therefore, we do not recognize it.

 

If you wish you can bring forward arguments that you feel refute this doctrine.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote B.H. Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 10 October 2006 at 10:25pm

Finally, with your interpretation it becomes odd that Allah would forgive them of a sin, which really was not a sin up to until that point, and even at this time, abstinence for short periods is not necessarily a sin. The verse states they were sinning, and then states that �now it has become lawful (sexual relations)�. Doesn�t it make more sense that they were doing an act which was a sin and then He showed leniency and allowed the act, along with eating and drinking without stipulation, or does it make more sense to you, that they were practicing abstinence and it was becoming popular and so Allah intervened and forgave this, and then had to make sexual relations between spouses lawful in order to motivate them? They needed urging from Allah to procreate on the evenings of Ramadan? I find your interpretation to be a bit comical (the scenario it implies, and not derogatory to your position

 

I am having a problem following you here.  Allah was concerned that the people were cheating themselves by not having realtions with each other.  I infer that somehow they got the idea that husbands and wives could not have relations at night during Ramadan and it was a wrong idea.  If it was commanded by Allah why would he say they were cheating themselves?  No, Allah saw that they were following an idea that was not good and had the prophet tell them it was okay to have sex with your wives at night during Ramadan.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote B.H. Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 10 October 2006 at 10:18pm

Allah further states in the verse in question that He turned to the believers and forgave them. Forgave them of what? You assert that their sin was abstaining from their wives during Ramadan.

The sin was not in abstaining from their wives in and of itself but in being deceived into thinking they HAD to abstain when it was not commanded. 

 

So your interpretation lets us suppose that there was a successful movement of Muslims who gave up having relations with their spouses on the nights of Ramadan for no good reason but just because someone said it is a good idea.

Whatever the reason given, the Muslims that followed such instruction were in error and Allah in his mercy corrected their misunderstanding.

 

Keep in mind that the verse uses the term �deceive yourselves�. Deceit requires the sinner or the wrong doer to have knowledge and intention of their act, knowing it is wrong, and to conceal it from someone. So if the �sinners� were deceiving themselves, then this would mean, according to your interpretation, that they did know it was wrong to abstain from having relations with their spouses and they knew they could have relations, but they did it anyway because the sin was somehow overwhelmingly �tempting� (mass abstinence when they knew abstinence was wrong does not make any sense on a number of levels). The sin of abstinence does not sound tempting. Is that tempting to you? To any normal healthy human?

 

Andulus, human beings never cease to amaze me in the things they fall for.  The idea that they would fall for something like this does not shock me one bit in the least.

As for "deceive themselves" I do not see why you have a problem here.  People who are deceived and spread their error can be said to deceive others or themselves.  Whether some people knew they were speaking ill or not is irrelevant

 

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