Introduction to the Sunnah
by Shaykh Suhayb Hasan
Chapter 1 -
Revelation Besides the Qur'?¢n
The Qur'?¢n is the word of
Allah which was revealed to the Prophet Muhammad, may the peace and blessings
of Allah be upon him, and preserved both verbally and in writing by his
Companions. Apart from the Qur'?¢n, whatever the Prophet uttered or did was
also preserved by the Companions. Thus the Sunnah includes the sayings of the
Prophet, peace be upon him, known commonly as hadiths (i.e. sayings), his
practices, and actions which gained his approval. Both the Qur'?¢n and the
Sunnah fall under a common title "wahy" (i.e. revelation or inspiration); the
difference between the two is that the Qur'?¢n is a revelation which is recited
(matalu) in the formal prayer (salat) while the Sunnah is not recited in the
formal prayers. The importance of the Sunnah as the second source of Islam is
covered in Chapter 2.
First of all, we will
establish that the Prophet, may the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him,
not only received the verses of the Qur'?¢n from Allah, but he also received
other revelation from time to time which is now preserved in the form of
hadiths. The following examples show how the Qur'?¢n itself refers to this
revelation:
1. According to verse 144
of S?»rah al-Baqarah (Chapter 2 of the Qur'?¢n), Allah Almighty commanded the
Prophet, may the peace and blessings of
Allah be upon him, to face the Ka'bah (in Mecca) in his daily prayers
instead of Jerusalem.
"We see
the turning of thy face to the heavens: now shall We turn thee to a Qiblah
that shall please thee. Turn then thy face in the direction of the Sacred
Mosque; wherever ye are, turn your faces in that direction."
But why was the Prophet,
may the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him, facing Jerusalem before
that? Verse 143 (of S?»rah al-Baqarah) shows that Allah Himself had appointed
Jerusalem as the initial Qiblah (i.e. direction faced when praying) for the
Prophet, may the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him.
"And we
appointed the Qiblah to which thou was used, only to test those who
followed the Messenger from those who would turn on their heels (from the
Faith)."
The appointment of the
previous Qiblah is referred to as being in the past. But there is no verse
in the Qur'?¢n which commands the Prophet, may the peace and blessings of
Allah be upon him, to face Jerusalem at the beginning of his mission!
Therefore, the Prophet, may the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him,
must have received this guidance from Allah in a form other than the Qur'?¢n.
As we have said above, this alternative revelation is preserved in the
Sunnah.
2. In verse 3 of S?»rah al-Tahreem
(Chapter 66 of the Qur'?¢n), a certain incident is cited.
"When the
Prophet disclosed a matter in confidence to one of his wives, and she then
divulged it, and Allah made it known to him, he confirmed a part of it and
repudiated a part. Then when he told her of it, she said, 'Who told you
this?' He said, 'He told me Who knows and is well-acquainted (with all
things)'."
We must consider carefully
the phrases "Allah made it known to him" and "He told me Who knows and is
well-acquainted", The question is, how did Allah make it known to him and
tell him? Certainly not via the Qur'?¢n, since there is no mention of it
anywhere else in the Book of Allah. Therefore, the Prophet, may the peace
and blessings of Allah be upon him, must have been told via revelation from
Allah which is not part of the Qur'?¢n.
3. In verse 5 of S?»rah al-Hashr
(Chapter 59 of the Qur'?¢n), a reference is made to the expedition against
the rebellious Jewish tribe of Banu Nadir, during which the Muslims cut down
some palm-trees and left others alone.
"Whether
ye (O Muslims) cut down the tender palm-trees or ye left them standing on
their roots, it was by leave of Allah, and in order that He might cover
the rebellious transgressors with shame."
Here, their action is
attributed to the "leave of Allah" given to them. Nowhere in the Qur'?¢n is
such permission found. Hence Allah guided the Prophet, may the peace and
blessings of Allah be upon him, in this matter but not via the Qur'?¢n.
4. According to verses
17-18 of S?»rah al-Qiyamah (Chapter 75), Allah took it upon Himself to
collect the Qur'?¢n. The Prophet, may the peace and blessings of Allah be
upon him, directed the scribes of the Qur'?¢n to arrange its S?»rahs
(chapters) in the order found today; this is not the order in which they
were revealed. Therefore, since this was Allah's responsibility, it shows
that He guided the Prophet, may the peace and blessings of Allah be upon
him, with respect to the order of the S?»rahs.
These are just a few examples
out of many which leave no doubt that the Prophet, may the peace and blessings
of Allah be upon him, used to receive revelation from Allah either directly or
through the medium of the Angel Gabriel (Arabic: Jibreel). A part of this
revelation was preserved word for word under the title of the Qur'?¢n. All
other revelation was embodied either in the Prophet's sayings or in his
practices which were carefully preserved by the Companions as the Sunnah of
the Prophet Muhammad, may the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him.
The various purposes
served by the Sunnah
The Mother of the Believers
(Arabic: Umm al-Mu'mineen) 'Aishah was once asked: "What was the character of
the Prophet?" She replied: "His character was nothing
but the Qur'?¢n". Thus the Prophet, peace be upon him, was an embodiment
of the Qur'?¢n itself: whatever he practiced or said, i.e. the Sunnah, is
related to the guidance of the Qur'?¢n. Let us explore the role of the Sunnah
in relation to the Qur'?¢n.
1. The Sunnah explains
Qur'?¢nic injunctions in detail.
a) Allah says in verse 43
of S?»rah al-Baqarah (Chapter 2 of the Qur'?¢n):
"Establish prayer and practice regular charity", and many similar
verses (Arabic: ayaat) also exist. All issues related to the prayer, such as
the required number of daily prayers, the number of prayer units (Arabic:
rak'at) and the recitation in each prayer, as well as how to perform the
prayer from beginning to end, are explained by the Sunnah. The Prophet,
peace be upon him, said: "Pray as you have seen me
pray." (Reported in Sah?®h al-Bukh?¢r?®.) Similarly, all issues
related to the Poor Due (Arabic: zakat), such as the minimum amount on which
zakat becomes payable, the percentage paid, the kinds of wealth, goods, and
animals on which zakat is obligatory, etc. are clearly expounded by the
Sunnah of the Prophet, may the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him.
Again, a detailed picture
of fasting and Hajj can only be seen in the Sunnah, for the Qur'?¢n has
touched upon both subjects briefly.
b) Almighty Allah says in
verse 38 of S?»rah al-Ma'idah (Chapter 5 of the Qur'?¢n):
"As to the
thief, male or female, cut off his or her hand - a punishment from Allah by
way of example for their crime. And Allah is exalted in Power, Wise."
The Sunnah explains the
minimum of stolen goods for which a thief deserves this punishment and the
manner in which the hand should be cut off.
To reject the Sunnah, as
some misguided "Muslims" advocate, will render the whole Qur'?¢n open to a
hotchpotch of interpretations inspired by the individuals' whims and
desires, which often come from the devil. For example, someone who does not
accept the practical demonstration of formal prayer (Arabic: salat) given by
the Prophet, peace be upon him, will make a mockery of salat by doing it in
a way suitable to his wishes. But how can a Muslim worship Allah, if he does
not know the way in which Allah wants to be worshipped?
2. The Sunnah can
establish a specific meaning when a number of meanings are possible.
a) Allah Almighty says in
verse 82 of S?»rah al-An'aam (Chapter 6 of the Qur'?¢n):
"It is
those who believe and confuse not their beliefs with dhulm that are in
security, for they are on (right) guidance."
Im?¢m Bukhari relates that
some of the Companions of the Prophet, peace be upon him, took the word "dhulm"
in its general meaning, i.e. to do injustice, to do wrong, to sin. So they
were troubled and said: "Which of us has not done wrong?" The Prophet, peace
be upon him, relieved them of this worry by explaining that "dhulm" here
means to commit shirk (i.e. to associate partners with Allah in worship
and/or belief; idol worship; polytheism), as in S?»rah Luqman (Chapter 31),
verse 13:
"Indeed,
worshipping others besides Allah is the greatest injustice (dhulm)."
b) Almighty Allah says in
verse 34 of S?»rah al-Taubah (Chapter 9 of the Qur'?¢n):
"Those who hoard gold and silver and spend it not in the Way of Allah,
announce unto them a most grievous penalty. On the day when heat will be
produced out of that wealth in the fire of Hell, and with it will be branded
their foreheads, their flanks, and their backs . . . "
The Arabic word "kanz"
means a hoard, big or small. So this verse seemingly dooms a person who
hoards any amount and does not spend it in the way of Allah. With this
meaning in mind, 'Umar, may Allah be pleased with him, questioned the
Prophet, peace be upon him, about this verse, to which he replied that once
the Poor Tax (zakat) which is due on the hoarded amount is paid, it is no
longer considered as "kanz". (Reported by Ibn Majah.)
3. The sayings of the
Prophet Muhammad (Arabic: ahadith) explain some historical events in detail
since they are mentioned only briefly in the Qur'?¢n.
a) Allah says in S?»rah al-Anfal
(Chapter 8) verse 7:
"Behold!
Allah promised you one of the two (enemy) parties, that it should be
yours; ye wished that the one unarmed should be yours, but Allah intended
to justify the Truth according to His words and to cut off the roots of
the unbelievers."
Which two parties are
meant? Which of them is unarmed? From books of ahadith we learn the relevant
details about the Battle of Badr, which is the incident referred to in the
above verses.
b) S?»rah al-Taubah, verse
118 says:
"(Allah
turned in mercy) to the three who were left behind;"
Who were these three
people, and why did they remain behind? Again, the books of ahadith explain
this.
c) S?»rah 'Abasa (Chapter
80), verses 1-2:
"He frowned
and turned away, because there came to him the blind man."
Who frowned and turned
away, and why? Who was the blind man? The details are furnished by the books
of ahadith.
4. The Sunnah can specify
exemptions from a general injunction.
a) In S?»rah Nisa' (Chapter
4) verse 11, the share of children in inheritance is given.
"Allah
directs you as regards your children's inheritance . . . "
The Prophet, peace be upon
him, explained that the Muslim child of a disbeliever (Arabic: kafir) the
non-Muslim child of a Muslim, and the murderer of his/her own father, none
of these can inherit.
b) The Qur'?¢n declares the
flesh of a dead animal and blood as prohibited (Arabic: haraam) in S?»rah al-Ma'idah
(Chapter 5), verse 3. The Prophet, peace be upon him, exempted fish and
locusts from the term "dead flesh", and the liver and spleen from "blood".
5. Deduction of a similar
injunction in an analogous case.
a) S?»rah an-Nisa' (Chapter
4), verse 23:
"Prohibited
to you are . . . and two sisters in wedlock at one and the same time."
The Prophet, peace be upon
him, declared that to marry a woman as well as her aunt in the same wedlock
is also prohibited.
b) Wine has been declared
unlawful by Almighty Allah in S?»rah al-Ma'idah, verse 93. The Prophet, peace
be upon him, extended the prohibition to anything which is intoxicating in
large doses, even if it is taken in a small quantity.
6. The Prophet, peace be
upon him, gave additional injunctions in a number of issues.
One of the many duties of the
Messenger, may the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him, was to tell the
believers what is lawful (halaal) and what is unlawful (haraam) (See Qur'?¢n
7:157). For example, he prohibited the flesh of donkeys, dogs, beasts with
canine teeth and birds of prey. He also made gold and silk haraam for Muslim
men, but halaal for Muslim women.
Chapter 2 -
Significance of the Sunnah
No devout Muslim would ever
dare to go against the teachings of the Qur'?¢n and Sunnah, but it is
regrettable to note that some of the liberal elite tend to raise the slogan
that the Book of Allah (i.e. the Qur'?¢n) is enough and that there is no need
at all for the Sunnah of the Prophet, may the peace and blessings of Allah be
upon him. Slogans like this are raised mainly by people who want to get rid of
the Islamic Law (Arabic: Sharee'ah) completely. The Prophet Muhammad, peace be
upon him, himself was well-aware that such ill-natured opinions would arise
and hence gave a clear warning of this as reported by Al-Miqdam ibn Ma'di
Karib, one of his Companions: "I have indeed been given the Qur'?¢n and
something similar to it besides it. Yet, the time will come when a man leaning
on his couch will say, 'Follow the Qur'?¢n only; what you find in it as halaal,
take it as halaal, and what you find in it as haraam, take it as haraam.' But
truly, what the Messenger of Allah has forbidden is like what Allah has
forbidden." (Reported by Abu Dawud and Darimi.)
In fact, ANYONE WHO REJECTS
THE SUNNAH OF THE PROPHET, PEACE BE UPON HIM, DOES NOT BELIEVE IN THE QUR'?‚N,
for Almighty Allah Himself has emphasized the importance of the Sunnah in many
verses, of which a few are given below.
"O
you who believe! Obey Allah and obey the Messenger and those charged with
authority among you; and if you differ in anything among yourselves, then
refer it to Allah and the Messenger if you do believe in Allah and the Last
Day. That is best and most suitable for final determination." (S?»rah
Al-Nisa' 4:59)
"The
answer of the believers, when summoned to Allah and His Messenger in order
that he may judge between them, is no other than this: they say, 'We hear
and we obey'. It is such as these who will attain success." (S?»rah
Al-Nur 24:51)
"But
no, by your Lord! (O Muhammad) They cannot be believers until they make you
judge in all disputes between them, and find in their souls no resistance
against your decisions, but accept them with the fullest submission."
(S?»rah Al-Nisa' 4:65)
Anas reported that the
Messenger of Allah said: "I have left among you two things; you will never
go astray as long as you hold fast to them: the Book of Allah and my Sunnah."
(Reported by Haakim.) The Companions of the Prophet, peace be upon him, used
to hold the commandments given by the Prophet, peace be upon him, in a very
high esteem, making no distinctions between them and those given by Allah.
Once 'Abdullah ibn Mas'ood quoted this saying of the Prophet (hadith) while he
was delivering a sermon: "May Allah curse the women who tattoo their bodies
and those who pluck their eyebrows; those who separate their teeth to make
them look more pretty and those who try to change the creation of Allah."
A woman named Umm Yaqub from the tribe of Banu Asad came to know of these
words. She approached Ibn Mas'ood and said: "O Abu 'Abd ar-Rahman! It was
reported to me that you have cursed such and such women." He said: "Why should
I not curse those whom the Prophet, peace be upon him, cursed and who are
cursed in the Book of Allah as well." She said: "I have read whatever is
contained between the two covers (i.e. the whole Qur'?¢n)." Had you been a good
reader, you would have discovered it. Did you not read the following verse?
"So
take whatever the Messenger gives you and keep away from what he forbids
you." (S?»rah Al-Hashr 59:7)
There are numerous examples
set by the Companions which show how emphatically they abided by the Sunnah of
the Prophet, peace be upon him, to the extent of severing their relations with
their kith and kin once they discovered someone going against the Sunnah. Let
us have some examples from the lives of the great Khulafah (Caliphs, i.e.
leaders) of Islam followed by a host of other Companions. Just after the death
of the Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, three major issues confronted the
Muslim community. They could have left it apart and disunited, had it not been
for the wise guidance of Abu Bakr who settled them amicably in the light of
the Sunnah of the Prophet, peace be upon him. The first issue was related to
the appointment of the Khalifah (i.e. leader of the Muslims). Assembled in
Saqifa Bani Sa'ida, a great number of Muhajirin (i.e. those who emigrated from
Mecca to Madina) and Ansar (those helped the emigrants from Mecca) originally
had been busy arguing this issue. The Ansar proposed that the leader (Arabic:
Emir) should be appointed from both of the above communities. The noble
companion Abu Bakr cited the saying of the Prophet: "Leaders (Arabic: Im?¢ms)
should be from Quraish (the tribe of Prophet Muhammad) as long as they have
the understanding (of the religion)." The Ansar conceded to this quietly. The
great companion 'Umar proposed the name of Abu Bakr as the Khalifah which was
accepted unanimously by those present there and later followed by all the
inhabitants of Madina through the oath of allegiance.
The second issue was related
to the place where the Prophet should be buried. Again the companion Abu Bakr
cited the saying of the Prophet: 'A Prophet is to be buried where he breathes
his last.' Accordingly, his burial took place in the apartment of his wife,
the Mother of the Faithful - 'Aishah, where he died.
The third issue was related
to the inheritance of the Prophet, peace be upon him, as raised by his
daughter Fatima who came to the Caliph Abu Bakr asking for her share. Abu Bakr
replied by reminding her of the saying of the Prophet: "We, the community
of the Prophets, are not inherited from - whatever we leave behind us is a
charity." Fatima didn't argue further, but retired quietly. Once the great
companion 'Umar saw Khalid bin Walid wearing a silk shirt. He asked him to
take it off (since it is forbidden for Muslim men to wear silk). Khalid
replied that Abd ar-Rahman ibn Auf used to have one as well. 'Umar said: "The
Prophet allowed him because he suffered badly from itching." Khalid, then, had
no alternative but to take if off. Following the news of the Muslim's victory
in the conquest of Syria, 'Umar advanced to Damascus with a number of
Companions. On reaching the outskirts of Amwas, a town in Syria, the news of a
widespread plague in the town reached him. 'Umar consulted his people whether
or not he should venture into the town. The heated discussion that followed
came to an end when Abd ar-Rahman ibn Auf cited this saying of the Prophet:
"If you are inside a place where an epidemic breaks out, don't come out of it.
And don't go in if you happen to be away from such a place." 'Umar,
eventually commanded his people to retreat. Someone still remarked: "'Umar! Do
you run away from a destiny decreed by Allah?" To this 'Umar replied: "Yes, we
run away from one destiny to the other decreed by Allah as well." Such was the
wisdom of the Prophet, peace be upon him, and centuries ago it foreshadowed
today's quarantine regulations. The Caliph 'Uthman once agreed to buy a piece
of land from a person. On the completion of the verbal agreement, he asked the
man to collect the money the following day. But the man turned up after a few
days, only to renounce the agreement. He had changed his mind because his
friends had blamed him for selling the land at a low price. 'Uthman could have
been adamant about the sale, particularly when it had been agreed upon
completely. But he remembered the saying of the Prophet, peace be upon him,
which admired a person who treated the people easily and wholeheartedly in his
sales. So, 'Uthman preferred to concede to the man's wish without raising any
objection. Once 'Ali was approached by a person who wanted his counsel
concerning the engagement of his daughter whose hand was sought by three
persons: Hasan, Hussain and 'Abdullah bin Ja'far. 'Ali found himself involved
personally as his two sons were among the candidates. But he recalled the
saying of the Prophet: "The one whose counsel is sought, should be honest."
So after giving some thought, he told the man: "Don't go for Hasan because he
is known to have divorced his women many times. And don't go for Hussain as
well, as he loves to be admired. Rather go for 'Abdullah bin Ja'far." In one
of his journeys, he found a merchant hoarding a stock of grain in the hope of
a good price. 'Ali reminded him of the saying of the Prophet: "The hoarder is
cursed" and instructed his people to set the stock on fire as a punishment.
This is how the Four Caliphs (Arabic: Khulafah) reacted to the Sunnah of the
Prophet.
Let us have some more
examples from the lives of the Companions. 'Abdullah ibn Mas'ood heard a man
saying after a sneeze: "Al-hamdu Lillah wa as-Salatu wa as-Salamu 'Ala Rasul
Allah." Ibn Mas'ood said to him: "Whatever you have said is true, but that is
not the way that the Prophet has taught us. He instructed us to say simply
"Al-Hamdu Lillah" after sneezing." It would be appropriate to remind all
Muslims about this Sunnah, which is commonly abandoned by a great number of
them. Say "Al-Hamdu Lillah" whenever you sneeze. If you hear someone saying
this after sneezing, say to him: "Yarhamukumu Allah" (May Allah have mercy
upon you). The sneezer should pray for you as well by saying: "Yahdi Kumullah
wa Yuslihu Balakum" (May Allah guide you and set your affairs right). There
are plenty of occasions when you should say: "As-Salatu Wa as-Salamu 'ala
Rasul Allah". You should say it, for example, whenever you hear the name of
our beloved Prophet or whenever you enter a mosque (Arabic: masjid) or step
out of it adding these words respectively: "Allahumma Iftah li abwaba Rahmatik"
(O Allah! Open for me the doors of your Mercy) and "Allahumma Inni As'aluka
min fadlika" (O Allah! I ask you for your Bounty).
Once 'Abdullah ibn Abbas was
sitting beside the Ka'bah when Emir Mu'awiyyah entered the Grand Mosque and
began circumambulating (Arabic: tawaf) around the Ka'bah. He kissed the Black
Stone in the beginning, but he rubbed his hand on the other three corners of
Ka'bah as well. Ibn Abbas knew that the Prophet, peace be upon him, apart from
kissing the Black Stone and rubbing the Yemeni corner - had never touched the
other two corners during tawaf. So he objected to Mu'awiyyah, to which he
replied: "To me none of the four corners of Ka'bah is deserted." "But that was
not the practice of the Prophet, peace be upon him," Ibn Abbas emphasized.
Mu'awiyyah could only say: "You have said the truth." Once Ibn Abbas saw a man
drawing a picture of a living being. He advised him not to do that because the
Prophet, peace be upon him, forbade such a practice.
'Abdullah ibn 'Umar was
well-known for his adherence to the Sunnah. He once saw his son Bilal stopping
his wife from going to the mosque. 'Abdullah ibn 'Umar said: "Don't do that
because the Messenger of Allah has said: 'Don't stop the female servants of
Allah from entering the Houses of Allah." Bilal was adamant that he would not
allow her to go, even after listening to this saying. Ibn 'Umar was so upset
that he swore never to speak to him again until his dying day. 'Abdullah ibn 'Amr
bin Aas had a very large garden with a great number of palm trees. Water in
this area was so abundant that his assistant planned to sell the extra amount
of it, after irrigating the whole garden, to a neighbor at an exorbitant price
of thirty thousand dirhams. That offer could have attracted anyone except a
companion like 'Abdullah ibn ''Amr who refused to approve of this sale because
the Prophet, peace be upon him, forbade the selling of any extra water. Abu
Hurayrah used to address a gathering of Muslims on Friday night (lit: after
sunset on Thursday). Once, before beginning his sermon, he said to the people:
"Whoever has cut off from any of his relations should leave this place." No
one stood up. On repeating these words thrice, a young man left the place and
went to his aunt whom he had deserted a long time before and reconciled with
her. Abu Hurayrah said this because he knew that all actions are presented to
Allah on each Friday night. He didn't like his assembly of the devout to be
smeared by a person who had committed the sin of deserting his relatives. By
doing so, he saved a person from a major sin. Anas ibn Malik was known to be a
faithful servant of the Prophet, peace be upon him. Once he was invited to a
party where a Magian (i.e. a Persian fire-worshipper) offered him some faluda
( a well-known drink) in a silver glass. Anas refused to accept it. He
preferred to drink in an earthen pot than to use the silver one because the
Prophet, peace be upon him, forbade the Muslims from eating or drinking from
golden or silver utensils. This is how the Companions behaved throughout their
lives - setting sublime examples of adherence to the Sunnah.
The numerous examples given
above are from the Companions. Let us see what the four great Im?¢ms (i.e.
religious scholars) have said about the authority of the Sunnah.
a) Im?¢m Abu Hanifah was
asked: "What do we do if we find a saying of yours opposing the Book of
Allah?" He replied: "Leave my saying and stick to the Book of Allah." The
questioner asked: "What if it contradicts a saying of the Prophet?" Abu
Hanifah said: "Leave my saying in the face of the Prophet's saying." Again he
was asked: "What if it goes against the saying of a Companion?" Again he said:
"Leave my saying in the face of the Companion's saying." (Reported in Al-Qawl
al-Mufeed by Shawkani.) Im?¢m Abu Hanifah also declared: "My way (Arabic:
madh-hab) is whatever hadith (saying of the Prophet) that is proved to be
authentic." (Shami 1:50, Al-Fulani in Iqaz, p. 62.)
b) The saying of Im?¢m Malik
ibn Anas is well-known: "The saying of any person can be accepted or rejected,
except for the Prophet of Allah, peace be upon him." (Reported by Ibn 'Abd
al-Barr and Ibn Hazm. Also in Al-Yawaqeet wa Al-Jawahir 2:96.) He also said:
"I am just a mortal; sometimes 1 am wrong, sometimes I am right - so check my
opinions. Whatever agrees with the Book (i.e. the Qu'ran) and the Sunnah,
accept it; whatever disagrees with them, reject it." (Reported by Al-Fulani in
Iqaz, p. 72.)
c) Once Im?¢m Shafi'i narrated
a saying of the Prophet (hadith). Someone from the audience said: "Do you say
so as well?" On hearing this, the Im?¢m was enraged. His face turned pale and
he said: "Woe to you! Which earth would carry me, which sky would shelter me
if I narrate a saying of the Prophet, peace be upon him, and do not hold the
same view! Do you see a zunnar (belt worn by non-Muslims) on me? Or have you
noticed me coming out of a church? How can I report something from the
Prophet, peace be upon him, and not agree with ?!!"
d) Im?¢m Ahmad ibn Hanbal
said: "Do not follow me or Malik or Shafi'i or Auza'i or Thawri, but take from
where they took (i.e. from the Qu'ran and authentic Sunnah)." (Reported by
Al-Fulani and Ibn al-Qayyim.) He also said: "He who is on the verge of
destruction rejects a saving of the Messenger of Allah, may the peace and
blessings of Allah be upon him." (Reported by Ibn al-Jauzi.)