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The Prophetic Sunnah as a Fundamental Source of Legislation
Author : Dr Noah Ali Salman
Date Added : 17-02-2026

The Prophetic Sunnah as a Fundamental Source of Legislation

 

All praise is due to Allah, Lord of the worlds. May Allah send blessings and peace upon our Master Muḥammad, and upon his family and all his Companions.

Whoever examines the noble science of Prophetic ḥadīth realizes that it is a divine inspiration from Allah, Most Blessed and Exalted, through which He preserved His religion and His Sharīʿah, so that the Sunnah would remain safeguarded alongside the Noble Qur’an. Together, they continue to provide Muslims in every age with the guidance they need for felicity in this world and the Hereafter.

Were it not for this divine inspiration and providential care, the scholars of ḥadīth would not have been able to establish such precise and rigorous principles by which the authenticity of reports attributed to the Messenger of Allah ﷺ could be verified.

A Muslim senses this divine preservation when comparing the meticulous transmission of reports concerning our Prophet Muḥammad ﷺ with the state of narrations attributed to previous prophets. One becomes certain that this is among the miracles of this religion, especially when recalling that Islam emerged among an unlettered nation, whereas earlier scriptures were revealed to peoples acquainted with reading, writing, and documentation. Yet Allah testified that distortion occurred among them, saying {what means}: “And indeed, among them is a group who twist their tongues with the Book so that you may think it is from the Book, while it is not from the Book; and they say, ‘It is from Allah,’ while it is not from Allah; and they speak lies about Allah knowingly.” (Āl ʿImrān/78)

There is no doubt that the Noble Qur’an has been preserved with absolute certainty. Everything within it is from Allah, and what we possess today is the entirety of the Qur’an that the Messenger of Allah ﷺ was commanded to convey.

As for the Prophetic Sunnah, the scholars of ḥadīth—by the help of Allah—were able to preserve it and establish precise criteria by which what is authentic may be distinguished from what is not among reports attributed to the Prophet ﷺ. These standards are unparalleled, even when compared to the developments in documentation and verification that have emerged in subsequent centuries. Indeed, specialists in documentation may well have benefited from the methodological foundations laid down by the scholars of ḥadīth.

The position of the scholars of ḥadīth was both delicate and grave. On one hand, they feared that something authentically reported from the Prophet ﷺ might be lost or excluded due to strict verification standards. On the other hand, they feared that something not truly from him might be falsely attributed to him—because the first would result in the loss of part of the religion, and the second would introduce into the religion what does not belong to it, thereby obligating the Ummah with what Allah did not obligate.

Imagine the intellectual state of one standing between these two serious concerns. Yet Allah granted them success and inspired them with a methodology that neither allowed any part of the religion to be lost nor permitted fabrication against the Seal of the Messengers. For the Sunnah falls under the divine promise in His saying {what means}: “Indeed, We have sent down the Reminder, and surely We are its Preserver.” (Al-Ḥijr/9)

The standards to which we have alluded were the result of coordinated and integrated scholarly efforts. They developed rational principles of verification, preserved the biographical details of every narrator associated with this knowledge, and refined methods of documentation to such an extent that this magnificent edifice became one of the great achievements of this Ummah and a clear sign of divine support for this religion. For centuries, Muslims benefited from it, finding in the Sunnah that which explains, complements, and clarifies the meanings of the Glorious Qur’an.

With the passage of time, however, the Muslim Ummah encountered new cultural circumstances due to interaction with other nations and exposure to foreign intellectual traditions. This occurred during periods of material weakness, social instability, and confrontation with cultural, military, and economic incursions—conditions that inevitably affected the Ummah negatively.

Consequently, some began to approach the science of ḥadīth as though it were merely a set of rigid mathematical formulas devoid of human, social, or cultural dimensions. Their aim, in many cases, was to undermine confidence in certain ḥadīth texts that had long been accepted by the righteous predecessors but did not appeal to those influenced by foreign ideologies.

Others went further, casting aspersions upon the great luminaries of ḥadīth scholarship for various reasons, including the pursuit of prominence—despite being wholly dependent upon those very scholars. For they did not receive ḥadīth directly from the Messenger of Allah ﷺ; rather, they received them through those early authorities. Nor did they personally meet the narrators; they knew them only through the biographies documented by earlier scholars. Nor did they independently establish the principles of this science; they inherited them refined and scrutinized. Yet, under the banner of objectivity and academic detachment, they allowed themselves to criticize those from whom they derived their knowledge.

More troubling still are those who seek to remove the Sunnah entirely from its legislative authority, arguing that it is not transmitted through mass transmission (tawātur), and thus claiming that only the Qur’an should remain as a source of law. In doing so, they free themselves from the obligations and responsibilities established by the Sunnah and interpret the Qur’an according to their own inclinations—exploiting verses that allow multiple interpretations to suit their preferences. In reality, this only exposes their ignorance. For just as Allah commanded obedience to Himself, He also commanded obedience to His Messenger: “Obey Allah and obey the Messenger.” (Al-Mā’idah/92)

Moreover, certain aspects of the Qur’an cannot be understood without the Sunnah. Where in the Qur’an are specified the number of daily prayers, their units, their timings, and their manner of performance?

In any case, this confusion surrounding the Sunnah and its texts finds acceptance only among those who are ignorant of the science of ḥadīth and unaware of the circumstances and integrity of its scholars. It has been said: “Whoever is ignorant of something will oppose it.”

Therefore, a scholarly revival is necessary—one that removes doubts, restores proper understanding of the science of ḥadīth, and addresses each era in language comprehensible to its people. Such efforts must clarify the principles governing the interpretation of texts and the evaluation of their narrators, explaining methodologies through analysis, illustration, and example. In this way, readers may come to appreciate this science as it truly is in the understanding of its rightful inheritors among the righteous predecessors—those who sought only the pleasure of Allah, the service of His religion, and the benefit of the Muslims, even if no recognition were ever attributed to them.

Perhaps through such endeavors, the living awareness of the science of ḥadīth will be renewed in the minds of the Ummah, as it rightfully deserves.

And may Allah send blessings and peace upon our Master Muḥammad, and upon his family and Companions.

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