Ulumuna Vol. 23, No. 1, 2019, p. 193-219 Journal of Islamic Studies Published by State Islamic University Mataram p-ISSN 1411-3457, e-ISSN 2355-7648, available online at https://ulumuna.or.id BID'A IN THE PERSPECTIVE OF ISLAMIC THEOLOGY AND LAW Musawar Syari’ah Faculty of State Islamic University of Mataram Email: musawwar_1@yahoo.com Abstract: Bid’a, literally translated as religious heresy and innovation, has become a topic of controversy amongst Muslims. There are Prophetic traditions that address bid’a in the most critical term, declaring its perpetrators of misguided persons threatened by hellfire. This paper critically examines the notion of bid’a and conceptually analyzes it from the perspectives of Islamic theology and law. Based on textual analysis of this term as this is found in some Prophetic traditions and their interpretation by Muslim scholars, this paper shows that the meaning of bid’a covers various aspects of Islam, including theology and law. Muslims scholars understand the hadith on bid’a literally and contend that all innovations are misleading. Other scholars, however, suggest that based on their critical examination of the term from linguistic, contextual and practical aspects, not all bid’a are misguided. These scholars tend to comprehend bid’a from the perspective of Islam law rather than theology. According to Islamic law, human actions fall into five legal categories: compulsory, recommended, neutral, reprehensible and forbidden. Bid’a must be put into this perspective. In other words, not all new things and innovation are forbidden because they can be categorised as neutral or recommended, depending on the relevant legal considerations. Keywords: Bid’a, Islamic Law, Theology DOI: https://doi.org/10.20414/ujis.v23i1.348 Introduction HUMANS’ LIFE is ever-changing and always develops in accordance with the time and places they live in. Every time and place pose different challenges and questions. This entails innovations in response to those challenges. Innovation is, therefore, required to answer those challenges. However, in the case of Islamic religious 193 Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA 194 Ulumuna, Vol. 23, No.1 (2019) tradition, innovation is often seen as a heresy that will lead to hellfire, as one famous tradition maintains. Here is the problem. Does the tradition restrict all innovations or a particular innovation? Does innovation in Islam always mean something wrong? Or is there another interpretation of the tradition so that this will not impede innovation? Muslims believe that Islam provides guides and norms for its followers. The guides are contained in its fundamental sources such as the Qur’an and Sunna of the Prophet Muhammad. They serve as valid sources for worship and human interactions. While the rules of worship never change, human interactions are subject to modification and adaptation to new circumstances. A Muslim jurist and philosopher Ibn Rhusd once stated1 "Problems amongst people never lasts while the Islamic texts, the action of 2 the Prophet, and his provisions are limited". This, therefore, calls for critical thinking to consider the fact that the Islamic religious texts, such as the Qur’an and the Prophet tradition, are limited while changes and problems are unlimited. In other words, continuous effort to understand those sources to respond to new challenges is necessary. Likewise, any change and innovation, including in Islamic religious matters, is unavoidable and cannot be simply seen as heresy. Many Muslims argue that such innovation is heresy and all heresies are misleading that will bring the perpetrators to the hellfire. Such notion is based on a Ibn Rushd his full name is Abu Walid Muhammad Ibn Muhammad . He was born in Cordova, a city in Andalus in 510 H / 126 AD, He is more popular as Ibn Rushd while Westerners call it an Averrois name that his title was taken from the name of his grandfather. His descendants come from pious and respectable families, even famous for families that have much knowledge. His grandfather and father were former judges in Andalus and he in 565 H / 1169 AD was also appointed as a judge in Seville and Cordova. Because of his outstanding achievements in jurisprudence, in 1173 AD he was promoted to head of the Court. See at Faturohman, ‚Ibnu Rusd dan Pemikirannya,‛ Tsarwah 1, no. 01 (January 16, 2016): 110, accessed January 8, 2019, http://jurnal.uinbanten.ac.id/index.php/tsarwah/article/view/133. 2 Ibn Rushd, Bidāyat al-Mujtahid wa Nihāyat al-Muqtaṣid (Dār al-Iḥyā’ alKutub al-’Arabiyya, n.d.), 2. 1 Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA Musawar, Bid'a in the Perspective of Islamic Theology and Law 591 prevalent Prophetic tradition that is almost always recalled by puritan Muslims in Friday sermon or religious teaching and learning. The hadith is narrated by Muslim from Abū ‘Abdullāh al-Hāfiẓ from Abū ‘Abdullāh: 3 ‚Abū ‘Abdullāh told us al-Hāfiẓ told us Abū ‘Abdullāh said: After that, actually good conversation is the book of God, and the best referrer is the instructions of Muhammad, the worst case is the innovation, and every heresy is heresy ... (Narrated by Muslim in Saheeh)‛ So, what does the hadith mean by bid’a (innovation) and ḍalāla (misguidance)? Do these two terms express the meaning as puritan Muslims understand them? In other words, does any and every innovation is misleading, and heresy, or is there any specific innovation that the hadith wants to address? This is a conceptual and philosophical study about bid’a as one of the most contested words that often incite controversies amongst Muslims.4 The study aims to analyze this term from the perspective of Islamic theology and law as the two fields from which debates and disputes over bid’a commonly emerge. Definition of Heresy The word ‫بدعة‬, commonly translated into English as ‚heresy‛, is a noun taken from the word ‚‫ بدعا‬- ‫ ”بدع – يبدع‬and means to create something without a valid example or precedent from the 3 Abū Bakr Aḥmad ibn Ḥusayn Ibn ’Alī Al-Bayhaqī, al-Sunan al-Kubrā wa Zaylih al-Jawhar al-Nuqā, vol. 2 (India: Majlis Dār al-Ma’ārif al-Niẓāmiyya, 1344), 206. 4 On the debates ober this issu in South Asian context, see SherAli Tareen, ‚Normativity, Heresy, and the Politics of Authenticity in South Asian Islam,‛ The Muslim World 99, no. 3 (2009): 521–551. On the debates of the issue of bid’a (Islamic religious innovation) during the Ottoman, see Khaled El-Rouayheb, Ottoman Puritanism and Its Discontents: Ahmad Al-Rumi Al-Aqhisari and the Qadizadelis (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016). Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA 196 Ulumuna, Vol. 23, No.1 (2019) 5 Prophet. This understanding is based on the book of al-Ta’rifa, especially if the word is read with (‫ )كسرة‬on the letter ba' ‚‫‛ب‬.6 This word is also used in the Qur'an below.7 The word ‚ ‫ "بةدع‬in verse above shows that Allah is the Creator of the skies and earth without referring to any previous existing example because in the Islamic theology the Lord can do and create something just by saying ‚be‛; then the intended thing exists or comes out afterwards.8 Based on this verse, the meaning of heresy according to original Arabic language refers to a new creation without precedence. In the context of Islamic religion, it thus relates to action, worship or belief or theology that is new and is not supported by valid precedent. However, the meaning of heresy, according to legal terms as described by Muslim scholars, varies. Ibnu Manẓūr, for example, says: "Heresy is a new action and held something after the perfection of religious 9 teachings." According to this scholar, heresy is a new thing as an addition or subtraction after finalization of Islamic teachings marked with the death of the Prophet. The meaning of heresy, as mentioned above, is very common; whatever a new thing may be called ‚heresy‛. While the other scholars, such as al-Shāṭibī, especially define heresy as a new thing in Islamic worship. He states: 5 Ahmad Warson Munawir, Al-Munawwir, Kamus Arab-Indonesia (Krapiyak, Yogyakarta: Unit Pengadaan Buku-buku Ilmiyah Keagamaan Pondok Pesantren al-Munawir, n.d.), 70. 6 ‘Abd al-Qāhir ibn ‘Abd ar-Raḥmān ibn Muḥammad al-Jurjānī, Al-Taʿrifāt (Beirut: Dār al-Kutub al-’Arabiy, 1405), 119. 7 Al-Qur’an sura al-Baqarah (2), verse 117 8 Abū ‘Abdullūh Muḥammad ibn Aḥmad ibn Abī Bakr al-Anṣārī al-Qurṭūbī, Al-Jamī’ li-’Aḥkām al-Qur’ān (Riyad-KSA: Dār al-’Ālam al-Kutub, 2003), 95; AlImām Abū al-Fidāʾ Ismāʿīl ibn ʿUmar Ibn Kathīr, Tafsīr al-Qur’ān al-‘Aẓīm, vol. 1 (Riyad: Dār al-Ṭayyibah li al-Nashar wa al-Tawzi’, 1999), 398. 9 Muḥammad ibn Mukarram Ibn Manẓūr, Lisān al-ʻArabī (Beirut: Dār Ṣādir, n.d.), 87. Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA Musawar, Bid'a in the Perspective of Islamic Theology and Law 591 ‚Heresy is a method made in religion that resembles shari'a actions and aims to be carried out as new worship to Allah. 10 Heresy, according to the definition above, refers to something inserted into religious worship without having a religious foundation. Something is said to be heresy if this has no Islamic religious basis. Or if the innovation is meant to be Shari’a itself and is related to worship and has no precedent in the time of the Prophet.11 One scholar, Wasim Fathullah, further defines bid’a as the following:12 "Heresy is an act that contradicts the Sunnah and is called heresy because the person who says it is made up without legal basis from saying of the imam, namely things that have never been done by followers or actions that are not based on the arguments from the syari’ah". His criteria of bid’a is not so much different from the other definition. According to him, innovation is bid’a if this contradicts Sunna and is not found or conducted by the Prophet’s companion and the generation after them (tābi’īn) and does not fit Shari’a. Heresy is something that has not happened at the time of the Prophet. This is not both indicated by shari'a whether it is about the prohibition or obligation.13 So, there are two streams of the definition of heresy that are mutually reinforcing. The first emphasizes that heresy is an act 10 Abū Isḥāq al-Shāṭibī, Al-Iʻtiṣām (Cairo: Dār al-Kutub al-’Arabiya, n.d.), 21. See also at ‚Abd al-Ra‛ūf Muḥammad ‘Uthmān, Maḥabbah al-Rasūl bayn al-Itbā’ wa al-Ibtā’ (Riyad: Ri’asah Idārah al-Buḥuth al-‚Ilmiyah wa al-Ifta‛ wa al-Da’wah, 1414), 285. 11 Abū Bakr Jābir bin Mūsā al-Jazā’irī, al-Inṣāf fi Qilā fi al-Mawlīd min al-Ghulū wa al-Ihjā (Riyad: al-Rais al-Ammah li Idārah al-Buḥuth al-’Ilmiyah wa al-Iftā’ wa al-Irshād, 1405), 18. 12 Wāsim Fatḥullāh, al-Bid’ah wa Atharuhā al-Sayyi’ fī al-Ummah, n.d., 21. 13 ‚Alī Ṣa‛id al-Aduwī al-Mālikī, Hashiah al-Aduwi ‘Alā Sharḥ Kifāyah al-Ṭālib al-Rabbanī (Beirut: Dār al-Fikr, 1412), 157. Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA 198 Ulumuna, Vol. 23, No.1 (2019) that never existed in the Prophet's time and contradicts the Sunna, whether it is good or, let alone, evil deeds. The second emphasizes the definition of heresy as a new act that never happened during the Apostle's time, whether it was good or bad. Bid’a in the Prophetic Tradition There are several prophetic tradition that deals with bid’a . These traditions have a slightly different narration but hold the same idea that bid’a is misleading. They are conveyed by several narrators and reported by al-Bukhārī, Muslim, al-Nasā’ī, alTurmudhī, Dāwūd. Below is one example. ‚Abū ‘Abdullāh told us al-Hāfiẓ told us Abū ‘Abdullāh said: it was the Messenger of Allah when he delivers sermon his eyes were red, his voice was high, and his anger was loud, so he was like a reminder of the army while saying: "I have been sent like this while stretching his index finger and middle finger and saying:" After that, actually the best conversation is the book of God, and the best guide is the guidance of Muhammad, and the worst matters is the innovation, and every bid’a is misguided.14 The other relevant, similar narrative is reported by al-Nasā’ī in his work Sunan al-Nasā’ī.15 "It was told from Jābir bin ‘Abdullāh that the Prophet had said in his sermon: "Indeed, the more exact speech is the book of Allah and the best guide is the instructions of Muhammad. While the worst matter is 14 Muḥammad Ibn Ḥibbān bin Aḥmad Abū Ḥatim al-Tamīmī Ibn Ḥibbān, Ṣahīh Ibn Ḥibbān bi Tartīb Ibn Baliban, vol. 1 (Beirut: Muassasah al-Risālah, 1414), 148. 15 Abū `Abd al-Raḥmān Aḥmad ibn Shu`ayb ibn ’Alī ibn Sīnān al-Nasā’ī, Sunan al-Nasā’ī al-Mujtaba, vol. 3 (Halb: Maktabah al-Maṭbu’ah al-Islamiyah, 1406), 189. Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA Musawar, Bid'a in the Perspective of Islamic Theology and Law 599 innovation and every innovation is bid’a and every bid’a is misguided, and every misguidance goes to the hellfire. In the other tradition, heresy is defined as something new, which is originally outside of Islamic religion but is now inserted into it and becoming part of it. This tradition is narrated by alTurmudhī below. "It is narrated from Kathīr ibn ‘Abdillāh, namely ibn is ‘Amar bin ‘Awf alMuzannī from his father from his: that the Prophet saw had said to Bilāl bin al-Hārith: ‛Know, hi Bilāl‛ (Bilāl replied: "What should I know hi Messenger of Allah? – replied by the Messenger of Allah - "Indeed, whoever revives a tradition from my traditions while it was abandoned after me, then he/she will receive a reward as the reward given to somebody else who follows that tradition without reducing the reward of the first person. Whoever creates innovation that Allah and His messenger do not recommend, he/she will get sin as the sin of the people following his/her innovation without reducing 16 his/her sin." And so does the following tradition. It conjoins Muslims to hold the tradition of the Prophet and the guided successors of him and prohibits the creation of new things since it may be misleading. The tradition is narrated by Abu Dāwūd as follow. "It is narrated from ‘Abdurraḥmān bin ‘Amar al-Sulamī and Ḥujrun. The Messenger of Allah said:" Surely those who live after me will see many differences, therefore hold on to my ordinances and the ordinances of alKhulafā’ who are guided and give instructions and braids hold on to him Muḥammad ibn ʿĪsā al-Sulamī al-Ḍarīr al-Būghī al-Tirmidhī, al-Jāmi’ alṢahīh Sunan al-Turmuzī, vol. 5 (Beirut: Dār Iḥyā’ al-Turāth al-Arabī, n.d.), 45. 16 Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA 200 Ulumuna, Vol. 23, No.1 (2019) and bite with your molten teeth. Avoid things that are made up, because in 17 fact every case that is made up is bid’a and every bid’a go astray". Those traditions become the legal source of the prohibition of bid’a . However, the narrators put the hadith of bid’a on the 18 different section in their respective work, meaning that they perceive the issue quite differently, as this is discussed in the next section. Muslim Scholars’ Interpretation of Bid’a Despite the number of Prophetic tradition on bid’a , scholars have different opinions about it. For example, al-Shāfi’ī classifies innovation into two categories: good innovation and bad innovation. One scholar of the Shafi’ite Ibn Ḥajar al-Asqalānī states19 ‚Heresy has two forms; maḥmūdah (commendable) and mazmumah (abhorrent). And then something that is by the Sunnah is praised and what is violate the sunnah is despicable.‛ Some Muslim scholars and jurists after al-Shāfi’ī, such as ‘Izz 20 21 al-Dīn ibn ‘Abd al-Salām, al-Qarafī, al-Ghazālī, Ibn Athir, and 22 al-Nawāwī, endorse the two categories of bid’a . Although alShāfi’ī still relies the definition of bid’a as something against the Sulaymān ibn al-Ash’ath as-Sijistānī Abū Dāwūd, Sunan Abū Dāwūd, vol. 4 (Beirut: Dār al-Fikr, n.d.), 200. 18 Ahmad Thantawi, ‚Hadits-hadits Bid’ah Perspektif Ulama,‛ Jurnal AlIrfani: Jurnal Kajian Tafsir Hadits 1, no. 1 (March 2017): 53–71, accessed January 11, 2019, http://ejournal.kopertais4.or.id/sasambo/index.php/alirfani/article/view/2877. 19 Aḥmad ibn ’Alī Ibn Ḥajar al-Asqalānī, Fatḥ al-Bārī Sharḥ Ṣahīh al-Bukhārī (Beirut: Dār al-Ma‛rifah, 1379), 253. 20 „Izz al-Dīn Ibn „Abd al-Salām, Qawā’id Al-Aḥkam Fi Maṣalih Al-Anām, vol. 2 (Beirut: Dār al-Ma‟arif, n.d.), 113. 21 Abū al-Sa’ādāt al-Mubārak Muḥammad al-Jazīrī, al-Nihāyah fī Gharīb alAhādith wa al-Athar (Beirut: Al-Maktabah al-’Ilmiyyah, 1978), 106–107. 22 ‘Abdullāh bin ‘Abd al-Azīz bin Aḥmad al-Tawjirī, al-Bidā’ al-Ḥawliyah, n.d., 11. 17 Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA Musawar, Bid'a in the Perspective of Islamic Theology and Law 105 prophet tradition, he accommodates innovation which is reasonable and not contrary to that tradition. He seems to be realized that innovation is inevitable. People work, dress, eat and live in a very dynamic way. So long as these do not contrary to the tradition of the Prophet, then they are acceptable. In contrast, it will be complicated if all innovations counted misleading. In this perspective, the problem is not on innovation itself, but the one that is against the Sunna of the Prophet. Consequently, an innovation that is under the Sunna of the Prophet is called commendable heresy. In contrast, the lousy heresy is an action which is not following the Sunna of the Prophet. However, Ibn Ḥajar asserts that heresy is something new inserted into religion, without legal basis of the prime source or the views of scholars, whether it is good or bad, and as it is claimed as part of religion. But literally, the term heresy/innovation has many meanings. In principle, it means something new regardless of its status as good or bad. Here is the example of the literal meaning of bid’a : "The word" ‫" المحدثات‬is plural of " ‫" محدث‬. It means here something new which has no basis in religion, and this is known in shari’a/religion as ‚heresy‛. The first actions of religion 'are not included in the category of "heresy". Therefore, heresy in religion view is despicable, but it is different in the meaning of language because of something that done without an example, even if it is commendable or despicable is heresy. 23 Some scholars interpret the hadith mentioned, arguing that heresy cannot be divided into two types or more, as this is supported by al-Shāṭibī, Ibn Ḥajar al-Haytāmī, Ibn Rajab alḤambalī, Ibn Taymiyya, al-Zarkāshī, and others.24 For example, Ibn Taymiyya argues that heresy only happened in religious teaching without basis legal and is not blessed by Allah and the 23 24 al-Asqalānī, Fatḥ al-Bārī, 253. al-Tawjirī, al-Bidā’ al-Ḥawliyah, 12. Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA 202 Ulumuna, Vol. 23, No.1 (2019) Prophet, both those are related to the duties or recommended thing, as shown in the following expression:25 Indeed heresy is something done in the Islamic religion; namely, it has not ordered (to be done) as a duty or recommended thing. Clearly, the points of the view show that bid’a relates to something new without the guidance of Allah or the Prophet permission.26 According to supporters of the literal meaning of the heresy, there is no good religious innovation because all innovations are heresy. They go on to say that those who divide the heresy into several parts are also heretics because there is no argument for the division. Nevertheless, it is evident in the Muslim scholar's view that heresy can impact the attitude of unbelievers or infidels with the recognized indications. In fact, there is a rebuttal that the person who divides the heresy into several parts has done heresy too because of lack of argument for that division. Al-Shāṭibī says: 27 Syathibiy's rejection of a variety of heresy is pushed by the fundamental definition regarding the heresy where it is the specific antithesis of the Shari'ah in an unspecified form that it does not own a basis of religion, either in general or in particular. If there is general argumentation in the Qur'an or hadith, it is not called heresy. The impact of heresy is that the doer of heresy 28 is categorized as a sinner. So, there is no way to escape from heresy, 25 Taqī al-Dīn Aḥmad Ibn Taymiyya, Majmū’ al-Fatāwā, vol. 4 (Dār al-Wafa’, 2005), 107. 26 Sā’īd bin ‘Alī bin Wahfa al-Qahtahnī, Nūr al-Sunnah wa Ẓulumāt al-Bid’ah fi Ḍaw’ al-Kitāb wa al-Sunnah, n.d., 33. 27 al-Jazā’irī, al-Inṣāf, 25. 28 Ḥāfiẓ bin Aḥmad al-Ḥakim, ‚Alam al-Sunnah al-Manshūrah li ‛Itqad alṬā’ifah al-Najiah al-Manṣūriyah (Wazarah al-Shu’un al-Islāmiyyah wa al-Awqaf wa Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA Musawar, Bid'a in the Perspective of Islamic Theology and Law 102 because of any types of the heresy is sin, although it is a really good thing because of it is recognized as the new thing and has not happened in the prophetic era and the follower’s time. Analysis of the Hadith about Bid’a The text of hadith, as mentioned above, is the basis of the difference of Muslim scholars views related to the concept of heresy. Among them is who gives clearness the aims of hadith by dividing the heresy into two types: good and bad heresy. However, some scholars do not make anything to divide it as long as the collected argumentation and the understanding are from the authoritative text. For example, al-Nawāwī argues that the hadith is still general and, therefore, can be reviewed specifically. So, the meaning of heresy in terms of language can be entered following the classification of the Islamic law that consists of the five categories: wājib (obligatory), harām (forbidden), makrūh (reprehensible), and mubāh (neutral), mandūbah (recommended). Innovation is thus provisional; it can fall into either legal 29 categories. Al-Nawāwī states "The Prophet's words" ‫' كل بدع ضالل‬are general in nature because heresy is any deed that has no previous example; therefore, the scholars include it into five categories: obligatory, recommended, forbidden, reprehensible, and neutral. I have mentioned a few examples in the book "Tahzib al-Asma’ Wa al-Lughah ". Also, ‘Izz al-Dīn ibn ‘Abd al-Salām classifies heresy according to Islamic law. Therefore, bid’a or innovation in religion can be obligatory, forbidden, neutral or reprehensible. For example, innovation may fall into the category of obligatory due to mandatory consideration of making of doing that even though it al-Da’wah wa al-Irshād, 1422), 272. See also ‘Abdullāh ‘Abd al-Azīz, Taḥzīb Tashīl al-Aqīdah al-Islāmiyah, 1425, 212. 29 Abū Zakariyyā Maḥyuddīn Yahyā bin Sharf al-Nawāwī, al-Majmū’ Sharḥ al-Muhadhdhab, vol. 4 (Beirut: Dār al-Fikr, 1417), 437. Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA 204 Ulumuna, Vol. 23, No.1 (2019) never happened before. Ibn Abdissalam's view was expressed by al-Syarwani as follows: 30 ‚‘Ibn ‘Abd al-Salām said that heresy is divided into five laws: compulsory (wājib), forbidden (harām), reprehensible (makrūh), recommended (mandūb), and neutral (mubāh). He said that the way to know the heresy is by being offered to sharia rules. So, if the heresy includes in the binding terms, then heresy would be an obligation, such as busying in the studying for Grammatical knowledge. If the heresy enters into prohibiting rule, the heresy becomes a prohibited thing, such as following the ideas of Murji'a, Rafidha, Qadariyya, or Mujassima. Next, he said: the refusing to them was as an obligatory because an innovator to something was the one who made a new thing in Shari'ah which had never happened in the time of the Apostle (the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him). If heresy is included in the matter of change, then heresy becomes a mandatory, such as building a hut, a school, and any good that never happened during the first period of companions, such as tarawih prayer. If the heresy includes in the reprehensible rule, then heresy becomes reprehensible, such as making decorating to the mosque and covering the Qur'an, and if the heresy includes in the rule of the permission, then heresy becomes neutral, such as shaking hands after praying in the morning (Fajr) and afternoon (‘Aṣar) and providing the food and clothing widely‛. The difference in views of Muslim scholars on the hadith about heresy is not due to the validity of the hadith in terms of hadith knowledge. Instead, what makes them different is the word "‫"كةل‬. Because the word "‫ "كةل‬can point into two meanings; ‚all‛ or 30 ‘Abd al-Ḥamīd al-Sharwānī, Ḥawāshī al-Sharwānī ‘alā Tuḥfah al-Muhtāj bi Sharḥ al-Minhāj, vol. 10 (Beirut: Dār al-Fikr, n.d.), 232. See also Muḥammad alKhāṭib al-Shabinī, Mughni al-Muhtaj ilā Ma’rifah Ma’ani Alfaẓ al-Minjah, vol. 4 (Beirut: Dār al-Fikrr, n.d.), 436. See the description of al-Mālikī, Hashiah al-Aduwi, 157. Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA Musawar, Bid'a in the Perspective of Islamic Theology and Law 101 ‚part‛, as will be explained later. However, further attention must be paid toward the meaning of the Prophet's hadith above since the main problem is the meaning of the derived sentence from the hadith mentioned as follows: Everything that is made up is heresy, every heresy is misguidance (ḍalālah), Moreover, every misguidance is in hell." The derived statement from hadith above is that if its sentence is changed with an inverted sentence arrangement, it logically will be dubious because of every new thing is in the hell, such as the following expression: Every misguidance is heresy Every heresy is a contrived matter Every a contrived matter is in the hell Obviously, the reading of a text like this is impossible, because its meaning is that all new actions are heresy (and it will be put into the hell), including the matter of transactions that have not happened or carried out by the Prophet in his time. While the development of human being activity never ends, but it becomes new (muḥdathah). So, this cannot immediately be said that it was the denounced thing. However, if the logic of the composition of the sentences is juxtaposed with the following expression, then it is not wrong: Everything besides God is a creature, Every creature is new (made), and every contrived is nature If the example expression above is read by reversal, such as the method done above, it will give the right meaning in one meaning as follows: Every nature is muhdath (the newly created thing) Every muhdath (the newly created thing) are creatures Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA 206 Ulumuna, Vol. 23, No.1 (2019) Every creature is other than Allah Anything other than God is nature Regarding the manner of reading as above, it gives the same meaning, where it is started, namely the understanding that "everything besides Allah is nature". Therefore, if reading like this is used to read the hadith about bid’a , it will give an error in the meaning; because logically it will give an implication of the meaning that every new thing is in the hell. So, it is an impossible and unwise way to read and understand the hadith. The analysis of the word The difference of Muslim scholars’ view toward the meaning of heresy is mostly caused by language aspect. Here, for example, the meaning of the word of ‚ ‛ in the hadith, because the fact the view of the scholar is divided into some categories. The first, there are among Muslim scholars, who argue that the meaning of the word ‚ ‛ is ‚all‛ without exception. Especially if the word is followed by another word (muḍāf ilayh),31 for example, is the following verse: 32 and 33 , the meaning of each ‚ ‛ in those verses is understood in the same meaning in the hadith related to heresy as described by Muslim scholar by the following expression: 34 Therefore, it can be affirmed that the meaning of ‚ ‛ includes all thing without exception as it was understood in the verses or hadith. Based on the meaning of hadith, it gives sense that all type of heresy is misguided and was a lousy thing naturally and its place is in hell. It appears that thought of some scholars is similar to a follower's attitude of Prophet that the text of hadith is not Majmu’ah min al-Mu’allifīn, al-Jāmi’ fi al-Mawlīd, vol. 5, n.d., 10. Qs. Surat Ali Imran (4) verse 185 33 Qs. Surat al-Mudastir, (74) verse 38 34 Hijazī Muḥammad Sharif, al-Bid’ah wa Atharuhā fī Mihnah al-Muslimīn, vol. 5, n.d., 3. 31 32 Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA Musawar, Bid'a in the Perspective of Islamic Theology and Law 101 specified by other sentences, so naturally, the general meaning of the word ‚ ‛ is covering the whole, both in worship or other, because followers know more the language of Prophet and exactly they were the first people do the heresy35 and it was known by the following expression: 36 The critical thing as argumentation to proof that heresy is terrible is an action of the Prophet’s follower, where if an activity in the prophet era, although it was ‚kindness‛ type, it was surely too done by them, because of the follower toward the religion are more understandable than the others as such said by the following expression: 37 Strictly speaking, all forms of new things that have a secure connection with the field of religion, then the benchmark is the practice of followers (the generation after the Prophet’s companion). Did they do it or not, because they have the best understanding of the words of the Prophet. If the general statement in the hadith above is not yet complete, indeed, followers will ask; where are the limits of heresy, what is heresy, and how it was? The second idea is among scholars who stated the word " " does not always mean a "whole", but it sometimes means "partial" with indications that excludes it, such as described by two verses 35 Burhān al-Dīn Abī al-Ḥasan Ibrāhīm bin ‘Umar al-Buqā’ī, Naẓm al-Durar fī Tanāsub al-Āyāti wa al-Suwar, vol. 7 (Beirut: Dār al-Kutub al-‘Ilmiyah, 1415), 123. 36 ’Abdullāh bin ’Abd al-Ḥamīd al-Atharī, al-Wajiz fi Aqīdah al-Salafi al-Ṣālih, (ahl al-Sunnah wa al-Jama’ah) (Saudi Arabia: Wazarah al-Shu’un al-Islāmiyyah wa al-Awqaf wa al-Da’wah wa al-Irshād, 1422), 155. 37 ‘Abd al-Razāq bin ‘Abd al-Muḥsin al-Badri, Tazkirah al-Mu’tisī Sharḥ Aqīdah al-Ḥāfiẓ ‘Abd al-Ghanī (Gharas li al-Nashar wa al-Tawzi’, 2003), 46. Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA 208 Ulumuna, Vol. 23, No.1 (2019) below, namely verse in Sura al-Aḥqāf talking about the condition of the unbeliever:38 The word of ‚ ‛ does not mean all of the things that can be destroyed by wind, like the angel is a thing that can not be destroyed and also earth, moon, and stars. So, the scope of the meaning of " " is partial and limited. Here, it is the same meaning as the hadith on bid’a . Likewise, the content of the next verse that mentioned in Sura al-Kahfi talking about the bad king is the same meaning as the following text: 39 The word ‚ ” in two verses points to the meaning of ‚part‛ not ‚whole‛, because such meaning (part/partial) is needed by the text.40 Likewise, it occurs in some scholars' understanding of the word " " mentioned before in hadith, which means "partially" because there is an indication for this. As a result, the meaning is not all heresy as a "whole", but heresy is divided into parts as it 41 was in accordance with the view of al-Nawāwī as follows: al-Qur’an, al-Aḥqāf ( 46 ) verse 24 – 25. al-Qur’an, al-Kahfi (18) verse 79 40 The word Kullu here shows partial eating, not meaningful whole, which is termed the term "General" - "special". See more information to Abū ‘Umar Yūsuf bin ‘Abdullāh bin ‘Abd al-Bar al-Zamrī, al-Tamhīd limā fī al-Muwaṭṭa’ min al-Ma’ānī wa al-Asānid, vol. 18 (Al-Maghrab: Wazā’ir ‛Umūm al-Awqāf Wa al-Shu’un alIslāmiyyah, 1378), 56; ‘Alī bin Muḥammad al-Āmidī, al-Iḥkām fī Uṣūl al-Iḥkām, vol. 2 (Beirut: Dār al-Kitāb al-Arabī, 1404), 301. 41 Abū Zakariyyā Maḥyuddīn Yahyā bin Sharf al-Nawāwī, al-Minhāj Sharḥ Ṣahīh Muslim, vol. 7 (Beirut: Dār Iḥyā’ al-Turāth al-Arabī, 1392), 10; al-Nawāwī, alMajmū’, 4:43. 38 39 Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA Musawar, Bid'a in the Perspective of Islamic Theology and Law 109 The point of view of al-Nawāwī above is that hadith talking about heresy is having general meaning and can be specified its meaning by another hadith. His view is similar to that of Zarqanī, who contends that the hadith talking about heresy in general.42 Further, Zarqanī stated that heresy is something without having a legal basis in religion. However, if it has a legal basis in religion, either individual or general ground, it cannot directly be named as heresy, even though in language aspect it is inserted as heresy. Therefore, people who put intentionally and believe in anything as part of the religion without a legal basis would be called as the perpetrators of heresy. He argues43 Zarqawi's view above is supported by al-Sayyid Muḥammad bin al-Sayyid ‘Aluwī al-Mālikī al-Ḥasanī who stated that heresy is something new done intentionally in religion, whether it was as an addition or reduction, that is forbidden by the Prophet, although 42 Muḥammad bin ‘Abd al-Baqī bin Yūsuf al-Zarqānī, Sharḥ al-Zarqānī ‚Alā Muwaṭṭa‛ al-Imām Mālik (Beirut: Dār al-Kutub al-’Ilmiyah, 1411), 340. 43 Abū al-Farj ‘Abd al-Raḥmān bin Aḥmad bin Rajab al-Ḥambalī, Jāmi’ al‚Ulūm wa al-Ḥikām fī Sharḥ Khamsīn Ḥadīthan min Jawāmi‛ al-Kalīm (Beirut: Dār alMa‘rifah, 1407), 266; Muḥammad ‘Abd al-Raḥmān bin ‘Abd al-Raḥmān alMubārakī, Tuḥfah al-Aḥwaz bi Sharḥ al-Tirmidhī, vol. 7 (Beirut: Dār al-Kutub alIlmiyah, n.d.), 366. Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA 210 Ulumuna, Vol. 23, No.1 (2019) in language aspect the heresy can be divided into five law. He states:44 ‚If you know fundamentally, the heresy is "everything that happened and made without its examples, so it is not unseen that addition or bad discovery here is addition in religion in order be part of religious business and the addition in religion to take the legitimacy until it is being the followed rule and related to the owner of shari’a. This is which the Prophet warns: "Anywho makes something in this case, where it is not of it (religion), then it is rejected". The separating boundary is in the theme of his word "our business". So that, indeed in our understanding the division of heresy into a good and evil is not only for heresy grammatically which is only making a something. All of us are no doubt that the meaning heresy in religion is the addition for religion self and labeled to religious activity; it is a misguided, despicable, rejected and hated thing.‛ The prime view of Sayyid al-Mālikī is that everything inserted by someone internally with a belief that it is part of religion without argumentation based on Shari’a, is bid’a and a misguided way that must be rejected. The Scope of Heresy If the concept of "heresy" is seen in terms of language, then its scope is very wide, whether it is related to religion or not. Heresy is something new without any previous example, such as engineerings, transportation, communication devices, medicine, agriculture and others that have not had examples. However, if the concept of heresy is seen in from its literal meaning, all new al-Sayyid Muḥammad bin al-Sayyid ‘Aluwī al-Mālikī al-Ḥasanī, Manhaj alSalaf fī Fahm al-Nuṣūṣ Bain al-Naẓariyah wa al-Ṭaṭbīq, 1419, 338. 44 Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA Musawar, Bid'a in the Perspective of Islamic Theology and Law 155 things cannot necessarily be called heresy. Therefore Muslim scholars have classified heresy into some categories. Some argue that the hadith of heresy covers all elements, including worship and social interactions. Perpetrators of bid’a can be called unbeliever or sinner. Such implication, however, depends on the motives of the perpetrators themselves. For example, transportation to fulfil the illegal purpose or permitted purpose. While the heresy that is considered to bring shirq is an action that 45 lead to it. Strictly speaking, the heresy in this view covers a broad scope, and that it may cause sin or infidel. On the other hand, some Muslim scholars divided heresy in accordance to the legal category, so this has implications for law; obligatory (wājib), forbidden (harām), neutral (mubāh), recommended (sunnah), and reprehensible (makrūh). The "thing that has ever been done" by the Prophet is divided into three categories, namely: a. Al-Sunna al-Mu’akkada, namely the actions described by the Prophet (sayings or deeds) that are highly recommended to be carried out. So that if it is not done, there is no sin such as praying in congregation, adhan (calling to pray), and the other actions that are always (ordinary) done by the Prophet. b. Al-Sunna al-Zayda (al-Nāfila), namely a new act not always done by the Messenger of Allah, but it is done and abandoned at some time, such as giving the gift, fasting at Monday and Thursday, non-obligatory praying, and others. People who do not carry out of these are not getting reproached. c. Al-Sunna al-Bashariya which is a virtue that does not become a shari’a (rule), such as the way (style) of walking, eating, drinking, sleeping, dressing, and the like where they serve as a symbol of humanity, and if it is not believed as a religious provision this does not impact to sin, because the manner of the Prophet is human habits.46 45 Abd al-‘Azīz bin Bāz and Muḥammad Ṣālih al-Uthaymīn, Fatāwā Muhimmah li ‘Umum al-Ummah (Riyad: Dār al-‘Aṣimah, 1413), 33. 46 ’Abd al-Wahhāb Khallāf, ‘Ilm Uṣūl al-Fiqh (Beirut: Dār al-Qalam, 1978), 112. Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA 212 Ulumuna, Vol. 23, No.1 (2019) Muslims may perform things that have never been done by the Prophet as long as they do not contradict the Qur'an and hadith. Nevertheless, if they are contradictory to these sources, then they are forbidden (muharrama) heresy, such as prayer by remembering only, changing the number of rakaah of prayer, fasting on two feast holidays, and so on. However, if an action has a strong argument, then it is permissible. Therefore, the "action that has never been done" cannot be used as an argument to forbid innovation. When the Prophet did not do something does not mean he prohibited it. For example, he avoided eating or drinking something. However, the unwillingness of the Prophet shows that the act did not point to it as forbidden. Moreover, the Prophet did not do something because sometimes he forgot it. For some reason, he also did not perform something for being afraid that this, later on, became an obligation for his people, such as tarawih prayer at night of Ramadhan. The Prophet might not have done anything because it did not come to cross at his mind, such as unwillingness to lean back on the tree of dates, but he did not think about chairs to preach. Furthermore, the Prophet was not used to do an activity because it was included in the general verse or hadith, such as he did not do morning prayer (ḍuḥā) at one time. For some other reasons, the Prophet just did not do anything because he was afraid of a change in the heart of his friends (such as a hadith telling about the demolition of the Ka'bah as Abraham did).47 Furthermore, Muslim scholars explained the concept of "not doing deeds". It can take two meanings. The first is " " which is similar to the " ", namely that something is done by the Prophet and he later stopped doing it. The second is " " or " ". It refers to a statement/word that has never been done/spoken. It leaves unanswered, and if it occurred after the Prophet’s time, it would become a center of contention amongst scholars,48 such as "heresy" (new things), because there was neither argument nor command for it. 47 48 Ibid., 416. Ibid. Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA Musawar, Bid'a in the Perspective of Islamic Theology and Law 152 To deal with such unanswered things, Muslim scholars will look at the general prescription of the Shari'ah law and ask if such things fall under the category of prohibition or something else. This is following the view of Ibn Ḥajar al-Asqalānī. He said 49 "Heresy is basically something that is held without any previous examples. It is used in the opposite meaning of the sunna so that it becomes despicable. However, after being adequately observed, then if this is below the good value according to religion, the heresy will be useful, so if it falls into a lousy value according to religion, it will become ugly and rejected. If not, it will be included in the corrupt part, and sometimes it will be divided into 5 (five) laws. Following al-Asqalānī, it is best stated that heresy must be put into the category of law, meaning that it does not necessarily forbid. It is, therefore, contingent upon several points or aspects of the law. The first is that there is no law that can be applied in any form unless it is supported by the authoritative textual base, including in the field of theology as pointed by the verse of al-Qur‟an below:50 “We will not punish until we send a prophet (as the reminder).” The explicit text of verse explains that God will not punish someone for misbehavior or misconduct until God sends a messenger who explains to people what is allowed and what is not. So what is forbidden and what is commanded are transparent and based on a legal text. In other words, something cannot be said as permitted or forbidden without a legal basis. The second is that if the concept of heresy is not recognized as part of the law, it will lock the freedom of the using of logic. At the same time, Islam encourages the use of logic as the basis of reasoning as long as suitable with law directly and indirectly. It was known that not only once a time the Qur‟an orders the use of the logic such as „don‟t you think” or “don‟t you ponder”. In contrast, if the concept of heresy is set in theology (not law), then the implication is that whoever conducts or belive things which is not based on a sound basis or precedent from the 49 50 al-Asqalānī, Fatḥ al-Bārī, 245. Al-Qur’an sura al-Isrā’ (17), verse 15. Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA 214 Ulumuna, Vol. 23, No.1 (2019) Prophet, this may cause big sin and conversion. So, such a narrow view (including theology in terms of heresy) will decrease the flexibility of Islam because this religion is accommodative to local custom and changing situation, both of which imply new things and unrecognized in the era of the Prophet.51 The third is that there are hadiths which describe events that are considered as heresy (new things) occurring during the time of the Prophet or his companions in the form of addition, such as the sentence of “ ” added by follower in praying with teaching of the Prophet. As reported in a lengthy hadith, the saying of this sentence in prayer is not forbidden by the Prophet; even he praised it.52 The other case (of new things in worship which has no ground) is concerned with the addition of the dhikr (chanting God‟s name) in praying that performed by a companion. According to a hadith, a companion read Sura al-Ikhlāṣ twice in one raka’ah. This case is complained by some other companions and reported it to the Prophet. Surprisingly, the Prophet allowed such reading of the sura although he had been not ordered it.53 There are some other reports on similar accidents.54 However, the Prophet may prohibit a new action which was deemed unnecessary or exaggerated. In a report, the Prophet forbade the deeds of Abu Isra’il, who was fasting talking and sheltering from the heat of the sun, and not sitting. The Prophet denounced this type of fasting because it could cause harm.55 Some examples that are shown in some reports is pointing that suitable addition or innovation with the general statement in the Qur'an is allowed although it is not taught, such as the sprite of the meaning of some verses. Other reports relate to the deeds of 51 A scholar says ‚We believe that Islam is both religion and state, worship and law and it is always suitable for all time and place‛. See Al-Nadwah al-‘Alamiyyah lī Ṣabab alIslāmī, al-Mawsū’ah al-Muyassarah fī al-Adyān wa al-Madhāhib wa al-Aḥzāb (Dar alNadwah al-‘Alamiyyah, n.d.), 16. 52 Al-Bayhaqī, al-Sunan al-Kubrā, 2:95. 53 Abū ‘Abd Allāh Muḥammad ibn Ismā‘īl ibn Ibrāhīm ibn al-Mughīrah ibn Bardizbah al-Ju‘fī al-Bukhārī, Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī, Kitāb Adhan (Kairo: Dār al-Sha’b, n.d.). in collecting two chapters in one raka’at, No. 774 see more to al-Asqalānī, Fatḥ al-Bārī, volume 2, 258. 54 Muslim bin al-Hajjāj, Ṣaḥīḥ Muslim, Kitâb al-Dhikr, The Chance of Gathering Together To Read the Qur'an and Dhikr Number 2701 55 al-Bukhārī, Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī no. 6704. Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA Musawar, Bid'a in the Perspective of Islamic Theology and Law 151 the companions. For example, the First Caliph Abu Bakar collected the verse of the Qur’an56 and the Third Caliph Ustman standardized and unified some manuscripts into a single official manuscript of the Qur’an and burnt other manuscripts.57 All these decisions by the Prophet’s companions and his successors, although without the approval of the Prophet suggests that innovation does not necessarily mean heresy, like the hadith of heresy reveal. There are many new things and innovation but relevant to Islamic doctrine, and consequently, does not need to be recalled heresy. Conclusion This study shows that heresy is a controversial issue and become a subject of heated discussion amongst Muslim scholars and lay people. Muslim scholars make heresy as a critical field to be taught to the community. Some argue that the meaning of bid’a do not include theology because the consequence is rampant and dangerous; those who make or believes things which are unknown in the Prophet's time could be considered an infidel. Therefore, these scholars compiled books to discuss heresy comprehensively and cautiously. Consequently, some Muslim scholars tend to discuss bid’a in terms of the law. As a legal category, bid’a is not always wrong or forbidden. Depending on the illat (reason), bid’a may be classified obligatory, recommended, neutral, reprehensible or forbidden. Nevertheless, here can be emphasized too, that Muslim scholars have agreed that heresy means something new, innovation, created in a later period after the Prophet’s era, whether it is good or bad deeds. However, Muslim scholars disagreed about the meaning of the hadith on heresy. Some have concluded that heresy covers all kinds of new things or innovation. Consequently, all heresies must be avoided because they lead to error and finally bring into the hellfire. Some scholars 56 Al-Daniyī Abū ‘Umar, al-Ahruf al-Sab’ah lī al-Qur’an (Makkah AlMukarramah: Maktabah al-Manarah, 1408), 62. 57 Mannā’ al-Qaṭṭān, Mabāḥis fī ‚Ulūm al-Qur‛ān (Beirut: Maktabah al-Ma’ārif wa al-Tawzi’, 2000), 146. Copyright © 2019_Ulumuna_this publication is licensed under a CC BY-SA 216 Ulumuna, Vol. 23, No.1 (2019) argue that all heresy is not misguided (ḍalāl). They argue that heresy refers to the thing that is added or reduced in religion intentionally without a legal basis from the provisions of Allah and His Messenger. Therefore, some Muslim scholars view that heresy only can be measured by the law or legal categories. References Al-Qur’an ‘Abd al-Azīz, ‘Abdullāh. Taḥzīb Tashīl al-Aqīdah al-Islāmiyah, 1425. Abū Dāwūd, Sulaymān ibn al-Ash’ath as-Sijistānī. Sunan Abū Dāwūd. Vol. 4. Beirut: Dār al-Fikr, n.d. Abū ‘Umar, Al-Daniyī. al-Ahruf al-Sab’ah lī al-Qur’an. 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