What is a Madhhab?
The word madhhab is derived from an Arabic word meaning "to go" or "to
take as a way", and refers to a mujtahid's choice in regard to a number
of interpretive possibilities in deriving the rule of Allah from the primary
texts of the Qur'an and hadith on a particular question. In a larger sense, a
madhhab represents the entire school of thought of a particular mujtahid Imam,
such as Abu Hanifa, Malik, Shafi'i, or Ahmad--together with many first-rank scholars
that came after each of these in their respective schools, who checked their
evidences and refined and upgraded their work. The mujtahid Imams were thus explainers,
who operationalized the Qur'an and sunna in the specific shari'a rulings in our
lives that are collectively known as fiqh or "jurisprudence". In relation
to our din or "religion",
this fiqh is only part of it, for the religious knowledge each of us possesses
is of three types. The first type is the general knowledge of tenets of Islamic
belief in the oneness of Allah, in His angels, Books, messengers, the prophethood
of Muhammad (Allah bless him and give him peace), and so on. All of us may derive
this knowledge directly from the Qur'an and hadith, as is also the case with
a second type of knowledge, that of general Islamic ethical principles to do
good, avoid evil, cooperate with others in good works, and so forth. Every Muslim
can take these general principles, which form the largest and most important
part of his religion, from the Qur'an and hadith.
The third type of knowledge is that of the specific understanding of particular
divine commands and prohibitions that make up the shari'a. Here, because of
both the nature and the sheer number of the Qur'an and hadith texts involved,
people differ in the scholarly capacity to understand and deduce rulings from
them. But all of us have been commanded to live them in our lives, in obedience
to Allah, and so Muslims are of two types, those who can do this by themselves,
and they are the mujtahid Imams; and those who must do so by means of another,
that is, by following a mujtahid Imam, in accordance with Allah's word in Surat
al-Nahl,
" Ask those who recall, if you know not " (Qur'an
16:43),
and in Surat al-Nisa,
" If they had referred it to the Messenger and to those of authority
among them, then those of them whose task it is to find it out would have known
the matter " (Qur'an 4:83),
in which the phrase those of them whose
task it is to find it out, expresses the words "alladhina yastanbitunahu minhum",
referring to those possessing the capacity to draw inferences directly from
the evidence, which is called in Arabic istinbat.
These and other verses and hadiths oblige the believer who is not at the
level of istinbat or directly deriving rulings from the Qur'an and hadith to
ask and follow someone in such rulings who is at this level. It is not difficult
to see why Allah has obliged us to ask experts, for if each of us were personally
responsible for evaluating all the primary texts relating to each question,
a lifetime of study would hardly be enough for it, and one would either have
to give up earning a living or give up ones din, which is why Allah says in
surat al-Tawba, in the context of jihad:
" Not all of the believers should go to fight. Of every section of them,
why does not one part alone go forth, that the rest may gain knowledge of the
religion and admonish their people when they return, that perhaps they may
take warning " (Qur'an 9:122).
The slogans we hear today about "following the Qur'an and sunna instead
of following the madhhabs" are wide of the mark, for everyone agrees that
we must follow the Qur'an and the sunna of the Prophet (Allah bless him and
give him peace). The point is that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace) is no longer alive to personally teach us, and everything we have from
him, whether the hadith or the Qur'an, has been conveyed to us through Islamic
scholars. So it is not a question of whether or not to take our din from scholars,
but rather, from which scholars. And this is the reason we have madhhabs in
Islam: because the excellence and superiority of the scholarship of the mujtahid
Imams--together with the traditional scholars who followed in each of their
schools and evaluated and upgraded their work after them--have met the test
of scholarly investigation and won the confidence of thinking and practicing
Muslims for all the centuries of Islamic greatness. The reason why madhhabs
exist, the benefit of them, past, present, and future, is that they furnish
thousands of sound, knowledge-based answers to Muslims questions on how to
obey Allah. Muslims have realized that to follow a madhhab means to follow
a super scholar who not only had a comprehensive knowledge of the Qur'an and
hadith texts relating to each issue he gave judgements on, but also lived in
an age a millennium closer to the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace)
and his Companions, when taqwa or "godfearingness" was the norm--both
of which conditions are in striking contrast to the scholarship available today.
While the call for a return to the Qur'an and sunna is an attractive slogan,
in reality it is a great leap backward, a call to abandon centuries of detailed,
case-by-case Islamic scholarship in finding and spelling out the commands of
the Qur'an and sunna, a highly sophisticated, interdisciplinary effort by mujtahids,
hadith specialists, Qur'anic exegetes, lexicographers, and other masters of
the Islamic legal sciences. To abandon the fruits of this research, the Islamic
shari'a, for the following of contemporary sheikhs who, despite the claims,
are not at the level of their predecessors, is a replacement of something tried
and proven for something at best tentative.
The rhetoric of following the shari'a
without following a particular madhhab is like a person going down to a car
dealer to buy a car, but insisting it not be any known make--neither a Volkswagen
nor Rolls-Royce nor Chevrolet--but rather "a car, pure and simple".
Such a person does not really know what he wants; the cars on the lot do
not come like that, but only in kinds. The salesman may be forgiven a slight
smile, and can only point out that sophisticated products come from sophisticated
means of production, from factories with a division of labor among those
who test, produce, and assemble the many parts of the finished product. It
is the nature of such collective human efforts to produce something far better
than any of us alone could produce from scratch, even if given a forge and
tools, and fifty years, or even a thousand. And so it is with the shari'a,
which is more complex than any car because it deals with the universe of
human actions and a wide interpretative range of sacred texts. This is why
discarding the monumental scholarship of the madhhabs in operationalizing
the Qur'an and sunna in order to adopt the understanding of a contemporary
sheikh is not just a mistaken opinion. It is scrapping a Mercedes for a go-cart.