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Ask Those Who Know
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Shaykh
Muhammad Naasir ud-Deen al-Albaanee rahimahullaah
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Jami'at
Ihyaa Minhaaj al-Sunnah
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Question: Some who are seeking knowledge are very hasty in
giving rulings in matters of halaal and haraam, and this is a
common noticeable defect. What is your advice to such people?
Reply:
"We have spoken on this issue long before, and we said that
Allaah the Wise has divided the Muslim community into two types
of people: the Ahl adh-Dhikr, and those that depend on the Ahl
adh-Dhikr. As Allaah says to the ordinary people:
"Then ask those who possess the Message
(Ahl adh-Dhikr) if you do not know." (Soorah 21:7 and
16:43)
The Ahl
adh-Dhikr are, as we all know, are the Ahl al-Qur’aan and the Ahl
al-Hadeeth, those who know the authentic from the unauthentic,
the general from the specific, the abrogating from the abrogated,
and other such principles of Fiqh and Hadeeth.
Hence,
it is not allowed for a Muslim to begin giving fatwaas on the
basis of some hadeeth, simply because he came across it in some
book, although he does not know if it is saheeh according to the
criteria of the scholars of hadeeth. On the other hand, he knows
that he is not sufficiently well-versed in knowledge and
competence in the Arabic language to explain the meanings and
ideas behind the Kitaab and Sunnah. Therefore, anyone who has not
decided to undertake acquiring knowledge and persevere in it for
many years, until the people of knowledge testify that he can
guide the people and direct them towads good, it is not
permissible for him to thank that he is an alim (scholar) simply
because he has read some ahadeeth and memorized some aayaat. We
often hear of some of them who cannot even read the Qur’aan
properly, nor the ahaadeeth of the Prophet sallallaahu 'alayhi wa
sallam. This is why I advise the seekers of knowledge to study
two fundamentals: a) the principles of fiqh and b) the principles
of hadeeth.
I have
mentioned before that it is not easy for one to deduce the
intended aim of the Lawgiver from any text unless he consults as
far as possible, all the texts of the Qur’an and Sunnah. I will
give a clear example: Allaah says:
"Forbidden for you are dead meat, blood…" (5:4). If a
beginner who is studying the Qur’aan and has no knowledge of
hadeeth is asked regarding dead fish, he will immediately bring
this aayah as proof to clearly forbid it since it prohibits dead
meat. But were he to look into the ahaadeeth, he would know that
the Prophet, sallallaahu 'alayhi wa sallam, excepted two types of
animals, fish and locusts, from this prohibition, so he could
rule accordingly.
Briefly,
the student must learn these two fundamental branches of learning
to help to understand the Qur’aan and Sunnah as correctly as
possible."
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