There is extensive historical information
on the life and teachings of Muhammad that
is found in the written collections of the
ancient Muslim oral traditions. These
written traditions are called hadithss1.
Some of the most valued collections of
hadith were those collected by Bukhari,
Dawud, and Muslim, who were ancient
traditional Muslim scholars.2
Their extensive collections provide
detailed information on the thoughts and
actions of Muhammad. These collections must
be studied in order to understand Muhammad’s
life and teachings. In fact, these
collections provide vastly more information
on the life and teachings of Muhammad than
does the Qur’an itself.
However, when someone examines these
accepted hadiths, they find some accounts in
which Muhammad displays unfavorable
behavior. This behavior is an embarrassment
to many Western Muslims who seek to defend
Muhammadanism in the Western world. Often,
these Muslims seek to minimize these
historical accounts by claiming that these
hadiths are weak; and, therefore, they
should be ignored in discussion of Muhammad’s
religion.
But, is this weak hadith argument a
legitimate defense of Muhammad’s
character? Or, is it a convenient ploy to
divert the attention away from the
unfavorable actions of Muhammad? Why should
the ancient writings of the great
traditional Muslim scholars be set aside so
conveniently whenever Muhammad’s
questionable behavior is presented from
scholarly traditional Muslim sources by
non-Muslims?
Now, it is true there were many hadiths
that were rejected by ancient traditional
Muslim scholars. They rejected them because
these traditions were fabricated (maudu’)
for political reasons long after Muhammad
died. So, it is proper that these fabricated
traditions should be rejected by those who
follow the life and teachings of Muhammad as
well as by Western scholarship.
These fabricated Muslim traditions are very
much like the apocryphal post-New Testament
writings that appeared long after the genuine New
Testament gospels were written. Now,
it is clear that Al-Bukhari, Imam Muslim
and others did not intend to include maudu'
hadiths within their collections.
In fact, they applied stringent standards to
assure that these mandu' hadiths were
excluded.
For an oral tradition to be accepted as sahih
(sound), it must meet important
requirements. And, if a tradition did not
meet the requirements for a sahih
hadith, it was not accepted into the family
of sahih hadiths. However, the
standard hadith collections are considered
by traditional Muslim scholarship to be sahih. Therefore, it is
unjustified to use a weak hadith
defense when a sahih hadith is used
to present the actions and teachings of
Muhammad.
Literally means sahih means sound,
healthy, and without fault. Firstly, to be a sahih
hadith, the hadith must have an impeccable chain of
transmission (isnad) in which there
is no weakness. Each link of the chain must be connected
by a narrator who heard the narration from
the prior link in the chain. The chain
of narrators must be an unbroken
chain. Secondly, each individual
narrator must be a
just (‘adl) Muslim of good reputation.
Thirdly, the text (matn) of the hadith must be in accordance
with orthodox Islamic teachings.
When a hadith meets all the proper
qualifications for a sahih hadith, it
must be accepted by all Muslims. A sahih
hadith is an obligatory hadith. It must be
acted upon according to the consensus of the
Muslim scholarship. The sahih hadiths
are those used as the sources of Islamic
jurisprudence (Usul al-Fiqh). And, it is
proof in cases involving Islamic shari’ah
law.
So, it is not legitimate for a Muslim who
professes to follow the teachings and
behavior of Muhammad to downplay sahih
hadiths. These sahih hadiths are not weak
hadiths in any technical sense.
Furthermore, the fact that a hadith is
not a sahih hadith does not mean that
the hadith is not a true report regarding
Muhammad’s life. It simply means that,
technically speaking, the isnad of
the hadith lacks the high standard required
to be a sahih hadith. So, even though
a hadith is technically weak,
i.e., its isnad is not flawless, it
may still be an authentic hadith. Technically, a
weak hadith is not the same thing as a
‘forged’ (Maudu’) or fabricated
hadith.
Fabricated hadiths were not
intentionally included
in either Bukhari's or Muslim’s
collections. So, simply setting aside a hadith as weak is only a
statement regarding its isnad. It is
not a statement that the traditions is a
forged or a Maudu’ hadith. The
fact that a hadith was included in Bukhari's
or Muslim's collections is strong evidence that the hadith is an authentic one, even though its isnad
may not meet the standard required to be a sahih
hadith. So, the weak hadith defense
against an unfavorable hadith regarding
Muhammad's behavior is really a weak
intellectual defense. What a Muslim must show is
that the hadith is not historically authentic
and this is a much more difficult task to
do.
Furthermore, Muslims accept the text of
the Qur'an without hesitation.
However, each ayah (verse) of the Qur'an is
not based upon Mutawatir (multiple
chains of corroborating narration continuous
through history) isnad. So, why
should a hadith have to meet a higher
standard of historical verification than the
Qur'an itself?
Lastly, some Muslims disparage some
hadiths because of their initial
presuppositions regarding the sayings and
behavior of Muhammad. For example,
they uncritically assume that Muhammad was a
perfect and flawless individual whose
sayings and actions were all divinely
inspired by Allah. Beginning with this
initial presupposition, they set aside
everything in traditional Muslim scholarship
that does not accord with their initial
religious assumptions. However, this
is unfortunate, because historical reality
should take precedent over our
religious assumptions. Instead, our
religious belief should be in accordance
with historical reality. This is why
the historical record found in the ahadith
and the Sirat Rasul Allah by ibn
Ishaq are so important.
Finally, the third standard (matn)
that Muslim scholarship uses to judge the
authenticity of a hadith seems to be an illegitimate
standard. The real standard should be
the historicity of a narrative. To determine the actuality of an historical
event, the chain of narrators (isnad)
and the reliability and reputation of the
narrators ('adl) are valid considerations.
By contrast, it is not intellectually
appropriate to reject a historical event
because it does not agree with Muslim religious doctrine.
This view gets
the cart before the horse. In essence,
it asserts that, even if a historical event
actually happened, Muslim scholarship would
reckon that it did not happen because it
conflicts with their present-day religious
dogma. Our present-day thoughts don't
create the events of past history. If
they did, there would be no point in
historical research.
As a side note, some Muslim scholarship
applies their third standard to the events
of the Bible. For example, some believe that all prophets lived sinless
lives. Since Muslim belief teaches
that adultery is a sin, it would follows that no
prophet committed adultery. Therefore,
since they believe that King Dawud (King
David) was a prophet, it follows that he
never committed adultery with Bathsheba (2
Samuel 11:2-5). Therefore, they
conclude that the biblical report of King
Dawud's adultery is not a true report.
For them, the historicity of the report is
irrelevant. It does not make any
difference whether or not King Dawud actually committed
adultery. Their present-day beliefs
take precedence over the actual events of
history. Thus, there could never be an
historical event that could conflict with
Muslim dogma. Such an arbitrary standard safely protects the Muslim's
religion from the realities of the
historical record, making their religion non-falsifiable.
For some additional information on the
classification of hadiths, see the
Introduction to Sahih Muslim's collection on
page ix.