Abdul Fattah
a.k.a. steve
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Selam aleykum
1. There are different kind of hadeeth, the ones saying what the prophet (peace be upon him) said, the ones saying what the prophet (peace be upon him) did, and what the prophet (peace be upon him) allowed. Rules derived from these different types have different strengths going from advisory to obligatory for that very reason you pointed out.
2. The Prophet (peace be upon him) is reported to have done many things merely for the sake of hadeeth! Like an example would be that he ate something he didn't like at least once, just so people wouldn't think its forbidden.
BTW, have you read my first post already?
Welll that's not really an issue because:the issue isn't about the hadeeth being important or accepted I believe, rather its about what was the prophet simply following cultual norms of his time and place, as opposed to the divine commands in the qur'an that must be held unchngeable.
1. There are different kind of hadeeth, the ones saying what the prophet (peace be upon him) said, the ones saying what the prophet (peace be upon him) did, and what the prophet (peace be upon him) allowed. Rules derived from these different types have different strengths going from advisory to obligatory for that very reason you pointed out.
2. The Prophet (peace be upon him) is reported to have done many things merely for the sake of hadeeth! Like an example would be that he ate something he didn't like at least once, just so people wouldn't think its forbidden.
That depends on the strength of the hadeeth. Also remember that if the Prophet (peace be upon him) would have said something because of cultural backgrounds that wasn't optimal that Allah (subhana wa ta'ala) could have corrected him, similar to how he corrected him with the surah Abasa (surah 80).for example the narrations of the prophet using or prescribing medicine, are they to be considered sacred and priscribed to everyone around us or were they the prophet telling people what was generlly known about medicine back then? and so on.
I never said his very acts were sacred. I don't think his acts were sacred, but I do think he lead by example and we should attempt to follow his deeds as much as possible. Whether or not they qualify as sacred actually has little to do with the whole discussion. In fact as has been pointed out a few times here already, the Qur'an itself tells us to follow his actions!no one considers every single act the prophet did as sacred, but the attitude prevalent among traditional muslims seems to miss this point.
Yes, of course, but how better to do that then to go back to the source of it all! If you want to know what true Islam is like, who better to look to then the prophet peace be upon him his sunnah?we don't need to reinvent the religion, rather to rediscover it.
Yes of course that is what I told you in the previous message, and this is exactly why we shouldn't just follow our own opinion but stick to the logical "proofs" based on hadeeth and ayath.In the end we are all humans, and who knows how much of our judgment is based on primal instinct rather than so called logic and rational thought.
I never said we have to "assume" that is a strawmen-argument. Most hadeeth are actually crystal clear and leave no room for interpretation or assumptions. It seems to me you have a wrong idea of what information can be actually found in the hadeeth.thus anyone making assumptions as to what the prophet meant by this or that shouldn't be accepted right away. the past generations did that, and look where it got them and us.
BTW, have you read my first post already?