Imam
Ahmad
by
Dr. G.F.Haddad
Ahmad
ibn Muhammad ibn Hanbal, Abu `Abd Allah al-Dhuhli al-Shaybani
al-Marwazi al-Baghdadi (d. 241). Al-Dhahabi says of him: "The
true Shaykh of Islam and leader of the Muslims in his time, the
hadith master and proof of the Religion. He took hadith from Hushaym,
Ibrahim ibn Sa`d, Sufyan ibn `Uyayna, `Abbad ibn `Abbad, Yahya ibn
Abi Za’ida, and their layer. From him narrated al-Bukhari [two
hadiths in the Sahih], Muslim [22], Abu Dawud [254], Abu Zur`a,
Mutayyan, `Abd Allah ibn Ahmad, Abu al-Qasim al-Baghawi, and a huge
array of scholars. His father was a soldier (one of those who
called to Islam) and he died young." Al-Dhahabi continues: `Abd
Allah ibn Ahmad said: "I heard Abu Zur`a (al-Razi) say: ‘Your
father had memorized a million hadiths, which I rehearsed with him
according to topic.’"
Hanbal
said: "I heard Abu `Abd Allah say: ‘I memorized everything
which I heard from Hushaym when he was alive.’"
Ibrahim
al-Harbi said: "I held Ahmad as one for whom Allah had gathered
up the combined knowledge of the first and the last."
Harmala
said: "I heard al-Shafi`i say: ‘I left Baghdad and did not
leave behind me anyone more virtuous (afdal), more learned (a`lam),
more knowledgeable (afqah) than Ahmad ibn Hanbal.’"
`Ali
ibn al-Madini said: "Truly, Allah reinforced this Religion with
Abu Bakr al-Siddiq the day of the Great Apostasy (al-Ridda), and He
reinforced it with Ahmad ibn Hanbal the day of the Inquisition
(al-Mihna)."
Abu
`Ubayd said: "The Science at its peak is in the custody of four
men, of whom Ahmad ibn Hanbal is the most knowledgeable."
Ibn
Ma`in said, as related by `Abbas [al-Duri]: "They meant for me
to be like Ahmad, but û by Allah! û I shall never in my life
compare to him."
Muhammad
ibn Hammad al-Taharani said: "I heard Abu Thawr say: ‘Ahmad is
more learned û or knowledgeable û than al-Thawri.’"
Al-Dhahabi
concludes: "Al-Bayhaqi wrote Abu `Abd Allah’s biography (sîra)
in one volume, so did Ibn al-Jawzi, and also Shaykh al-Islam [`Abd
Allah al-Harawi] al-Ansari in a brief volume. He passed on to Allah’s
good pleasure on the day of Jum`a, the twelfth of Rabi` al-Awwal in
the year 241, at the age of seventy-seven. I have two of his
short-chained narrations (`awâlîh), and a licence (ijâza) for the
entire Musnad." Al-Dhahabi’s chapter on Imam Ahmad in Siyar
A`lam al-Nubala’ counts no less than 113 pages.
One
of the misunderstandings prevalent among the "Salafis" who
misrepresent Imam Ahmad’s school today is his position regarding
kalam or dialectic theology. It is known that he was uncompromisingly
opposed to kalâm as a method, even if used as a means to defend the
truth, preferring to stick to the plain narration of textual proofs
and abandoning all recourse to dialectical or rational ones. Ibn
al-Jawzi relates his saying: "Do not sit with the people of
kalam, even if they defend the Sunna." This attitude is at the
root of his disavowal of al-Muhasibi. It also explains the
disaffection of later Hanbalis towards Imam al-Ash`ari and his
school, despite his subsequent standing as the Imam of Sunni Muslims
par excellence. The reasons for this rift are now obsolete although
the rift has amplified beyond all recognizable shape, as it is
evident, in retrospect, that opposition to Ash`aris, for various
reasons, came out of a major misunderstanding of their actual
contributions within the Community, whether as individuals or as a
whole.
There
are several general reasons why the Hanbali-mutakallim rift should be
considered artificial and obsolete. First, kalam in its original form
was an innovation in Islam (bid`a) against which there was unanimous
opposition among Ahl al-Sunna. The first to use kalam were true
innovators opposed to the Sunna, and in the language of the early
scholars kalam was synonymous with the doctrines of the Qadariyya,
Murji’a, Jahmiyya, Jabriyya, Rawâfid, and Mu`tazila and their
multifarious sub-sects. This is shown by the examples Ibn Qutayba
gives of kalam and mutakallimun in his book Mukhtalif al-Hadith, none
of which belongs to Ahl al-Sunna. Similarly the adherents of kalam
brought up in the speech of al-Hasan al-Basri, Ibn al-Mubarak, Ibn
Rahuyah, Imam al-Shafi`i and the rest of the pre-Hanbali scholars of
hadith are the innovators of the above-mentioned sects, not those who
later opposed them using the same methods of reasoning. The latter
cannot be put in the same category. Therefore the early blames of
kalam cannot be applied to them in the same breath with the
innovators.
Second,
there is difference of opinion among the Salaf on the possible use of
kalam to defend the Sunna, notwithstanding Imam Ahmad’s position
quoted above. One reason why they disallowed it is wara`: because of
extreme scrupulousness against learning and practicing a discipline
initiated by the enemies of the Sunna. Thus they considered kalam
reprehensible but not forbidden, as is clear from their statements.
For example, Ibn Abi Hatim narrated that al-Shafi`i said: "If I
wanted to publish books refuting every single opponent [of the Sunna]
I could easily do so, but kalam is not for me, and I dislike that
anything of it be attributed to me." This shows that al-Shafi`i
left the door open for others to enter a field which he abstained
from entering out of strict Godwariness.
Third,
kalam is a difficult, delicate science which demands a mind above the
norm. The imams forbade it as a sadd al-dharî`a or pre-empting
measure. They rightly foresaw that unless one possessed an adequate
capacity to practice it, one was courting disaster. This was the case
with Ahmad’s student Abu Talib, and other early Hanbalis who
misinterpreted Ahmad’s doctrinal positions as Bukhari himself
stated. Bukhari, Ahmad, and others of the Salaf thus experienced
first hand that one who played with kalam could easily lapse into
heresy, innovation, or disbelief. This was made abundantly clear in
Imam Malik’s answer to the man who asked how Allah established
Himself over the Throne: "The establishment is known, the ‘how’
is inconceivable, and to ask about it is an innovation!" Malik’s
answer is the essence of kalâm at the same time as it warns against
the misuse of kalam, as observed by the late Dr. Abu al-Wafa’
al-Taftazani.
Malik’s
reasoning is echoed by al-Shafi`i’s advice to his student
al-Muzani: "Take proofs from creation in order to know about the
Creator, and do not burden yourself with the knowledge of what your
mind did not reach." Similarly, Ibn Khuzayma and Ibn Abi Hatim
admitted their technical ignorance of the science of kalâm, at the
same time acknowledging its possible good use by qualified experts.
As for Ibn Qutayba, he regretted his kalam days and preferred to
steer completely clear of it.
In
conclusion, any careful reader of Islamic intellectual history can
see that if the Ash`ari scholars of kalam had not engaged and
defeated the various theological and philosophical sects on their own
terrain, the silence of Ahl al-Sunna might well have sealed their
defeat at the hands of their opponents. This was indicated by Taj
al-Din al-Subki who spoke of the obligatoriness of kalam in certain
specific circumstances, as opposed to its superfluousness in other
times. "The use of kalam in case of necessity is a legal
obligation (wajib), and to keep silence about kalam in case other
than necessity is a sunna."
The
biographical notice on Imam Ahmad in the Reliance of the Traveller
reads: "Out of piety, Imam Ahmad never gave a formal legal
opinion (fatwa) while Shafi`i was in Iraq, and when he later
formulated his school of jurisprudence, he mainly drew on explicit
texts from the [Qur’an], hadith, and scholarly consensus, with
relatively little expansion from analogical reasoning (qiyâs). He
was probably the most learned in the sciences of hadith of the four
great Imams of Sacred Law, and his students included many of the
foremost scholars of hadith. Abu Dawud said of him: ‘Ahmad’s
gatherings were gatherings of the afterlife: nothing of this world
was mentioned. Never once did I hear him mention this-worldly
things.’ ... He never once missed praying in the night, and used to
recite the entire [Qur’an] daily. He said, ‘I saw the Lord of
Power in my sleep, and said, "O Lord, what is the best act
through which those near to You draw nearer?" and He answered,
"Through [reciting] (sic) My word, O Ahmad." I asked, "With
understanding, or without?" and He answered, "With
understanding and without."’. . . Ahmad was imprisoned and
tortured for twenty-eight months under the Abbasid caliph al-Mu`tasim
in an effort to force him to publicly espouse the [Mu`tazila]
position that the Holy [Qur’an] was created, but the Imam bore up
unflinchingly under the persecution and refused to renounce the
belief of Ahl al-Sunna that the [Qur’an] is the uncreated word of
Allah, after which Allah delivered and vindicated him. When Ahmad
died in 241/855, he was accompanied to his resting place by a funeral
procession of eight hundred thousand men and sixty thousand women,
marking the departure of the last of the four great mujtahid Imams of
Islam."
Ibn
al-Jawzi narrates from Bilal al-Khawass that the latter met al-Khidr
and asked him: "What do you say of al-Shafi`i?" He said:
"One of the Pillar-Saints (Awtâd)." "Ahmad ibn
Hanbal?" "He is a Siddîq."
Main sources:
al-Dhahabi, Siyar A`lam al-Nubala’
9:434-547 #1876 and Tadhkira al-Huffaz
2:431 #438.
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