Components of Hadīth
The promise made by Allah(SWT) in Qur'ān 15:9 is
obviously fulfilled in the undisputed purity of the
Qur'ānic text throughout the fourteen centuries since
its revelation. However, what is often forgotten by many
Muslims is that the divine promise also includes, by
necessity, the Sunnah of the Prophet(P), because the
Sunnah is the practical example of the implementation of
the Qur'ānic guidance, the wisdom taught to the
Prophet(P) along with the scripture, and neither the
Qur'ān nor the Sunnah can be understood correctly
without the other.
Allah(SWT) preserved the Sunnah by enabling the
Companions and those after them to memorize, write down
and pass on the statements of the Prophet(P), and the
descriptions of his way, as well as to continue the
blessings of practicing the Sunnah.
Later, as the purity of the knowledge of the
Sunnah became threatened, Allah(SWT) caused the Muslim
Ummah to produce individuals with exceptional memory
skills and analytical expertise, who travelled
tirelessly to collect thousands of narrations and
distinguish the true words of prophetic wisdom from
those corrupted by weak memories, from forgeries by
unscrupulous liars, and from the statements of the large
number of Ulama (scholars), the Companions and those who
followed their way. All of this was achieved through
precise attention to the words narrated, and detailed
familiarity with the biographies of the thousands of
reporters of hadīth.
The methodology of the expert scholars of hadīth
in assessing the narrations and sorting out the genuine
from the mistaken and fabricated, for ms the subject
matter of the science of hadīth. In this article a brief
discussion is given of the terminology and
classifications of hadīth.
Components Of Hadīth
A hadīth is composed of three parts (see the
figure [below]):

Matn (text), isnād (chain of reporters), and
taraf (the part, or the beginning sentence, of the text
which refers to the sayings, actions or characteristics
of the Prophet(P), or his concurrence with others
action). The authenticity of the hadīth depends on the
reliability of its reporters, and the linkage among
them.
Classifications Of Hadīth
A number of classifications of hadīth have been
made. Five of these classifications are shown in the
figure [below], and are briefly described subsequently.

According to the reference to a particular
authority Four types of hadīth can be
identified.
Qudsi - Divine;a revelation from
Allah(SWT) relayed with the words of the
Prophet(P).
Marfūc - elevated; a narration from the
Prophet(P), e.g., I heard the Prophet(P) saying
...
Mauqūf- stopped: a narration from a
companion only, e.g., we were commanded to
...
Maqtūc - severed: a narration from a
successor.

According to the links of isnād - interrupted
or uninterrupted
Six categories can be identified.
-
Musnad -
supported: a hadīth which is reported by a
traditionalist, based on what he learned from his
teacher at a time of life suitable for learning;
similarly - in turn - for each teacher until the isnād
reaches a well known companion, who in turn, reports
from the Prophet(P).
-
Muttasil -
continuous: a hadīth with an uninterrupted isnād which
goes back only to a companion or successor.
-
Mursal -
hurried: if the link between the successor and the
Prophet(P) is missing, e.g., when a successor says
"The Prophet said...".
-
Munqatic -
broken: is a hadīth whose link anywhere before the
successor (i.e., closer to the traditionalist
recording the hadīth) is missing.
-
Mucadal -
perplexing: is a hadīth whose reporter omits two or
more consecutive reporters in the isnād.
-
Mucallaq -
hanging: is a hadīth whose reporter omits the whole
isnād and quotes the Prophet(P) directly (i.e., the
link is missing at the beginning).
According to the number of reporters involved
in each stage of isnād
Five categories of hadīth can be identified:
Mutawātir - Consecutive: is a hadīth which
is reported by such a large number of people that they
cannot be expected to agree upon a lie, all of them
together.
Āhād - isolated: is a hadīth which is
narrated by people whose number does not reach that of
the mutawātir.
It is further classified into:
Mash'hūr - famous: hadīth reported by more
than two reporters.
Azīz - rare, strong: at any stage in the
isnād, only two reporters are found to narrate the
hadīth.
Gharīb - strange: At some stage of the
isnād, only one reporter is found relating it.
According to the nature of the text and isnād
Munkar - denounced: is a hadīth which is
reported by a weak narrator, and whose narration goes
against another authentic hadīth.
Mudraj - interpolated: an addition by a
reporter to the text of the hadīth being narrated.
According to the reliability and memory of the
reporters
This provides the final verdict on a hadīth -
four categories can be identified
Sahih - sound. Imām al-Shaficī states the
following requiremetts for a hadīth, which is not
Mutawātir, to be acceptable "each reporter should be
trustworthy in his religion; he should be known to be
truthtul in his narrating, to understand what he
narrates, to know how a different expression can alter
the meaning, and to report the wording of the hadīth
verbatim, not only its meaning".
Hasan - good: is the one where its source is
known and its reporters are unambiguous.
Dacīf - weak: a hadīth which fails to
reach the status of Hasan. Usually, the weakness is: a)
one of discontinuity in the isnād, in which case the
hadīth could be - according to the nature of the
discontinuity - Munqati (broken), Mucallaq (hanging),
Mucadal (perplexing), or Mursal (hurried), or b) one of
the reporters having a disparaged character, such as due
to his telling lies, excessive mistakes, opposition to
the narration of more reliable sources, involvement in
innovation, or ambiguity surrounding his person.
Maudu - fabricated or forged: is a hadīth
whose text goes against the established norms of the
Prophet's sayings, or its reporters include a liar.
Fabricated hadīth are also recognized by external
evidence related to a discrepancy found in the dates or
times of a particular incident.
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