From Revelation to Ruling: Foundations of Islamic Law
MTA
How the Qur'an, Hadith, and juristic reasoning created a living legal tradition
2nd Edition
Islamic law is presented as a living legal tradition firmly rooted in the Qur'an and the Sunnah, with the Hadith serving as the primary vehicle for transmitting prophetic practice. Early chapters explain how jurists developed rigorous sciences of Hadith criticism to authenticate reports, employed sophisticated hermeneutical tools to discern legal meanings from language and context, and devised principles such as naskh (abrogation), takhsis (specification), and tarjih (preferential ranking) to reconcile apparent textual contradictions. The discussion of the five legal values and legal capacity establishes the ethical framework for classifying human actions and determining accountability, while the architecture of usul al‑fiqh outlines the systematic methodology for deriving rulings from the Qur'an, Sunnah, consensus (ijma'), analogical reasoning (qiyas), and subsidiary sources like juristic preference (istihsan), public interest (maslahah), and custom ('urf).
The work then surveys the major schools of jurisprudence, portraying them as distinct methodological laboratories rather than rigid sects. The Hanafi school emphasizes analogical reasoning and juristic preference, suited to imperial governance; the Maliki school privileges Medinan practice and unrestricted public interest; the Shafi'i school stresses textual precision and a systematic hierarchy of sources; the Hanbali school adheres closely to transmitted texts and early precedent. Comparative perspectives include the Ja'fari tradition, which grants authority to the Imams and maintains an open gate of ijtihad, and the Ibadi school, which stresses independent verification of texts and cautious reasoning. Legal maxims (qawa'id) are presented as concise principles—such as judging acts by intentions, the precedence of certainty over doubt, and the removal of harm—that distill centuries of juristic reasoning into coherent guidelines for diverse cases.
Finally, the text examines how Islamic law operates through institutions like muftis (who issue non‑binding fatwas) and qadis (who render binding judgments), and how it governs substantive domains including criminal law (hudud, ta'zir, siyasa), commerce and finance (contracts, prohibition of riba, Islamic financial instruments), and family law (marriage, divorce, custody, inheritance). It concludes by addressing modern challenges: efforts to revitalize ijtihad through individual and collective reasoning, ongoing codification projects that seek to harmonize rulings from various schools into state law, and the ongoing dialogue between Islamic legal principles and global human rights frameworks, showing how the tradition adapts while remaining anchored to its revealed sources.
This book is designed for students, scholars, and practitioners of Islamic law who seek a comprehensive yet accessible understanding of its sources, methodologies, and applications. It will particularly benefit comparative lawyers, legal researchers, and professionals working in Muslim-majority contexts who need to navigate Islamic legal principles in modern settings. Readers will gain the tools to analyze fatwas, judicial opinions, and policy proposals with an informed perspective on the living tradition of Islamic jurisprudence.
May 20, 2026
53,338 words
3 hours 44 minutes
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