Author: Mufti Abu Saeed Al-Rashid
Imam al-A‘zam Abu Hanifah (RA): The Role Model (part 7)
Collection of Articles
Subject: Imam Abu Hanifa’s Methodology in Deriving Legal Rulings and the Strength of His Evidence
Imam al-Aʿzam Abu Hanifa (RA) was among the greatest jurists (mujtahids) in Islamic jurisprudence. He employed a distinctive methodology in deriving legal rulings and legal evidence.
First Discussion: Imam Ab Hanifah’s Methodology in Deriving Legal Rulings

A. General Methodology of Derivation

Regarding the general methodology of deriving legal rulings, Imam Abu Hanifah (RA) himself said:
«إني آخذ بکتاب الله إذا وجدته، فما لم أجده فيه أخذت بسنة رسول الله صلى الله عليه وسلم، والآثار الصحاح عنه التي فشت في أيدي الثقات، فإذا لم أجد في كتاب الله ولا سنة رسول الله صلى الله عليه وسلم، أخذت بقول أصحابه من شئت، وأدع قول من شئت، ثم لا أخرج عن قولهم إلى قول غيرهم، فإذا انتهى الأمر إلى إبراهيم والشعبي وابن المسيب فلي أن أجتهد كما اجتهدواTranslation: “Whenever I find a ruling in the Book of Allah (SWT), I act upon it. If I do not find it therein, I resort to the Sunnah of the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings be upon him) and to the authentic reports transmitted by trustworthy narrators. If I do not find the matter in the Book of Allah or the Sunnah of the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings be upon him), I choose from among the opinions of the Companions whichever I deem appropriate and leave whichever I wish, but I do not depart from their opinions to the opinions of others. When the matter reaches Ibrahim al-Nakha ‘i, al-Sha ‘bi, and Ibn al-Musayyib, then I may exercise ijtihad just as they exercised ijtihad.” [1]
He also said: «مَا جَاءَ عَن رَّسُولِ الله صلى الله عَلَيْهِ وَسلم فعلى الرَّأْس وَالْعَيْن، وَمَا جَاءَ عَن أَصْحَابِهِ اخْتَرْنَا، وَمَا كَانَ غَيْرَ ذَلِكَ فَنَحْنُ رِجَالٌ وَهُمْ رِجَالٌTranslation: “Whatever comes from the Messenger of Allah (PBUH) is accepted wholeheartedly. Whatever comes from his companions, we choose from among their opinions. As for what comes from others, they were men and we are men.” [2]
And he said: «إِذَا جَاءَ عَنِ النَّبِيِّ صلى الله عليه وسلم فَعَلَى الرَّأْسِ، وَإِذَا جَاءَ عَنْ أَصْحَابِهِ نَخْتَارُ مِنْ قَوْلِهِمْ، وَإِذَا جَاءَ عَنِ التَّابِعِينَ زَاحَمْنَاهُمْTranslation: “When a ruling comes from the Prophet (PBUH), it is accepted without hesitation. When it comes from the Companions, we choose among their opinions. When it comes from the Tabiʿīn, we engage in independent reasoning alongside them.” [3]
B. The Seven Foundational Principles of Imam Abu Hanifah in Deriving Legal Rulings
  1. The Noble Qur’an
Imam Abu Hanifah (may Allah have mercy on him) always referred to the Noble Qur’an first when deriving legal rulings, because the Qur’an is the primary and most authoritative source of Islamic law. Whenever a ruling was explicitly and unequivocally stated in the Qur’an, he adhered to it without resorting to independent reasoning (ijtihad).
  1. The Sunnah of the Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
If Imam Abu Hanifa did not find an explicit ruling in the Qur’an, he turned to the Sunnah of the Messenger of Allah (PBUH). He accepted only authentic narrations and avoided relying on weak or doubtful reports.
Principles for Accepting Hadith
  1. Criteria for the Acceptance of Hadith
Imam Abu Hanifah (RA) accepted only authentic (sahiḥ) and reliable (thiqah) hadiths in his juristic reasoning. He adopted very strict standards in evaluating hadith in order to exercise the utmost caution in matters of Islamic law. His most important criteria for accepting hadith were as follows:
  • The Chain of Transmission (Isnad) and the Narrators: Imam Abu Hanifah accepted only those hadiths whose narrators were trustworthy (thiqah), upright (ʿadl), and possessed strong memories. He carefully investigated the integrity, piety, honesty, and reliability of each narrator.
  • Well-Known and Mass-Transmitted Hadiths: He gave preference to hadiths that were widely known and transmitted by numerous narrators (mashhūr and mutawātir), since such narrations had gained broad acceptance among the Muslim community.
  • Solitary (Rare) Hadiths: Imam Abu Hanifah exercised great caution regarding gharīb hadiths (reports transmitted by only one or two narrators) because of the possibility of weakness in their chains of transmission.
  1. Conditions for the Acceptance of Hadith
Imam Abu Hanifah (may Allah have mercy on him) established specific conditions for accepting a hadith:
  1. The hadith must not contradict the Qur’an or the Mutawātir Sunnah.
  2. It must be consistent with sound reason, the public interest (maṣlaḥah), and the established principles of Islamic jurisprudence.
  3. It should be transmitted by well-known and reliable scholars.
  1. Acceptance of Khabar al-Wahid (Solitary Reports)
Imam Abu Hanifah was particularly cautious in accepting Khabar al-Waḥid (a hadith transmitted through a single chain of narration), especially when such a report appeared to conflict with established legal principles or scholarly consensus (ijmaʿ). He maintained that solitary reports should be applied with caution and should not serve as the sole basis for major theological or legal rulings unless their narrators were exceptionally trustworthy.
  1. Ijma (Scholarly Consensus)
Imam Abu Hanifah (may Allah have mercy on him) regarded ijmāʿ (consensus) as a valid and authoritative source of Islamic law. Whenever the Qur’an and the Sunnah did not provide a clear ruling on a particular issue, he referred to the consensus of the Companions (Ṣaḥābah) or the Successors (Tabiʿun).
Definition of Ijma
Linguistically, ijmaʿ means unity or agreement.
Technically, in the science of Usul al-Fiqh, it refers to the unanimous agreement of all qualified Muslim jurists (mujtahids) of a particular generation on a legal ruling after the death of the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH).
Conditions for a Valid Ijma
Classical scholars have identified four essential conditions for the validity of ijmaʿ:
  1. The legal ruling must be communicated to all qualified scholars of that generation.
  2. Sufficient time must pass to allow them to examine and deliberate upon the issue.
  3. After careful consideration, all of them must unanimously agree upon the same ruling.
  4. The consensus must not contradict any authentic evidence from the Qur’an or the Sunnah.
Therefore, even if all people were to agree upon a view that contradicts a clear textual proof from the Qur’an or the Sunnah, such an agreement would not constitute a valid ijma. [4]
The Basis (Sanad) of Ijma
The textual evidence or legal proof upon which a consensus is established is called the sanad (basis) of ijma.
For example, a solitary report (Khabar al-Waḥid) concerning the inheritance rights of a grandmother (jaddah) became the basis upon which scholarly consensus was established.
To be continued…

Previous Part

[1]. Al-Fikr al-Samī fī Tarīkh al-Fiqh al-Islami (The Sublime Thought in the History of Islamic Jurisprudence), Vol. 1, p. 424.

[2]. Mukhtaṣar al-Muʾammal fī al-Radd ilā al-Amr al-Awwal (A Concise Work on Returning to the Original Matter), p. 62, No. 147.

[3] Al-Marjiʿ al-Sābiq (Previous Reference), p. 63, no. 150.

[4]. Mawlana Khalid Saifullah Rahmani, Āsān Uṣūl al-Fiqh (Easy Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence), p. 34.

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