This paper is an attempt to partially delineate the
salient features of Islamic law from a Qur'anic perspective. It seeks to
clarify that every human society necessitates that there exist a system of
rules without which there can be no public order but chaos. It also shows that
in Islam, there is no separation of religion from morals, worldly affairs and
from politics. Islam is an all-embracing religion consisting of a set of laws
and injunctions which are requisite for the establishment of an ideal society.
Therefore, all the laws and injunctions which are of a practical character and
which should be applied to human society can be subsumed under the general
rubric 'law.' The paper continues by discussing the sources of Islamic law and
its goals.
Introduction
The Qur'an is the verbatim revelation or the Word of God,
revealed in Arabic through the archangel Gabriel to the Prophet Muhammad during
the twenty-three-year period of his prophetic mission.
The practices of Muslims as ordained by the Shari'ah
(Islamic Law) have their origin in the Qur'an. Although the foundations of the Shari'ah
must also be sought in the Sunnah and the elaboration of the law depends
furthermore, with respect to Shi'ism, upon reason ('aql) and consensus
(ijma'), all principles of the Shari'ah are already contained
in the Qur'an.
The scheme of life which Islam envisages consists of a set
of rights and obligations, which, as already mentioned, have their origin in
the Qur'an, and every human being who accepts this religion is enjoined to live
up to them. Broadly speaking, the law of Islam imposes four kinds of rights and
obligations on every man: (1) the rights of God, which every man is obliged to
fulfill; (2) his own rights upon his own self; (3) the rights of other people
over him; and (4) the rights of those powers and resources which God has placed
in his service and has empowered him to use for his benefit.
These rights and obligations constitute the corner-stone
of Islam and it is the bounden duty of every true Muslim to understand and obey
them carefully. The Shari'ah discusses clearly each and every kind of
right and deals with it in detail. It also throws light on the ways and means
through which the obligations can be discharged.
Social Phenomenon
Issues pertaining to human social life can be divided into
two categories: those which deal with social phenomena irrespective of their
goodness or badness, and those which are concerned with the value judgements on
the various aspects of social life and through which the goodness and badness
of each social phenomenon are judged. In other words, there are certain issues
which deals with 'is' and 'is not', whereas certain others deal with 'ought to'
and 'ought not'. Most issues of the first category relate to sociology and the
philosophy of history, while those pertaining to the second fall mainly into
the category of morals and rights. The rulings pertaining to the former are
called real and descriptive rulings, while those pertaining to the latter are
called normative and prescriptive ones.
Religion and worldly affairs
The prescriptive rulings as mentioned above are divided
into three categories:
A. The Divine and Religious Laws: These consist of the
commands and prohibitions which are attributed to God Almighty and as in every
religion, people are required to abide by them, such as keeping the daily
prayer and performing the pilgrimage to Mecca, etc.
B. Moral Laws: That is, the laws which are comprehended by
human reason, primordial nature (fitra) or consciousness to varying
degrees and which are considered to be of value or validity irrespective of the
Divine or human criteria, such as the goodness of truthfulness and the ugliness
of oppressing others.
C. Legal Laws: That is, the laws which are made for
safeguarding the best interests of human beings in their worldly life by a
qualified authority in view of the relations of individuals with each other
within a society. These laws have an executive backing, which is usually the
government.
Over the years, there has been a tendency to separate
these three groups of law from one another and to specify a distinct area for
each group.. According to this view, the area of Divine laws is restricted to
the rituals and rites which concern the followers of each religion in specific
times and places, such as the religious ceremonies of the Hindus or the rites
of idol-worship which are seen in various parts of the world. These rites and
rituals are not connected at all with other social aspects of life but rather
they consist of performing the duties which, according to the followers of each
religion, are required by the natural or supernatural powers. Religious laws
are neither connected to the moral laws nor are they connected to the legal
ones.
In the Western world, after Christianity had become the
official religion of the Byzantine empire, in spite of accepting Christianity,
apparently on account of the exigencies of the time, some rulers planned to
separate religion from all its worldly aspects including politics in order to
gain the secular power totally, and to rule over the countries under their control
as they wished and to exclude the divine commands and prohibitions from the
domain of politics and law in their general sense. For this purpose, they used
every possible means, even the distortion of the scriptures.
After the Renaissance, this attitude gained more momentum,
to the extent that a large number of writers and intellectuals demanded the
total separation of religion and law. Furthermore, they supported the total
separation of religion from morals. The separation of religion from worldly
affairs in general and from politics in particular as seen today in the Muslim
countries is nothing but the acceptance of the current mainstream attitude in
the Western world.
Such a separation cannot be deemed acceptable in any
revealed religion. From the Islamic point of view, religion is a system of
theoretical knowledge and practical laws, and its practical laws embrace all
three areas of the relation of man to God, the relation of man to himself, and
of man to others.[1]
In the Holy Qur'an and the traditions narrated from the holy Shi'ite Imams,
there is a huge collection of moral and legal laws, therefore the moral and
legal systems of Islam are completely based on the fundamental religious
principles consisting of the belief in Divine Unity, the Resurrection, etc. In
other words, both morals and law are two main sections of the whole of the
religion and are deeply rooted in the most fundamental theoretical religious
sciences.
Law
In spite of the fact that there are a lot of uses of the
word 'law' in legal terms, it does not have a definite and specific meaning and
is used in different ways. Sometimes, it is used in a wide sense and includes
any prescriptive ruling which should be practised in society whether it be
legislated or non-legislated laws, such as social customs and conventions.
Thus, some of the law experts use the term “natural law”,
which refers to a type of moral theory, as well as to a type of legal theory,
but the core claims of the two kinds of theory are logically independent.
According to natural law ethical theory, the moral standards that govern human
behaviour are, in some sense, objectively derived from the nature of human
beings. However, according to natural law legal theory, the authority of at
least some legal standards necessarily derives, at least in part, from
considerations having to do with the moral merit of those standards. The phrase
“natural law” is sometimes opposed to the positive law of a given political
community, society, or nation-state, and thus can function as a standard by
which to criticize that law. Positive law in the strictest sense is law made by
human beings.
The Main Differences between Morals and Law
The other point to discuss in this regard is that though
there are cases where morals and law overlap with each other, there are some
differences between them, the most important of which are as follows:
1. Legal precepts are just concerned with social
behaviour, while moral rules cover all voluntary human behaviour.
2. Legal rules are based on an external guarantee of
enforcement, while moral rules are not based on such a guarantee of enforcement
but based on an internal guarantee of enforcement.
3. Ethical 'dos' and 'don'ts' are permanent, universal and
eternal, while legal 'dos' and 'don'ts' are, more or less, changeable.
4. Legal rules are obligatory, while within the moral
domain, there are both obligatory and recommended obligations.
5. The goals of legal dos and don'ts are to provide the
happiness of people in their worldly life and to establish social justice,
order, security and public welfare and the like, while the goals of ethical
commands and prohibitions are to achieve spiritual perfection, which is nothing
other than proximity to God.
6. Legal rules are just concerned with the external aspect
of the act, but are not so concerned with the motivation for and intent of the
doer of the action, while the moral rules are mostly concerned with the
motivation for and the goal of the doer of the action.
Ethical and Legal Concepts are of Conventional
Nature
Apart from the above-mentioned differences between legal
and ethical rules, ethical and legal concepts are, however, i'tibari
(conventional). For example, considering the concept of property, we see that
even if it is applied to such metals as copper and silver, it is not because of
their being metals of a specific kind, but because they are desired by people
and can be used as a means for meeting their needs. In other words, the
acquisition of property by a person signifies another concept called
'possession' without an external instance.
These concepts are only based on the desires of groups or
individuals without having a relation to objective truth independent of
inclinations of social groups and individuals. These concepts, in spite of
being conventional, are not without relation to external reality. Their
validity is based on the specific needs of man to attain felicity and his own
perfection. Consequently, the worth of these concepts, albeit dependent on
convention, lies in their being a symbol of the objectively true relationship
between man's actions and their results.
Consider the term “good”: one of its meanings is to
achieve a purpose desired by a doer performing an action. The word ''good'' is
contrasted with the result that an agent expects. Without a comparison and the
relationship between the action and the goal of the action, it may not be
possible to say if the action is good or not.
As is the case with the term 'right': one of its meanings
in legal terms is an advantage which can be claimed and which must be observed
by others. The word ''right'' in this meaning can be understood by considering
a person having an advantage as well as others who have to observe this right.
Therefore, the term ''right'' is predicated on the external benefit after a
comparison and intellectual analysis. The word “right” is associated with duty,
and they are two reciprocal concepts which will be further explained.
The Reciprocity of Right and Duty
Right and duty are two reciprocal concepts and the two
faces of the same coin. When a person has the right to dispose of his property
as he wishes, others consequently are bound not to dispose of it at all.
Therefore, right and duty are reciprocally determined. That is, wherever a
right is determined, a duty is also determined, and vice versa. Of course, only
one of the two is explicitly stated; however, the specification of one
necessitates that of the other. It should be noted that right is of a voluntary
nature, whereas duty is of an obligatory nature. One has a right against
something and can use it or not, but with respect to duty, one is obliged to
respect it and should not evade his or her obligation.
It is worth noting that the fundamental principle of
Islamic Law is that man has the right and in some cases the bounden duty, to
fulfill all his genuine needs and desires and make every conceivable effort to
promote his interests and achieve success and happiness. However, he should do
all this in such a way that not only are the interests of other people not
jeopardized and no harm is caused to their strivings towards the fulfilment of
their rights and duties, but there should be all possible social cohesion,
mutual assistance and cooperation among human beings in the achievement of
their objectives. In respect of those things in which good and evil, gain and
loss are inextricably connected, the tenet of the law is to choose, for
instance, the least harm for the sake of greater benefit and sacrifice a little
benefit, in order to avoid a greater harm. This is the basis of Islamic Law. To
what degree one should choose harm for the sake of a greater degree of benefit
depends on the circumstances in which one is involved.
Islam attaches great importance to social life, and
moreover Islam considers it incumbent upon all to attend to social problems and
to struggle for the benefit of all human beings and for the establishing a just
society on Earth. Being indifferent to such problems is considered in Islam to
be a major sin. Paying attention to such problems is so crucial that sometimes
one feels obliged to spend all of one's property and even to endanger one's own
life in order to save others from worldly and other-worldly afflictions and
harms. It is unlikely to find any other school of thought other than Islam
which has advanced this idea so far. Of course, all of the revealed religions
are unanimous on basic principles and rules; naturally they are in common with
Islam in this regard.
The word al-haqq (truth or the True) in the Qur’an
In Islam, there appear to be three golden threads that run
through all its aspects and these three golden threads are clearly intertwined.
They are: truth, justice and equity. The words used in the Qur'an are al-haqq,
al-'adl, and al-qist. It is significant that each of these
words is significantly used in the Qur'an several times; the word al-haqq
is used about 247 times, al-qist 15 times and al-'adl 13
times. The word al-haqq incorporates the other two terms and has
several meanings depending upon the context: truth, obligation, right and
justice.
Al-haqq can be used as a name for God. For example, the
Qur'an says:
That is because Allah, He is the True, and that whereon
they call instead of Him, it is the false, and because Allah, He is the High,
the Great. (22:62).[2]
At this point, it is worth noting that in many Qur'anic
verses, the word `haqq' is used in a sense similar to the technical
meaning of law but not identical with it. Similarly in the Treatise on
Rights (Risalat al-huquq) by the Fourth Shi`ite Imam, there are
topics such as the rights of your womb relatives, the right of your self (nafs)
and the rights of the tongue, hearing and sight. Many of these rights are moral
in their nature. It should be noted that the word haqq is not used in
a legal sense in the above verses but rather it falls into the category of
morals. However, in this paper, while dealing with law from a Qur'anic
perspective, we are not concerned with law (huquq) in its moral sense
but in its legal sense.
The Source of Right and the Legal Goal of Society
from the Islamic Point of View
At the same time, it should be noted that the social laws
and injunctions which make up the legal system of Islam should be based on a
goal which directly results from that system and which secures man's felicity
in social life. The question is: Is there another goal beyond this goal which
can be used as a means for the attainment of that goal or not? In other words,
the question is: Is providing for man's felicity the ultimate goal or the
intermediate one?
In answer to these questions, it should be said that the
legal system of Islam is distinct from other ones. The other legal systems
based on a secular world view know no goal beyond that of providing for man's
felicity in social life, and consequently, this very goal is considered to be
the ultimate goal and the desired object per se. In other words, in such
systems, only those interests and benefits which can be actualized and attained
in this world are taken into consideration. In this regard, God says in the
Qur'an:
They know only some appearance of the life of the world,
and are heedless of the Hereafter (30:7).
Then withdraw (O Muhammad) from him who fleeth from Our
remembrance and desireth but the life of the world (53:29).
Islam does not restrict man's felicity to this world only
but rather the goal of man's creation transcends this world. The ultimate goal
is to get spiritually closer to God. Man's felicity in this world can be
desirable only when it is consistent with attaining the ultimate goal.
Islam is a religion which encourages the qualities of
purity, beauty, goodness, virtue, success and prosperity which Allah
wants to flourish in the life of His people and to suppress all kinds of
exploitation and injustice. As well as placing before us this high ideal, Islam
clearly states the desired virtues and the undesirable evils. Therefore, the
members of society should have the right to use all the God-given
potentialities and abilities for the attainment of their ultimate goal.
The legal goal of Islam is to prepare the ground and
context for the spiritual growth and eternal felicity of the people. At the
very least they should not be inconsistent with spiritual development, for, in
the view of Islam, the life of this world is but a fleeting phase of the entire
human life which despite its short duration, has a fundamental role in human
destiny. It is in this phase that with his conscious behaviour the human being
prepares for himself his everlasting felicity or wretchedness. Even if a law could
maintain the social order in this world but would cause eternal misfortune for
humans, it would not be, from an Islamic perspective, a desirable law, even if
it were to be accepted by the majority.
The Necessity of Law and Legal Rules in Society
Islamic law is based on a realistic view of things which
are on one hand related to God Who created the universe and man based on a
definite goal, and on the other hand to Resurrection, because it is the last
phase of human existence and the ultimate station of his journey towards God.
Finally, it is connected to Divine Wisdom, because the best created order is
built upon the most Sublime Divine Wisdom. Since the members of a society are
not equal in terms of understanding, and since all the members equally do not
seek right and justice, thus, for the establishment of order and for the
prevention of chaos, it is necessary that there be some highly qualified
institutionalized powers representing the whole society for taking
responsibility for the crucial functions. These powers consist of the
legislature, the executive and the judiciary.
The functions of the legislature are to be exercised
through the Islamic Consultative Assembly, consisting of the elected representatives
of the people. Legislation approved by this body, after going through certain
stages, is communicated to the executive and the judiciary for implementation.
The judiciary is of vital importance in the context of
safeguarding the rights of the people in accordance with the line followed by
the Islamic movement, and the prevention of deviations within the Islamic
nation. Provision has therefore been made for the creation of a judicial system
based on Islamic justice and operated by just judges with meticulous knowledge
of the Islamic laws. This system, because of its essentially sensitive nature
and the need for full ideological conformity, must be free from every kind of
unhealthy relation and connection (this is in accordance with the Qur'anic verse:
“When you judge among the people, judge with justice” [4:58]).
Considering the particular importance of the executive
power in implementing the laws and ordinances of Islam for the sake of
establishing the rule of just relations over society, and considering, too, its
vital role in paving the way for the attainment of the ultimate goal of life,
the executive power must work toward the creation of a just Islamic society.
Consequently, the confinement of the executive power within any kind of complex
and inhibiting system that delays or impedes the attainment of this goal is
rejected by Islam. Therefore, the system of bureaucracy, the result and product
of old forms of government, will be firmly cast away, so that an executive
system that functions efficiently and swiftly in the fulfilment of its
administrative commitments comes into existence.goal of life, the executive
power must work toward the creation of a just Islamic society. Consequently,
the confinement of the executive power within any kind of complex and
inhibiting system that delays or impedes the attainment of this goal is
rejected by Islam. Therefore, the system of bureaucracy, the result and product
of old forms of government, will be firmly cast away, so that an executive
system that functions efficiently and swiftly in the fulfilment of its
administrative commitments comes into existence.
The Separation of Powers
During the past three centuries, there have been a lot of
disputes between the philosophers of law and other social scholars. Today the
issue of separation of powers has been stressed so much that it has been
accepted as an indisputable principle of the philosophy of law and of the basic
law.
In the newly-established Islamic society in Medina, the
holy Prophet of Islam had responsibility for the three powers, and there
occurred no problem in this regard. During the occultation of the twelfth
Shi'ite Imam, according to the Shi'ite jurisprudential principles, the leader
has responsibility for all the three powers.[3]
Therefore, the powers of government in the Islamic Republic of Iran, for
example, are vested in the legislature, the judiciary, and the executive
functioning under the supervision of the supreme Leader.
The Basic Law
Most of the social regulations are legislated and approved
by a legislature, but there is another law called basic law which should be
specified and validated before the formation of a legislature and which deals
with such questions as why it is necessary that there should be a legal system
in every society, and why law needs three basic institutions of legislature,
judgement and execution, and so on.
The basic law consists of a set of rules which should be
validated before the legislation and codification of the social regulations.
In the democratic systems, in order to give credence to
the basic law, first the people should elect the members of the constituent
assembly by voting for them. Then, the elected members of the constituent
assembly will legislate and approve the code of the basic law which is called
constitution, and which is offered to be voted for by the people.
The term basic law is used in some places as an
alternative to “constitution.” A Basic Law is either a codified constitution,
or in countries with constitutions which are not codified, a law given to have
constitutional powers and effect. The term basic law is used in some places as
an alternative to “constitution.” A Basic Law is either a codified
constitution, or in countries with constitutions which are not codified, a law
given to have constitutional powers and effect.
The Sources of Law in Islam
Each and every legal system consists of a set of legal
rules which are usually derived from one or more sources. In other words, in
order to build a legal system, some of these sources, and the elements or
constituents which are extracted from them, should be used.
To date the Muslim juristic rationalists (usuliyyun)
have never used the term 'the sources of law', and instead they have used the
expression 'the jurisprudential proof', though the meaning of the latter
expression is not the same as the former. The Shi'ite juristic rationalists (usuliyyun)
rely on four proofs called the juristic proofs, which consist of: the Book (the
Qur'an), the Sunnah (the Tradition), consensus, and reason. Some of the other
juristic rationalists also add some other proofs or sources which consist of:
analogical reasoning (qiyas), juristic preference (istihsan),
public interest (masalih mursalah), opening and blocking the means (fath
wa sadd al-dharaai'), convention, and so on.
Having said this, it has to be noted that the only source
of law in Islam is the Divine Legislative Will. That is, a rule is valid in
Islam only when it can be attributed to the legislative Will of God Almighty.
Attributing to any other source can never give validity to the legal ruling.
Firstly, the unique importance of the Qur'an and secondly of the Sunnah (the
Tradition, that is, the sayings, actions and silent assertions of the Prophet
and the Imams) is due to the fact that these two proofs derive from the Divine
Legislative Will. That is, if we wish to know about the rulings of God, we will
have no choice but to refer to these two proofs. These two are not sources
themselves but guide us to the original source. A consensus is binding if it
can be a means for discovering the Sunnah (the Tradition) of the holy Prophet
or of the Imam
As previously stated, the religion of Islam accepts reason
as one of the fundamental proofs of the religious rulings and attaches great
importance to it, if it can be a means for discovering the rulings of God. The
Book, the Sunnah, consensus and reason are binding simply because they are
means of discovering the Will of God, and never are they considered to be
independent sources vis-à-vis the Divine Legislative Will.
Notes:
[1] Based on
the religious teachings and the consensus of all the religious scholars, the
goal of religion is to provide man with a comprehensive felicity in this world and
the next. Islam as a revealed religion is both the path and the guide which
will lead to man’s eternal happiness. It is composed of three elements which
are intertwined: i. doctrine ii. ethics iii. law. The threefold elements play
an effective role in providing man with happiness when all three are combined
together just as a single organism is composed of its inseparable organs. These
three elements in combination facilitate man’s eternal felicity. The texture or
combination of these three elements is such that they should never be separated
from one another, and if they are considered separately, they will lose their
own essential qualities. Therefore, if anyone believes only in God, the
Creator, the all-Wise, the all-Knowing, the all-Powerful, the all-Compassionate,
the all-Rich, and the Lord of the Universe, who created man and Who wills both
his good and perfection, and who knows his needs, interests and harms or if he
observes an ethical discipline only for the purification of the soul and the
acquisition of good traits of character or if he only abides by the religious
commands and prohibitions, he will never attain to that comprehensive
this-worldly and other-worldly felicity, which will be actualized though the
three elements mentioned above.. The Islamic intellectual and transmitted
sciences (al-’ulum al-’aqliyyah wa’l-naqliyyah) are comprised of an extensive
scope dealing with different major issues. However, based on the same threefold
elements mentioned above, the religious sciences are comprised of Islamic
theology, that is the discipline relating to the beliefs, and ethics, i.e. the
discipline relating to the purification of the soul, and moral conduct, and
jurisprudence, the discipline concerned with the laws and injunctions relating
to man’s individual and social needs. Of course, acquaintance with these
sciences entails being familiar with certain disciplines which are considered
to be their preliminaries and which can be called religious sciences in one
sense.
[2] For
further study, refer to the following verses: (30:8), (2:61), (38:21), (38:22),
(38:26), (21:112), (40:20), (40:78), (39:69), (39:75), (10:47), (10:54),
(2:282), (24:48), (24:49) (51:19), (70:24), (70:25), (6:141), (17:26), (30:38),
(2:180), (2:236) and (2:241).
[3] According
to twelve-Imam Shi‘ism, Abu’l Qasim Muhammad ibn al-Hasan al-Askari, the Proof
(al-hujjah), the righteous descendent (al-khalaf al-salih), the promised Mahdi
and the twelfth Imam, peace be upon him, was born in Surra man ra’a (Samarrah)
in the midnight of Sha’ban in the year 255. When his father died, he was five
years old and he became Imam through Divine Command as was the case with Yahya
(John) as He, the Exalted, says: “O Yahya! Take hold of the Book with strength,
and We granted him judgement while yet a child” (19: 12). God made Yahya a
prophet while he was a child as He made Christ a prophet while still a little
child. God, the Exalted, says through Jesus when he addressed his people: “He
said: Surely I am a servant of Allah; he has given me the Book and made me a
prophet” (19: 30). The Muslims are agreed on the appearance of the Mahdi at the
end of the time for the obliteration of ignorance, oppression and tyranny and
for dissemination of the signs of justice and the exaltation of the word of
truth and the manifestation of Religion in its entirety even if the polytheists
may be averse. By the permission of God, he will deliver the world from the
disgrace of servitude to other than God and abolish evil morals and customs and
abrogate the irreligious laws as established by whims and break the bonds of
national and racial prejudices and eliminate the causes of hostility and hatred
which have given rise to the division and disunity of the community, and God,
the Exalted, will keep through his appearance His promise which He made to the
believers as He says: “Allah has promised to those of you who believe and do
good that He will most certainly make them rulers in the earth as he made
rulers those before them, and that He will most certainly establish for them their
religion which He has chosen for them, and that He will most certainly, after
their fear, give them security in exchange; they shall serve Me, not
associating aught with Me, and whoever is ungrateful after this, these it is
who arte the transgressors” (24:55). “And We desired to bestow a favour upon
those who were deemed weak in the land, and to make them the Imams, to make
them the heirs” (28:5). “And certainly We wrote in the Book after the reminder
that (as for) the land, My righteous servants shall inherit it” (21:105). The
Occultation of the twelfth Imam has two distinct stages: the Lesser Occultation
and the Greater Occultation. In the Lesser Occultation, which began in 260/872
and ended in 329/939, lasting about seventy years, the Hidden Imam continued to
communicate with humanity through his special deputies. The second, the greater
occultation which commenced in 329/939 and which is continuing as long as God
wills it. According to the Shi‘ah, the Mahdi is alive but hidden. He is the
axis mundi, the hidden ruler of the Universe.
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