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I was raised a Sunni Muslim

We were adherents of the Hanafi School of jurisprudence. I shall seek to explain that simply.

The Hanafi school (Arabic: حَنَفِية, romanized: Ḥanafiyah; also called Hanafite in English), Hanafism, or the Hanafi fiqh, is the oldest and one of the four traditional major Sunni schools (Fiqh) of Islamic Law (madhhab). It is named after the 8th century Kufan scholar, Abu Hanifa, a Tabi‘i whose legal views were preserved primarily by his two most important disciples, Imam Abu Yusuf and Muhammad al-Shaybani. It is considered one of the most widely accepted maddhab amongst Sunni Muslim community and is called the Madhhab of Jurists (maddhab ahl al-ray). A plurality of Hanafi Muslims follow and have followed the Maturidi school of theology (Arabic: عقيدة).

The importance of this madhhab lies in the fact that it is not just a collection of rulings or sayings of Imam Abu Hanifa alone, but rather the rulings and sayings of the council of judges he established belong to it. Abu Hanifa was the first to formally solve cases and organize them into chapters.[citation needed] He was followed by Imam Malik ibn Anas in arranging Al-Muwatta. Since the Sahaba and the successors of the Sahaba did not put attention in establishing the science of Sharia or codifying it in chapters or organized books, but rather relied on the strength of their memorization for transmitting knowledge, Abu Hanifa feared that the next generation of the Muslim community would not understand Sharia laws well. His book consisted of Taharah (purification), Salat (prayer), other acts of Ibadah (worship), Muwamalah (public treatment), then Mawarith (inheritance).

Under the patronage of the Abbasids, the Hanafi school flourished in Iraq and spread throughout the Islamic world, firmly establishing itself in Muslim Spain, Greater Khorasan and Transoxiana by the 9th-century, where it acquired the support of rulers including Delhi Sultanate, Khwarazmian Empire, Kazakh Sultanate and the local Samanid rulers. Turkic expansion introduced the school to the Indian subcontinent and Anatolia, and it was adopted as the chief legal school of the Ottoman and Mughal Empire. In the modern Republic of Turkey, the Hanafi jurisprudence is enshrined in Diyanet, the directorate for religious affairs, through the constitution (art. 136).

The Hanafi school is the maddhab with the largest number of adherents, followed by approximately one third of Sunni Muslims worldwide. It is mostly followed in Turkey, Egypt, Bosnia and other Balkans, the Levant, Central Asia, Morocco, Pakistan and Bangladesh, in addition to parts of Russia, China, and India. The other primary Sunni legal schools are the Maliki, Shafi'i and Hanbali schools.

Hanafi is the largest of the four schools; it is followed by approximately 30% of Muslims world-wide. The other three schools of thought are Shafi, Maliki, and Hanbali.

History
The circumference of Islamic Sharia is very vast. However, there was no madhhab existed in the form current structure among the Sahaba. To them, the only sources of Sharia were the Quran and the Sunnah. If not found in these two sources, consensus used to be adopted. Furthermore, throughout history, the Companions have differed in their practice of knowledge, variation in expertising in certain religious matters, except for those on which there had consensus. The Companions did not live all in specific areas, but were engaged in establishing the Shari'ah in the conquered Muslim areas, and due to differences in knowledge, the Shari'ah took on different forms in those areas. At the end of the era of the Companions, the Tabi'is used to find solutions by adopting different ways to know and convey the Islamic Shari'ah. Therefore, it is said that the ingredients and formulas for establishing the Islamic Shari'ah were prepared by the Sahaba and the Tabi'is. At the end of the Tabi'i period, various wars and the expansion of the Islamic world felt the need to give the Shari'ah a scientific form—Fiqh—which Abu Hanifa, one of the last Tabi'in did by making a unique methodology after working 40 years. At the same time he also established the Islamic credology—Aqeeda as an individual religious science.

Ja'far al-Sadiq, a descendant of Muhammad was one of the teachers of Abu Hanifah and Malik ibn Anas who in turn was a teacher of Al-Shafi‘i, who in turn was a teacher of Ahmad ibn Hanbal. Thus all of the four great Imams of Sunni Fiqhs are connected to Ja'far directly and indirectly.

In the early history of Islam, Hanafi doctrine was not fully compiled. It was compiled in the 3rd Hijri century and has been gradually developing since then.

The Abbasid Caliphate and most of the Muslim dynasties were some of the earliest adopters of the relatively more flexible Hanafi fiqh and preferred it over the traditionalist Medina-based Fiqhs, which favored correlating all laws to Quran and Hadiths and disfavoured Islamic law based on discretion of jurists. The Abbasids patronized the Hanafi school from the 2nd Hijri century onwards. The Seljuk Turkish dynasties of 5th and 6th Hijri centuries, followed by Ottomans and Mughals, adopted Hanafi Fiqh. The Turkic expansion spread Hanafi Fiqh through Central Asia and into Indian subcontinent, with the establishment of Seljuk Empire, Timurid dynasty, several Khanates, Delhi Sultanate, Bengal Sultanate and Mughal Empire. Throughout the reign of 77th Caliph and 10th Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent and 6th Mughal emperor Aurangzeb Alamgir, the Hanafi-based Al-Qanun and Fatawa-e-Alamgiri served as the legal, juridical, political, and financial code of most of South Asia.

During the early periods of time that Islam was just being found up (mainly the first 250 years), there were around 100+ school of thoughts.

Genesis of Madhhab
Duration
The genesis stage of Hanafiet is generally reckoned by islamic scholars to begin with the time of the judicial research of Abu Hanifa (d. 150 AH) and end with the death of his senior disciple Hasan bin Ziyad (d. 204 AH).

This stage is concerned with the foundation of the Madhhab and its establishment, the formation of principles and bases upon which orders are determined and branches arises. Abu Zuhra, a prominent 20th century Egyptian Islamic jurist suggested, "The work would have done by the Imam himself. And under his guidance, his senior students would participated in it. Abu Hanifa had a unique "discussions and debate" method to conduct on the issues until they were settled. If resolved, Abu Yusuf would have been ordered to codify it."

Work
Explaining the method of Abu Hanifa in teaching his companions, Al-Muwaffaq Al-Makki says, “Abu Hanifa established his doctrine by consultation among them. He never possess the rulings arbitrarily without them. He was diligent in practicing religion and exaggerated in advising about God, His Messenger and the believers. He would pick up questions one by one and present to them. He would hear what they had and say what he had. Debates would have continued with them for a month or more until one of the sayings was settled in it. Then Judge Abu Yusuf would formulate the principle from that, thus, he formulated all the principles.” Accordingly, the students of Abu Hanifa were participants in the establishment of this jurisprudential structure, not they were just listeners, accepting what was presented to them. And Abu Yusuf was not the only one who recorded what the opinion settled on, but in the circle of Abu Hanifa there were ten blogging, headed by the four big ones: Abu Yusuf, Muhammad bin Al-Hassan Al-Shaibani, Zufar bin Al-Hudhayl and Hassan bin Ziyad al-Luluii.

Methodology
Hanafi usul recognises the Quran, hadith, consensus (ijma), legal analogy (qiyas), juristic preference (istihsan) and normative customs (urf) as sources of the Sharia. Abu Hanifa is regarded by modern scholars as the first to formally adopt and institute qiyas as a method to derive Islamic law when the Quran and hadiths are silent or ambiguous in their guidance; and is noted for his general reliance on personal opinion (ra'y).

The islamic jurists are usually viewed as two groups: Ahl al-Ra'y (The people of personal opinion) and Ahl al-Hadith (The People of Hadith). The jurists of the Hanafi school are often accused of preferring ra'y over hadith. Muhammad Zahid al-Kawthari says in his book Fiqh Ahl al-`Iraq wa Hadithuhum: "Ibn Hazm thinks of the jurists as Ahl al-Ray and Ahl al-Hadith. This differentiation has no basis and is without a doubt only the dream of some exceptional people, that have been influenced by the statements of some ignorant narrators, after the mihna of Ahmad bin Hanbal." He also states that the Hanafis could only be called Ahl al-Ray, because of how talented and capable they are when it comes to ra'y. And not because of their lack of knowledge in hadith or them not relying on it, as the term Ahl al-Ray usually implies.

Nevertheless the usage of Ra'y as one of the sources of their jurisprudence, the Hanafite scholars still prioritize the textual approach of the Sahaba for their jurisprudence, as careful examination by modern Islamic jurisprudence researcher Ismail Poonawala, has found that the influence of the hadiths narrated by Zubayr regarding Rajm (stoning) execution as a form of punishment towards adulterers to be within Abu Hanifa's rulings in the Hanafite school of thought for such kinds of punishments' validity and furthermore, how to implement the punishment in accordance with Muhammad's teachings due to self-confession of the accused. This Hanafite stoning law which is based on hadiths narrated by Zubayr arguably has historical and profound influence as various governments have implemented Hanafite code of law in their state laws from the late medieval to modern period:

Fatawa 'Alamgiri: Fatawa 'Alamgiri is an Islamic edict book first implemented as state law in India during the reign of Mughal emperor Aurangzeb. Later, the British Raj also implemented this law in an effort to better control their Indian Muslim subjects.
Qanun: The Ottoman Empire through their Qanun law which is not dissimilar from Fatawa 'Alamgiri was formed and canonized as state law by Suleiman the Magnificent. This law indirectly influenced their ally, the Sultanate of Aceh, who also had its own version of Rajm (stoning) law in their law codex. This codex even became the autonomical legal codex of modern-day Aceh province, as the province recognizes Sharia law based on Qanun which they call Qanun Jinayat. This Hanafite law of Rajm (stoning) in Aceh has survived to the 21st century as it was officially recognized by the Indonesian government in 2014, in addition to the Selangor state of Malaysia recognizing it in 1995 as an autonomical law, The fundamentalist Taliban faction also reportedly follow their own variant of Hanafi Qanun.
The foundational texts of Hanafi madhab, credited to Abū Ḥanīfa and his students Abu Yusuf and Muhammad al-Shaybani, include Al-Fiqh al-Akbar (book on theology), Al-fiqh al-absat (book on theology), Kitab al-Athar (thousands of hadiths with commentary), Kitab al-Kharaj and the so called Zahir ar-Riwaya, which are six books in which the authorative views of the founders of the school are compiled. They are Al-Mabsut (also known as Kitab al-Asl), Al-Ziyadat, Al-Jami' al-Saghir, Al-Jami' al-Kabir, Al-Siyar al-Saghir and Al-Siyar al-Kabir (doctrine of war against unbelievers, distribution of spoils of war among Muslims, apostasy and taxation of dhimmi).

Istihsan
The Hanafi school favours the use of istihsan, or juristic preference, a form of ra'y which enables jurists to opt for weaker positions if the results of qiyas lead to an undesirable outcome for the public interest (maslaha). Although istihsan did not initially require a scriptural basis, criticism from other schools prompted Hanafi jurists to restrict its usage to cases where it was textually supported from the 9th-century onwards.
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Carazaa · F
Thank you for this education, I appreciate it and love to learn about peoples beliefs. Please don't be offended by my questions
1. How do you in your religion believe in treating your enemies who hurt you or your family? In christianity we teach our children to love their enemies, and turn the other cheek. The golden rule.
2. How does a person please God in your religion? In christianity we are all sinners and no one can please him we are all doomed to hell, that's why God himself took our sins on his shoulders because he loves us. In most religions people have to work to please God, except in christianity Jesus did it all because he loves us.
3. How does your religion believe people should be treated by their government. In christianity everyone has equal rights under the law. Is it so in your religion does your religion believe that women and men have equal rights?
SW-User
@Carazaa [quote] In christianity we are all sinners and no one can please him we are all doomed to hell, that's why God himself took our sins on his shoulders because he loves us. In most religions people have to work to please God, except in christianity Jesus did it all because he loves us. [/quote]



"[i]By God's grace alone is God to be grasped. All else is false, all else is vanity."
[/i]
(Guru Nanak of the Sikh Faith)

"[i]They who have known God have known also this one certainty; that it was God's grace that led them to it, and framed them in readiness for it, and prepared their heart and mind for it; and it was God alone who lifted them to that embrace."
[/i]
(Swami Abhayananda of the Hindu faith)

And in Buddhism, the Pure Land expression is the purest expression of "salvation" by grace alone that I have found.

Even in zen, when the emperor of China asked the Zen Buddhist missionary what merit he had gained by all good acts, Bodhidharma answered:- "None at all"

On close study it is apparent that "grace" features in most Religions.

All this points to the reality of what many Christians and theologians call the "Universal Christ" - recognising also that many Christians in fact only recognise what could be called "Jesusainity", which they then assert is the "only way".
Carazaa · F
@SW-User Grace in most religions is a feel good forgiveness, forgetting the justice that God demands. Rape, murder, theft, all hate etc has to be punished! God took the punishment. Your Jesus is not my Jesus and not the Jesus that died for sinners and rose on the third day.
Please be careful that you are not deceived by Satan who comes as an angel of light and deceives the whole world. Jesus warned that many will come in my name deceiving many in the last generation before he comes back to judge the living and the dead.
SW-User
@Carazaa I will not enter into argument, but will simply say you in effect pronounce judgement on "other religions"; also that we should be more aware of "deceptions" and erroneous teachings within our own hearts rather than implying that we have avoided them ourselves.

I will not respond to you again.
@Carazaa I'LL ANSWER YOUR QUESTIONS IF YOU NEED FURTHER INFO JUST ASK I'LL BE SHORT TO THE POINT 1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MoWI7-Ui8i8
2. https://sunnah.com/ibnmajah:2794 24 The Chapters on Jihad
(15)Chapter: Fighting in the cause of Allah : It was narrated that ‘Amr bin ‘Abasah said:
“I came to the Prophet (ﷺ) and said: ‘O Messenger of Allah, which Jihad is best?’ He said: ‘(That of a man) whose blood is shed and his horse is wounded.’”

3. https://sunnah.com/muslim:1847b 3 The Book on Government
(13)Chapter: The obligation of staying with the Jama'ah (main body) of the muslims when Fitn (tribulations) appear, and in all circumstances. The prohibition of refusing to obey and on splitting away from the Jama'ah

It his been narrated through a different chain of transmitters, on the authority of Hudhaifa b. al-Yaman who said:

Messenger of Allah, no doubt, we had an evil time (i. e. the days of Jahiliyya or ignorance) and God brought us a good time (i. e. Islamic period) through which we are now living Will there be a bad time after this good time? He (the Holy Prophet) said: Yes. I said: Will there be a good time after this bad time? He said: Yes. I said: Will there be a bad time after good time? He said: Yes. I said: How? Whereupon he said: There will be leaders who will not be led by my guidance and who will not adopt my ways? There will be among them men who will have the hearts of devils in the bodies of human beings. I said: What should I do. Messenger of Allah, if I (happen) to live in that time? He replied: >>>> You will listen to the Amir and carry out his orders; even if your back is flogged and your wealth is snatched, you should listen and obey. <<<

ANY OTHER QUESTIONS? FEEL FREE TO ASK
JSul3 · 70-79
@SexyLesGirl13 What are your feelings about ISIS militants?

What are your feelings about the Taliban in Afghanistan?

What are your feelings about the journalist, Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi dissident journalist being killed by agents of the Saudi government at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul?
Carazaa · F
@SexyLesGirl13

Please be more clear answering my 3 questions Yes or No!

1. Do you teach your children to forgive all enemies?

[b] Yes or No?[/b]

2. Do you have to do good works to please God and to go to heaven?

[b] Yes or no[/b]

3. Does your government believe that every human has equal rights under the law whether man or woman religious or not

[b]Yes or no?[/b]
@Carazaa i am not nor will i ever be fucking stupid enough to be a muslim i study islam. please dont ask" do you" because im not a muslim
Massageman · 70-79, M
@Carazaa 1 and 2- yup- absolutely. 3- Some might note a conflict of Christian doctrine and people having equal rights under GOVERNMENTAL LAW. They do under GOD'S LAWS, but the government might be considered another ball game. Give unto Caesar what is Caesar's (Mark 12:17.)
Carazaa · F
@Massageman Christian governments have equal rights.
JSul3 · 70-79
@Carazaa What Christian governments are those?
Carazaa · F
@JSul3 Equal rights of Sweden, Norway, Denmark and most protestant countries.
Carazaa · F
@SW-User
Jesus says [c=BF0000][b]"I am the way, the truth, and the life NO ONE comes to the Father but through me!"[/b][/c]
@Carazaa anytime continue reading. if you wanna know anything about islam just ask