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DEVELOPMENT OF JURISPRUDENCE
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Ash-Shafi'i is without question one of the greatest figures in the history of law.
Perhaps he had not the originality and keenness of Abu Hanifa; but he had a balance of
mind and temper, a clear vision and full grasp of means and ends that enabled him to say
what proved to be the last word in the matter. After him came attempts to tear down; but
they failed. The fabric of the Muslim canon law stood firm. There is a tradition from the
Prophet that he promised that with the end of every century would come a restorer of the
faith of his people. At the end of the first century was the pious Khalifa, Umar ibn Abd
al-Aziz, who by some accident strayed in among the Umayyads. At the end of the second came
ash-Shafi'i. His work was to mediate and systematize and bore especially on the sources
from which rules of law might be drawn. His position on the positive side may be stated as
one of great reverence for tradition. "If you ever find a tradition from the Prophet
saying one thing," he is reported to have said, "and a decision from me saying
another thing, follow the tradition." An absolutely authentic—according to Muslim
rules of evidence—and clear tradition from the Prophet he regarded as of equally divine
authority with a passage in the Qur'an. Both were inspired utterances, if slightly
different in form; the Qur'an was verbally inspired; such traditions were inspired as to
their content. And if such a tradition contradicted a Qur'anic passage and came after it
in time, then the written law of the Qur'an was abrogated by the oral law of the
tradition. But this involved grave difficulties. The speculative jurists
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AGREEMENT AS A SOURCE
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had defended their position from the beginning by pointing to the many contradictory
traditions which were afloat, and asking how the house of tradition could stand when so
divided against itself. A means of reconciling traditions had to be found, and to this
ash-Shafi'i gave himself. We need not go over his methods here; they were the same that
have always been used in such emergencies. The worship of the letter led to the straining
of the letter, and to explaining away of the letter.
But there lay a rock in his course more dangerous than any mere contradiction in
differing traditions. Usages had grown up and taken fast hold which were in the teeth of
all traditions. These usages were in the individual life, in the constitution of the
state, and in the rules and decisions of the law courts. The pious theologian and lawyer
might rage against them as he chose; they were there, firmly rooted, immovable. They were
not arbitrary changes, but had come about in the process of time through the revolutions
of circumstances and varying conditions. Ash-Shafi`i showed his greatness by recognizing
the inevitable and providing a remedy. This lay in an extension of the principle of
agreement and the erection of it into a formal source. Whatever the community of Islam has
agreed upon at any time, is of God. We have met this principle before, but never couched
in so absolute and catholic a form. The agreement of the immediate Companions of Muhammad
had weight with his first Successors. The agreement of these first Companions and of the
first generation after them, had determining weight in the early church.
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