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Innovation
البدعة‎

At a Glance

According to search-discovered classical Islamic scholarship, the concept of Bid'ah (reprehensible religious innovation) is fundamentally grounded in the Quran's absolute prohibition of 'iftira'—the act of fabricating lies against Allah. Across more than 50 verses, the Quran condemns inventing religious laws, beliefs, or rituals without divine authority (Quran 16:116). Building on this Quranic foundation, eminent scholars like Imam al-Shatibi systematically defined Bid'ah as 'a newly invented way in religion, in imitation of the Shari'ah (prescribed law), by which closeness to Allah is sought, not being supported by any authentic proof.' This distinguishes it from worldly innovation (like technology), a clarification emphasized by scholars such as Ibn Taymiyyah, who noted the prohibition applies only to matters of worship ('ibadat), not customs ('adat). The synthesis of these Quranic verses and scholarly analyses establishes Bid'ah as a transgression against the perfected and complete nature of Islam, safeguarding the purity of worship from human additions.

📖 Quranic Context

The Quran's core message strictly forbids adding to or subtracting from the religion, establishing that the sole right to legislate belongs to Allah.

Inventing religious practices is seen as a transgression against Allah's sovereignty and a corruption of His perfected religion.

References: The provided 53 verses primarily condemn 'iftira', especially in fabricating religious laws (5:103, 16:116) and false beliefs (3:24).

💭 Theological Perspective

It addresses the human tendency to add to religion based on personal desires or cultural traditions.

Bid'ah is considered a spiritual disease stemming from arrogance (believing one knows better than the divine law) and a desire for distinction.

It stands in direct opposition to following the Sunnah (the Prophet's way) and adhering strictly to the Quran and authentic prophetic guidance.

Avoiding Bid'ah is essential for the purity (Ikhlas) of worship and ensuring actions are accepted by Allah.

📜 Hadith Perspective

The concept of Bid'ah is most explicitly defined in the Hadith, with famous traditions stating, '...every newly invented matter is an innovation, every innovation is a going astray, and every going astray is in the Hell-fire.'

  • The completeness of the religion: 'This day I have perfected your religion for you...' (from the Prophet's final sermon, based on Quran 5:3).
  • The rejection of invented acts: 'Whoever innovates something in this matter of ours (i.e., Islam) that is not part of it, will have it rejected.'
  • The distinction between good Sunnah and bad innovation.

There is a universal consensus on the prohibition of Bid'ah in matters of worship ('ibadat), though differences exist on its precise scope and application.

💎 Deeper Insights

Search grounding reveals the 'Iftira-Bid'ah Bridge': The scholarly concept of Bid'ah is not explicitly detailed in the Quran by that name; rather, it is a legal-theological construct built upon the Quran's absolute condemnation of 'iftira' (fabricating lies against Allah). Understanding this bridge is the key to authenticating the prohibition of religious innovation from the Quran itself.

Imam al-Shatibi, Ibn Kathir

Cross-scholar synthesis provides the 'Adat vs. Ibadah Principle', a critical tool for contemporary Muslims. Ibn Taymiyyah's distinction between worldly customs ('adat), where innovation is permissible, and religious worship ('ibadat), where it is forbidden, acts as a practical filter to navigate modern life without falling into prohibited Bid'ah. This solves debates on everything from using technology to celebrating cultural events.

Ibn Taymiyyah

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