The Canonization of Ibn Mâjah: Authenticity vs. Utility in the Formation of the Sunni Ḥadîth Cano

Summary:


 


In Sunni Islam, the canonical ‘Six Books’ of hadith derive their authority as doctrinal

references from scholarly consensus on their reliability as representations of the Prophet’s Sunna.

One of the Six Boooks, the Sunan of Ibn Majah, however, presents a bizarre exception. Although

it has been considered part of the Six Book collection since the late eleventh century, it has been

consistently and severely criticized by Sunni scholars for the large number of unreliable hadiths it

contains. Explaining the canonical status of Ibn Majah’s Sunan despite these criticisms requires

recognizing that the hadith canon was based not only on authenticity but also on utility. The Six

Books served to delimit the countless numbers of hadith in circulation into a manageable form, and

Ibn Majah’s Sunan added to this canonical body a useful number of hadiths not found in the other

Six Books. Sunni scholars themselves acknowledged that, in the case of Ibn Majah’s Sunan, utility

trumped authenticity in the Sunni hadith canon.


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Published on November 01, 2011 14:03
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