IMAM AL-BUKHARI AND THE SCIENCE OF HADITH
In
 Islamic sciences, all knowledge of the religion comes back to two 
sources: the Quran and the sayings and doings of the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ–
 the hadith. The Quran is of course considered the un-changed word
 of Allah as revealed to Prophet Muhammad ﷺand is thus the foundation of
 all Islamic knowledge. Second after the Quran is the example set forth 
by the Prophet ﷺ.
But
 considering that he lived 1400 years ago, how can we be sure that the 
sayings and doings we attribute to him are real and unchanged? To 
someone unfamiliar with the science of hadith, the collections of hadith
 may seem unreliable and susceptible to corruption. However, due to the 
work of Imam Muhammad al-Bukhari in the 9th century, the science of 
hadith has been protected from such problems using a systematic and 
thorough method of verification for each and every saying attributed to 
the Prophet ﷺ. Thus, in the 21st century we can still benefit directly 
from the authentic sayings of the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ.
Al-Bukhari’s Early Life
Abu
 Abdallah Muhammad ibn Ismail al-Bukhari was born in 809 or 810 in the 
city of Bukhara, in what is now Uzbekistan. He came from a Persian 
family that converted to Islam 3 generations before his time. 
Unfortunately for the young al-Bukhari, his father died while he was 
still an infant, leaving his upbringing to his mother. Despite the 
difficult circumstances, al-Bukhari dedicated himself to studying 
Islamic sciences from a young age.
Studying
 with the scholars in and around his hometown, al-Bukhari immersed 
himself in hadith studies as well as fiqh, Islamic jurisprudence. From a
 young age he showed a unique ability to understand complex issues of 
law, but more importantly, he was capable of remembering long and 
complex chains of narrations of hadiths. For a hadith to be considered 
authentic, a reliable chain of narrators is needed to connect that 
saying to the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ. In this, al-Bukhari excelled.
By
 his late teens, al-Bukhari had completed his studies in Bukhara and set
 out to Makkah to do Hajj (pilgrimage) with his mother and brother. 
Since the rise of Islam in the 600s, Makkah has been a unique mixing 
place for world travelers. Since all Muslims are obligated to complete 
the Hajj at least once, Makkah is constantly visited by people from all 
corners of the world. For a hadith scholar like al-Bukhari, this type of
 environment was invaluable.
He
 stayed in Makkah and Madinah for several years, where he continued to 
collect hadiths from some of the leading hadith scholars of the world, 
memorizing the text of the hadiths (the matn), the chain of narrators 
(the isnad), and advancing his understanding of the reliability of those
 narrators (the knowledge of men – ‘ilm al-rijaal). He traveled through 
Egypt, Syria, and Iraq to continue his studies throughout his adult 
life, finally settling in Basra, where he would compile his monumental 
hadith collection.
Sahih al-Bukhari
Although
 Imam al-Bukhari authored several works on the science of hadith, his 
most lasting contribution to Islamic sciences was his compilation of 
over 7000 hadiths, which he called al-Jaami’ al-Sahih al-Musnad 
al-Mukhtasar min Umur Rasool Allah wa sunanihi wa Ayyamihi, meaning “The
 Abridged Collection of Authentic Hadith with Connected Chains regarding
 Matters Pertaining to the Prophet, His practices and His Times”. This 
collection took him 16 years to complete and since its compilation has 
been considered the most authentic book of hadith in history, thus the 
book’s common name: Sahih al-Bukhari meaning “The Authentic Hadiths of 
al-Bukhari”.
What
 makes Sahih al-Bukhari so unique was Imam al-Bukhari’s meticulous 
attention to detail when it came to the compilation of hadiths. He had 
far stricter rules than other hadith scholars for accepting a hadith as 
authentic. The chain of narrators for a particular hadith had to be 
verified as authentic and reliable before Imam al-Bukhari would include 
that hadith in his compilation. For example, the first hadith in the 
book begins:
“We
 have heard from al-Humaydi Abdallah ibn al-Zubayr who said that he 
heard from Sufyan, who said he heard from Yahya ibn Sa’eed al-Ansari who
 said he was informed by Muhammad ibn Ibrahim al-Taymi that he heard 
‘Alqama ibn Waqqas al-Laythi say that he heard ‘Umar ibn al-Khattab say 
on the sermon pulpit that he heard the Prophet Muhammad ﷺsay: ‘Actions 
are only by intentions…'”
This
 chain of six narrators was meticulously inspected by Imam al-Bukhari. 
In order for him to consider the hadith authentic, he had to study the 
lives of all the people in the chain in depth. He studied where and when
 the narrators lived, in order to make sure that if someone narrates 
from someone else, they must both have been in the same place at the 
same time and have actually met and discussed hadith. Other hadith 
scholars did not all require evidence that two consecutive narrators met
 personally, but Imam al-Bukhari’s strict requirements is what makes his
 compilation unique.
Imam
 al-Bukhari also studied the lives of narrators, to make sure they were 
trustworthy and would not fabricate, or change the wording of a hadith. 
If he discovered that someone in a chain openly sinned or was not 
considered trustworthy, that hadith was immediately discarded and not 
included in his book unless a stronger chain for it existed.
Using
 his strict guidelines for hadith acceptance, Imam al-Bukhari was the 
first to make a systematic approach to classifying hadith. Each hadith 
he analyzed was labelled as either sahih (authentic), hasan (good), 
mutawatir (recurrent in many chains), ahad (solitary), da’eef (weak), or
 mawdu’ (fabricated). This system for hadith then became the standard by
 which all hadiths were classified by other hadith scholars.
Imam al-Bukhari’s Fiqh
Imam
 al-Bukhari’s collection of hadiths is a monumental achievement and an 
irreplaceable cornerstone of the science of hadith scholarship. Through 
his work, hadith studies became a science with governing laws that 
protected the field from innovations and corruptions. However, his Sahih
 is not just a simple collection of hadiths. Al-Bukhari organized his 
collection in a way that it can also be used to help deduce rulings 
within Islamic law – fiqh.
The
 Sahih is divided into 97 books, each with numerous chapters within it. 
Each chapter is then titled with a ruling on a particular issue within 
fiqh. Then within the chapter will be all the hadiths that he considered
 authentic that support that ruling. For example, the chapter about 
extra prayer during the month of Ramadan (Taraweeh) is titled “The 
Superiority of Extra Prayers at Night in Ramadan” and it contains six 
sayings of the Prophet ﷺthat indicate how important the Taraweeh prayer 
is.
Thus,
 not only is Sahih al-Bukhari the most authentic book of hadith ever 
compiled, but Imam al-Bukhari also had the foresight to organize it into
 a book of law that helps everyday Muslims live their lives as close to 
the life of the Prophet ﷺas possible. His monumental work would go to 
inspire generations of hadith scholars, including al-Bukhari’s student 
Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj, who would go on to collect Sahih Muslim, which is 
considered second only to Sahih al-Bukhari in authenticity.
One
 of the common accusations made by non-Muslims against Islamic sciences 
and the study of hadith is that there is no way of verifying the hadith 
and that they should not be used as a source of belief or law. This 
argument is based on a very rudimentary and flawed understanding of how 
the hadith were collected and the incredible amount of effort scholars 
such as al-Bukhari put into verifying their authenticity. With the 
monumental work of al-Bukhari and other scholars of hadith, we have been
 able to know what words and actions can truly be attributed to the 
Prophet Muhammad ﷺeven 1400 years after his life.
 
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