While Christian scholarship emphasized theology and correct belief, learned Muslims gave more attention to law and correct behavior. That law was known as the sharia, an Arabic term that referred to a path toward water, which is the source of life. To many Muslims, that was the role of law — to construct the good society within which an authentic religious life could find expression.
The sharia emerged as the early Islamic community confronted the practical problems of an expanding empire with a very diverse population. But no single legal framework developed. Rather, four major schools of Islamic law crystallized, agreeing on fundamentals but differing in emphasis. How much weight should be given to the hadiths, and which of them were most reliably authentic? What scope should reason and judgment have in applying religious principles to particular circumstances? Despite disagreement on such questions, each of the four approaches to legal interpretation sought to be all-
Questions to consider as you examine the source:
The Sharia, Ninth Century
On Prayer
The five prayers are obligatory for every Muslim who has reached the age of puberty and has the use of reason, except for women who are menstruating or recovering from childbirth.
If Muslims deny the necessity of prayer through ignorance, one must instruct them; if they deny it willfully, they have apostatized. . . .
On Zakat [alms for the poor]
The obligation pertains only to a free Muslim who has complete ownership of the property on which it is due. . . .
Whoever has the obligation to pay zakat and is able must pay it; if not, they commit a fault for which they must answer. If anyone refuses to pay it and denies its obligatory character, they have committed apostasy and may be put to death. If they refuse it from avarice, they shall have the amount taken from them and be given a sentence at the judge’s discretion.
On Marriage
[Marriage] is contracted by means of declaration and consent. When both parties are Muslims, it must be contracted in the presence of two male or one male and two female Muslim witnesses who are free, sane, and adult. . . .
It is not lawful for a man to marry two women who are sisters or to cohabit with two sisters who are his slaves. . . .
A man may not marry his slave-
Similarly, marriage with an idolatress is forbidden, until she accepts Islam or a religion of the Book.
It is not lawful for a man already married to a free woman to marry a slave. . . .
A free man may marry four women, free or slave, but no more. It is unlawful for a slave to marry more than two women. . . .
On Government
There are ten things a Caliph [successor to Muhammad as political leader of the Islamic community] must do in public affairs:
It is necessary therefore to cause the masses to act in accord with divine laws in all the affairs, both in this world and in the world to come. The authority to do so was possessed by the prophets and after them by their successors.
On Men and Women
It is not permitted to men or women to eat or drink or keep unguents [ointments] in vessels of gold or silver. . . .
It is not permitted for a man to wear silk, but it is permitted for a woman. . . .
It is not permitted for a man to wear gold or silver, except for silver on a ring, or on a weapon.
It is not permitted for a man to look at a strange woman [a woman outside one’s immediate family]. . . . A woman frequently needs to bare her hands and face in transactions with men. Abu Hanifa said it was also permitted to look at her feet and Abu Yusuf said it was permitted to look at her forearms as well. . . .
On the Economy
It is disliked to corner the market in food for humans or animals if it occurs in a town where this may prove harmful to the people. It is disliked to sell weapons in a time of trouble.
There is no harm in selling fruit juice to someone who will make wine of it, since the transgression is not in the juice but in the wine after it has been changed. . . .
Earning a living by changing money is a great danger to the religion of the one who practices it. . . .
Owners of ships and boats must be prevented from loading their vessels above the usual load, for fear of sinking. . . .
Sellers of [pottery] are not to overlay any that are pierced or cracked with gypsum . . . and then sell them as sound.
Source: John Alden Williams, trans. and ed., The Word of Islam (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1994), 71, 80–