Comparative Analysis of Classification and Factors Causing the Emergence of Bid'ah in the Perspective of Islamic Law Scholars

  • Muchlis Bahar UIN Imam Bonjol, Padang, Indonesia
Keywords: Analysis, Bid'ah, Islamic Law, Classification, Causes.

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to analyze the classification and the causes of their emergence according to Islamic jurists. This research uses qualitative research with descriptive analysis approach. This research uses secondary data and the data collection method used is a literature study. The research was developed by starting the discussion in the perspective of terminology, and redeveloped in the perspective of epistemology and axiology. Based on the previous explanations and descriptions, several conclusions can be drawn, including: 1) Ulama agree that there is Bid'ah in Islamic teachings, but they are different in Understanding the Nature of Bid'ah; 2) Syafi'iyah scholars generally divide Bid'ah into five laws, there are Mandatory, Makruh, Sunnah (Mandubah), Haram and permissible (permissible); and 3) The cause of the emergence of heretical practices is the factor of ignorance (Jahalah) of the religious teachings themselves, because they follow the lust of lust, and because they want to maintain the traditions, culture and customs of their ancestors.

References

Alimi, M. Y. (2018). Rethinking Anthropology of Shari’a: Contestation Over the Meanings and Uses of Shari’a in South Sulawesi, Indonesia. Contemporary Islam, 12(2), 123-151.

Arfa, F. A. (2014). Problems of Pluralism in Modern Indonesian Islam. Journal of Indonesian Islam, 8(2), 209-234.

Ariyanto, S. (2018). A portrait of gender bias in the prescribed Indonesian ELT textbook for junior high school students. Sexuality & Culture, 22(4), 1054-1076.

Azra, H. (2018). Islamic Education in Indonesia. International handbooks of religion and education, 7, 763-80.

Bustamam-Ahmad, K., & Zakaria, R. (2018). Cross-cultural Differences Experienced during Hajj: A Case Study of Acehnese Hajj. Studia Islamika, 25(1), 67-96.

Casey, C. (2018). Sensory Politics and War: Affective Anchoring and Vitality in Nigeria and Kuwait. In Political Sentiments and Social Movements (pp. 147-174). Palgrave Macmillan, Cham.

Fakhruroji, M. (2019). Digitalizing Islamic lectures: Islamic apps and religious engagement in contemporary Indonesia. Contemporary Islam, 13(2), 201-215.

Jahroni, J. (2018). Ritual, Bid‘ah, and the Negotiation of the Public Sphere in Contemporary Indonesia. Studia Islamika, 25(1), 1-35.

Kersten, C. (2015). Islamic post-traditionalism: Postcolonial and postmodern religious discourse in Indonesia. Sophia, 54(4), 473-489.

Kudhori, M. (2018). Qaul Al-Mukhtar Al-Nawawi sebagai Pendapat Alternatif Muslim Nusantara. Al-Manahij: Jurnal Kajian Hukum Islam, 12(1), 31-50.

Makin, A. (2016). Challenging Islamic Orthodoxy: Accounts of Lia Eden and Other Prophets in Indonesia (Vol. 1). Springer.

Miichi, K. (2015). Democratization and ‘failure’of Islamic parties in Indonesia. In Southeast Asian Muslims in the era of globalization (pp. 127-144). Palgrave Macmillan, London.

Osili, U., & Ökten, Ç. (2015). Giving in Indonesia: A culture of philanthropy rooted in Islamic tradition. In The Palgrave handbook of global philanthropy (pp. 388-403). Palgrave Macmillan, London.

Rakhmani, I., & Abu-Lughod, L. (2017). Mainstreaming Islam in Indonesia. Palgrave Macmillan.

Ramakrishnan, P., Karimah, A., Kuntaman, K., Shukla, A., Ansari, B. K. M., Rao, P. H., ... & Murthy, P. (2015). Religious/spiritual characteristics of Indian and Indonesian physicians and their acceptance of spirituality in health care: A cross-cultural comparison. Journal of religion and health, 54(2), 649-663.

Salim, D. P. (2015). The transnational and the local in the politics of Islam. The Transnational and the Local in the Politics of Islam: The Case of West Sumatra, Indonesia.

Setiadi, H. (2015). Islam and Urbanism in Indonesia: The mosque as urban identity in Javanese Cities. In The Changing World Religion Map (pp. 2415-2436). Springer, Dordrecht.

Sirgy, M. J., Estes, R. J., El-Aswad, E. S., & Rahtz, D. R. (2019). Cultural drivers of jihadist terrorism and increasing religiosity. In Combatting Jihadist Terrorism through Nation-Building (pp. 77-94). Springer, Cham.

Suharto, T. (2018). Transnational Islamic Education in Indonesia: An Ideological Perspective. Contemporary Islam, 12(2), 101-122.

Woodward, M. (2017). Resisting Salafism and the Arabization of Indonesian Islam: A Contemporary Indonesian Didactic Tale by Komaruddin Hidayat. Contemporary Islam, 11(3), 237-258.

Published
2019-12-23
How to Cite
Bahar, M. (2019). Comparative Analysis of Classification and Factors Causing the Emergence of Bid’ah in the Perspective of Islamic Law Scholars. International Journal of Science and Society, 1(4), 227-237. https://doi.org/10.54783/ijsoc.v1i4.408