The links around “the Sunna” revolve around distinguishing between the messengerly Sunna and the prophetic Sunna, and between what is connected to the message and the rites and what remains historical and interpretive. The concept also appears in its relation to reading hadith through the Qur’an and to the limits of obedience and example.

Direct answer

For Shahrur, the Sunna is read through distinguishing between two stations: the message and prophethood. It is therefore divided into a messengerly Sunna tied to the message and the rites, and a prophetic Sunna that is historical and interpretive. This page gathers the links for this distinction, connecting them to reading hadith through the Qur’an, to the limits of obedience and example, and to what is binding or nonbinding.

Key concepts

  • The Sunna is divided into messengerly and prophetic.
  • The messengerly Sunna is tied to the message and the rites.
  • The prophetic Sunna appears as historical and interpretive.
  • Reading hadith passes through the Qur’an on this page.
  • The limits of obedience and example are central questions of the concept.

Where does the tracing begin?

Shared entry

Lexicon

Its appearance in the books

  • This page does not begin from a single verse, but from the distinction between the station of the message and the station of prophethood, and what follows from that in understanding the Sunna.

Conceptual relations

Nearby claims