Durus Al-Mutun

Qāla Allāh wa qāla ar-Rasūl – قال الله وقال الرسول

    The phrase “قال الله وقال الرسول” (Qāla Allāh wa qāla ar-Rasūl) is not a direct verse from the Qur’an or a single hadith. Rather, it is a well-known expression used by scholars to emphasize reliance on revelation.

    1. In Classical Poetry

    It is most famously found in a line of poetry attributed to Imam al-Shafi‘i:

    العلم قال الله قال رسوله
    قال الصحابة ليس بالتمويه

    Meaning:

    “Knowledge is: ‘Allah said, the Messenger said,
    and the Companions said’ — not deception or speculation.”

    This verse defines true Islamic knowledge as being rooted in:

    • Qur’an
    • Sunnah
    • Understanding of the Sahabah

    2. In Scholarly Methodology (Manhaj)

    Scholars—especially from the Athari/Salafi tradition—use this phrase to stress:

    • Evidence-based religion (dalīl)
    • Avoiding blind following (taqlīd) without proof

    You’ll often hear it in lessons explaining:

    • Aqeedah (creed)
    • Fiqh اصول (principles of jurisprudence)

    3. In Khutbahs and Lectures

    Preachers frequently say:

    • “Qāla Allāh ta‘ālā…” (Allah said…)
    • “Qāla ar-Rasūl ﷺ…” (The Messenger said…)

    This is a practical application of the phrase—showing that:

    Every claim must be backed by revelation.


    4. In Books of Aqeedah and Sunnah

    Many classical works follow this pattern, such as:

    • Kitab al-Tawhid
    • Al-Aqeedah al-Wasitiyyah

    These books structure chapters by:

    • Qur’anic verses
    • Then hadiths

    Summary

    The phrase is essentially a methodological slogan meaning:

    “True knowledge comes only from revelation—Qur’an and Sunnah—not personal opinion.”

    If you want, I can trace how this concept evolved across different madhhabs or compare how various scholars interpret it.

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