Praise be to Allaah.
It is not obligatory for a Muslim to follow any particular
madhhab among these four. People vary in their level of understanding and
ability to derive rulings from the evidence. There are some for whom it is
permissible to follow (taqleed), and indeed it may be obligatory in their
case. There are others who can only follow the shar’i evidence. In
Fataawa al-Lajnah al-Daa’imah this question was answered in a detailed
manner, which is worth quoting here in full.
Question:
What is the ruling on following one of the four madhhabs in
all cases and situations?
The Committee replied:
Praise be to Allaah, and blessings and peace be upon His
Messenger and his family and companions.
Firstly: the four madhhabs are named after the four imams –
Imam Abu Haneefah, Imam Maalik, Imam al-Shaafa’i and Imam Ahmad.
Secondly: These imams learned fiqh (jurisprudence) from the
Qur’aan and Sunnah, and they are mujtahideen in this regard. The mujtahid
either gets it right, in which case he will have two rewards, the reward for
his ijtihaad and the reward for getting it right, or he will get it wrong,
in which case he will be rewarded for his ijtihaad and will be forgiven for
his mistake.
Thirdly: the one who is able to derive rulings from the
Qur’aan and Sunnah should take from them like those who came before him; it
is not right for him to follow blindly (taqleed) when he is believes that
the truth lies elsewhere. Rather he should follow that which he believes is
the truth. It is permissible for him to follow in matters in which he is
unable to come to a conclusion based on the Qur’aan and Sunnah and he needs
guidelines concerning a particular issue.
Fourthly: Whoever does not have the ability to derive
rulings himself is permitted to follow one whom he feels comfortable
following. If he is not comfortable following him then he should ask until
he finds someone with whom he is comfortable.
Fifthly: From the above
it is clear that we should not follow their opinions in all situations and
at all times, because they may make mistakes, but we may follow their views
that are sound and are based on the evidence.
Fataawa al-Lajnah, 5/28
It says in Fataawa al-Lajnah, no. 3323:
Whoever is qualified to
derive rulings from the Qur’aan and Sunnah, and has strong knowledge in that
regard, even if that is with the help of the legacy of fiqh that we have
inherited from earlier scholars of Islam, has the right to do that, so he
can act upon it himself and explain it in disputes and issue fatwas to those
who consult him. Whoever is not qualified to do that has to ask trustworthy
people who so that he may learn the rulings from their books and act upon
that, without limiting his asking or his reading to one of the scholars of
the four madhhabs. Rather people refer to the four imams because they are so
well known and their books are well written and widely available.
Whoever says that it is obligatory for the learned people to
follow the scholars blindly in all cases is making a mistake and being
inflexible, and is thinking that these learned people are inadequate, and he
is restricting something that is broad in scope.
Whoever says that we
should limit following to the four madhhabs is also mistaken, because he is
restricting something that is broad in scope with no evidence for doing so.
With regard to the common (i.e., uneducated) man there is no difference
between the four imams and others such as al-Layth ibn Sa’d, al-Awzaa’i and
other fuqaha’.
Fataawa al-Lajnah, 5/41
It says in Fatwa no. 1591:
None of them called people to follow his madhhab, or was
partisan in following it, or obliged anyone else to act in accordance with
it or with a specific madhhab. Rather they used to call people to follow the
Qur’aan and Sunnah, and they would comment on the texts of Islam, and
explain its basic principles and discuss minor issues according to general
guidelines, and issue fatwas concerning what people asked about, without
obliging any of their students or anyone else to follow their views. Rather
they criticized those who did that and said that their opinions should be
cast aside if they went against a saheeh hadeeth. One of them said: “If the
hadeeth is saheeh then that is my madhhab.” May Allaah have mercy on them
all.
It is not obligatory for anyone to follow a particular
madhhab, rather we should strive to learn the truth if possible, or to seek
the help of Allaah in doing so, then to rely on the legacy that the earlier
Muslim scholars left behind for those who came after them, thus making it
easier for them to understand and apply the texts. Whoever cannot derive
rulings from the texts etc for some reason that prevents him from doing so
should ask trustworthy scholars for whatever rulings of sharee’ah he needs,
because Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning):
“So ask the people of the Reminder [Scriptures — the
Tawraat (Torah), the Injeel (Gospel)] if you do not know”
[al-Anbiya’ 21:7]
So he has to strive to ask one whom he trusts among those who
are well known for their knowledge, virtue, piety and righteousness.
Fataawa al-Lajnah al-Daa’imah,
5/56
The madhhab of Abu
Haneefah (may Allaah have mercy on him) is the most widespread madhhab among
the Muslims, and perhaps one of the reasons for that is that the Ottoman
caliphs followed this madhhab and they ruled the Muslim lands for more than
six centuries. That does not mean that the madhhab of Abu Haneefah is the
most sound madhhab or that every ijtihaad in it is correct, rather like
other madhhabs it contains some things that are correct and some that are
incorrect. What the believer must do is to follow the truth and what is
correct, regardless of who says it.
And Allaah knows best.