%0 Journal Article %T The Dilemma of £¿Amal and £¿ad¨©th in the Change of A£¿k¨¡m: Changing a Reprehensible Practice to a Recommended One with the £¿ad¨©th Narrations on the Topic of Shaww¨¡l Fasting %A Ahmet Temel %J - %D 2018 %X This article aims at examining the limits of change in the field of worship through a study on the origins of the £¿ukm[religious ruling] of Shaww¨¡l fasting that is widely practiced in the different parts of Muslim world. The study, firstly, deals with the evolution of the £¿ukm of Shaww¨¡l fasting chronologically among four sunn¨© schools of law, then analyzes the solitary reports on the topic. It concludes that in M¨¡lik¨©and £¿anef¨©schools, the £¿ukm of this specific worship changed within the limits of kar¨¡ha [reprehensibility], ib¨¡ha [permissibility], and nadb [recommendation]. This £¿ukm was constructed based on solitary reports which later became a paradigmatic source of religious legitimacy in the £¿anbal¨©school beginning with the eponymous Im¨¡m and in the Sh¨¡fi£¿¨©long after the founding authorities. It also claims that it is strongly probable that the solitary reports on the topic go back to a deduced opinion in the age of companions, but then reached to a form of prophetic solitary report in the corpus of had¨©th reports. Ultimately, this specific worship that has restricted number of fasting was established with the paradigmatic effect of the approach to solitary reports as the only authentic way of transmitting the sunna, even though it is at odds with the fact that this worship had not been implemented in the first two centuries after hijra, i.e. contrary to the established practice [£¿amal]. Summary: The issue of change of rulings in Islamic law comes up frequently on various occasions, and an increasing number of academic studies are trying to determine the characteristics and limits of this change in numerous books, articles and papers. These studies mostly seem to focus on bringing together the arguments that can be compiled under the title of ¡®the flexibility of Islamic law in response to the challenges of modernity¡¯. Although the change of rulings in Islamic law is an undeniable fact, reading it only from the lens of the change in Islamic law depending on the requirements of time is an inadequate reading. The change of rulings in Islamic law has different motives; and the change of time, more precisely the change of custom, is only one of them. On the other hand, another issue that comes up in relation to the change of rulings is the claim that this change can only take place in terms of the rulings regulating the interpersonal relations, i.e. mu£¿¨¡mal¨¡t. In fact, this claim relies on the abovementioned approach that limits the change in Islamic law with the change of custom. Hence, because other two main areas of Islamic law, worships (£¿ib¨¡d¨¡t) %K £¿slam Hukuku %K £¿badet %K H¨¹k¨¹m %K De£¿i£¿im %K Amel %K Hadis %K £¿evval Orucu %U http://dergipark.org.tr/cuid/issue/37971/460152