Page 61 - Ulum Al Quran An Introduction To The Sciences Of The Quran
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The Iraq Group
        There were also many mufassirun among the tabi’un in Iraq. Their principal teacher was Ibn Mas'ud. Their main centres
        were Basra and Kufa. The best known among them are: Al-Hasan al-Basri (d.121/738), Masruq b. al-'Ajda' (d.63/682)
        and Ibrahlm al-Nakha'i. (d.95/713).

        Summary

        Nothing  can  excel  the  tafsir  of  the  Qur'an  by  the  Qur'an.  This  is  followed  by  sound  reports  about  the  Prophet's
        explanation of the revelation.

        Whatever is sound and genuine in the explanation of the Qur'an by the sahaba and the tabi’un may not be rejected, but
        the following principles are to be observed:

             Sound reports must be distinguished from unsound ones, for many views have been falsely attributed to some
               sahaba and tabi’un (especially to Ibn 'Abbas and Mujahid, the most renowned ones among them), which cannot
               be traced back to them when the isnad is investigated. Those reports must of course be rejected.


             Material from the ahl-al-kitab, in particular the Jewish traditions (isra’iliyat) [For details, see below, p. 133.] must
               be sorted out and evaluated.

             Material which crept in due to theological, philosophical, political and other considerations, must be sorted out
               and evaluated (such as e.g. some Shi'a attributions to 'Ali, or 'Abbasid attributions to Ibn 'Abbas, etc.).
             False material purposely introduced by the enemies of Islam must be distinguished from sound material.


        Tafsir bi'l-ra'y
        The second kind of tafsir, after tafsir bi'l-riwaya, is the so-called tafsir bi'l-ra'y. It is not based directly on transmission of
        knowledge by the predecessors, but on the use of reason and ijtihad.
        Tafsir bi’l-ra'y does not mean 'interpretation by mere opinion', but deriving an opinion through ijtihad based on sound
        sources.  While the former has been condemned already  in the hadith,  the latter is recommendable, when used in its
        proper place as sound ijtihad, and was also approved by the Prophet, e.g. when he sent Mu’adh bin Jabal to Yemen.
        [Mishkat al-masabih, op.cit., II, p.794: (Arabic), Vol. 2, No. 3737.]

        Tafsir bi'l-ra'y on the other hand has been declared haram on the basis of the following hadith:

               'From  Ibn  ‘Abbas:  Allah's  messenger  said:  "He  who  says  (something)  concerning  the  Qur'an  without
               knowledge, he has taken his  seat  of fire"  ‘.  [Ibn Taimiya, p.105,  from Tirmidhi,  who says it is hasan
               sahlh.]

        However this hadith has been explained in two ways:

             That no one should say of the Qur'an what is not from the sahaba or tabi’un.

             That no one should say of the Qur'an what he knows to be otherwise. [Sabuni.tibyan,p.174.]

        The obvious meaning of the hadith is that one should not say something about the Qur'an without having the proper
        knowledge, the sources of which have already been explained. [The Qur'an explained by the Qur'an, by the Prophet, by
        the Companions. By the tabi’un. by sound ijtihad.
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