Those firmly rooted in knowledge

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Those firmly rooted in knowledge
Arabic?
Romanizational-rasikhuna fi 'l-'ilm
Literal meaningThose firmly rooted in knowledge

Those firmly rooted in knowledge is a recurring theme in the Qur'an and Sunnah. This term is of special interest for the Shi'a.

Qur'an

The term and its like is used in Al-Imran [Quran 3:7] and [Quran 4:162].

Sunni view

All those who speak truth, their hearts are firm in belief, do not commit any unlawful acts, those who are well grounded in their knowledge of Deen, their knowledge translates into their actions, does not swear or take false oaths, does not consume wealth unlawfully.

Sunni view that those firmly rooted in knowledge are the body of Muslim Jurists ([Ulema] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help)) who interpret the Divine Law ([sharia] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help)), deriving the Islamic Jurisprudence ([Fiqh] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help)).

Ulema is the plural of Alim, Arabic for knowledgeable. This connects to the Arabic for knowledge, ilm, the last word of this term: "al-rasikhuna fi 'l-'ilm"

Shi'a view

Shi'a view those firmly rooted in knowledge to be Muhammad's household and ([Ahl al-Bayt] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help)) himself.[1] See Al-Imran [Quran 3:7] for some hadith in this regard.

References