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History – Al-Shia https://en.al-shia.org The al-Shia Scientific, Cultural, and Doctrinal Website Thu, 16 Oct 2025 06:27:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 https://en.al-shia.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/cropped-cropped-FIcon-32x32.png History – Al-Shia https://en.al-shia.org 32 32 The Reason for the Prophet’s Marriage to Zaynab https://en.al-shia.org/the-reason-for-the-prophets-marriage-to-zaynab/ https://en.al-shia.org/the-reason-for-the-prophets-marriage-to-zaynab/#respond Thu, 09 Oct 2025 06:30:20 +0000 https://en.al-shia.org/?p=16579 The Prophet’s marriage to Zaynab bint Jahsh, in particular, has often been the subject of curiosity, misunderstanding, and even distortion by critics of Islam.
For Muslims, however, it is essential to approach this marriage not through the lens of polemical narratives but through the light of the Qur’an, authentic hadith, and the insights of our great scholars in both Sunni and Shia traditions. This study situates the marriage within its historical and Qur’anic context to uncover its true purpose and divine wisdom.
The objective is to clarify the reasons behind the marriage, address common misconceptions, and highlight its enduring lessons for Muslims today. The findings show that the Prophet’s marriage was not motivated by personal inclination but was a divinely mandated act to abolish pre-Islamic adoption laws, affirm obedience to revelation, and reform entrenched social customs.
The conclusion emphasizes that this marriage serves as a model of submission to divine will, courage in confronting cultural norms, and the prioritization of truth over social pressures, offering Muslims timeless guidance for faith and practice. Historical and Social Background To understand the divine wisdom behind the Prophet’s marriage, we must first look at the historical and social environment of seventh-century Arabia — a society built on tribal pride and rigid class distinctions.
At that time, a person’s worth was often determined by lineage rather than piety or good character [1] . One deeply rooted pre-Islamic custom was adoption, where an adopted child was treated exactly like a biological one. Adopted sons could inherit property and were considered permanently maḥram to the family. Thus, they considered that to marry the divorced wife of an adopted son was unlawful [2] .
Zayd, once enslaved before Islam, was freed and adopted by the Prophet (PBUHH), and people affectionately called him “Zayd ibn Muḥammad.