Hadith Sahih al-Bukhari
Saheeh al-Bukhari (Arabic صحيح البخاري) is one of the six major Sunni collections of hadith (Qutub as-Sitta). Hadiths are collected by the medieval Islamic theologian Muhammad al-Bukhari, after two hundred years, these hadiths were transmitted orally. Saheeh al-Bukhari for Sunnis is one of the three most reliable collections of hadith along with Sahih Muslim and Muwatta Imam Malik. Some theologians consider Sahih al-Bukhari the most authentic Islamic book after the Quran
A well-known Islamic theologian Amin Ahsan Islahi listed three main qualities of Sahih al-Bukhari:
1. The quality and reliability of the chain of transmitters selected by the hadith. Muhammad al-Bukhari used two criteria for selecting an oral narrative. First, the period of the transmitter's life should coincide with the time it is about. Secondly, it must be checked whether the hadeeth transmitters actually met in life. The criteria of al-Bukhari were stricter than they were in Muslim.
2. Muhammad al-Bukhari accepted the hadith only from trusted theologians did not receive them from the Murjites.
3. The special arrangement and order of chapters made the book a useful guide to understanding religious disciplines
Hadith (arabic الحديث) - a legend about the words and actions of the Prophet Muhammad, affecting various religious and legal aspects of the life of the Muslim community. Hadith is the saying (caul), approval (takir), the image (vasfi) or the action (film) of the Prophet Muhammad, the sum of which forms the Sunnah, which is authoritative for all Muslims and constitutes one of the foundations of the Sharia. The hadiths were transmitted through the companions of the prophet.