December 18, 2025 · S. Basaltun
One Source or Two: Al-Kitab and Al-Hikmah?
A common claim is that when the Quran mentions 'the scripture and the wisdom' (al-kitab wal-hikmah), it refers to two separate sources — the Quran and the Hadith. But does the Quran itself support this reading?
Grammatical evidence: a singular reference
In 2:231, God says He sent down 'the scripture and the wisdom' and uses the singular pronoun 'bihi' (by it) — not 'bihima' (by them). This grammatical construction treats scripture and wisdom as one unified revelation, not two separate sources.
Wisdom is within scripture
When God tells the prophet's household to remember 'God's revelations and the wisdom' recited therein (33:34), the key word is 'yutla' — meaning 'recited.' This is terminology specifically tied to revelation. Hadith are narrated, transmitted, attributed — they are not recited as revelation. The wisdom is inherent in the scripture itself.
The Quran's own verdict on hadith
God asks directly: 'Which hadith other than this do they believe in?' (7:185, 45:6). The Quran positions itself as the only source of religious law and guidance. There is no room left for a second corpus of revelation attributed to any human being.
Conclusion
Al-hikmah is not a separate book. It is the wisdom embedded within God's scripture — the ability to understand, apply, and live by the Quran. One source, one revelation, one God.