It’s a reminder that beneath all the legal rulings (masa'il), there is a deep, burning core of theology and heart-work.
| Actual Book Title | Author | What it comments on | |---|---|---| | Sharh Ma'ani al-Athar | Imam Al-Tahawi (Hanafi) | Hadith & legal reasoning | | Sharh al-Hidayah | Al-Marghinani (or later: Al-Babarti, Al-Siyalkuti) | Al-Hidayah (core Hanafi fiqh) | | Sharh al-Wiqayah | Ubayd Allah al-Mahbubi (and others) | Al-Wiqayah (fiqh for judges) | | Sharh Mukhtasar al-Quduri | Al-Ghunjār (or later: Al-Quduri himself) | Mukhtasar al-Quduri (early primer) | sharh hanafiyah page 89 hot
A famous Hanafi sub-discussion on page 89 distinguishes between shahwat (pleasure-driven) and non-shahwat discharge. If semen exits without any pleasure (e.g., due to illness or accidental pressure), ghusl is obligatory. This is a uniquely Hanafi position. The "hot" factor: Jurists debate how to determine if pleasure was present. It’s a reminder that beneath all the legal