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The Role of Husband and Wife in Maintaining Family Resilience: Study of Takhrij Hadith Maesaroh, Siti; Sutisna, Nata
Journal of Takhrij Al-Hadith Vol. 4 No. 1 (2025)
Publisher : Faculty of Ushuluddin UIN Sunan Gunung Djati Bandung

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.15575/jth.v4i1.43746

Abstract

This study aims to discuss the hadith about the role of husbands and wives in maintaining resilience. This research uses a qualitative approach by applying the descriptive-analytical method. The formal object of this research is the science of hadith, while the material object is the hadith about the role of husbands and wives in maintaining family resilience in an-Nasa'i's narration No. 2536. The results and discussion of this study indicate that the status of the Hadith is of Shahih quality. This study concludes that the Hadith narrated by An-Nasa'i No. 2536 shows that Islam provides flexible guidelines regarding the roles of husbands and wives, with an emphasis on cooperation, communication, and responsibility according to their respective abilities. In addition, career women are not a threat to family resilience, but rather an opportunity to improve family welfare, provided that husbands and wives are able to maintain a balance of their respective roles. Synergy and agreement between couples is the main key in building a harmonious and resilient family.
Justice in the Perspective of the Qur'an and the Sacred Texts of Other Religions and its Contextuality Hubby Dzikrillah Alfani, Ilzam; Mukhsin, Mukhsin; Sutisna, Nata
FALASIFA : Jurnal Studi Keislaman Vol 15 No 02 (2024): September
Publisher : UAS PRESS

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.62097/falasifa.v15i02.1896

Abstract

This paper explores the views of various religions on justice as a value that must be upheld because it pertains to the well-being of life. The purpose is to broaden the understanding of interfaith ideologies in Indonesia. This research employs a qualitative approach, relying on literature studies analyzed descriptively. The paper concludes that there are several perspectives on the definition of justice. According to Islam, justice is divided into three forms: first, justice in a material and immaterial sense, closely related to fulfilling rights and obligations among all beings. Second, justice in the form of balance, meaning impartiality towards oneself, relatives, and those of the same faith. Third, justice as retribution, signifying the consequences of one's actions. In Christianity, the term "tsedeq" refers to righteousness, associated with God’s justice in His covenant to sustain, save, and act against His people's enemies. In Hinduism, as presented in the Vedas, justice is a trait of actions and behavior. God bestows justice evenly upon all beings, allowing them to act and liberate themselves from samsara (repeated birth) as a result of their deeds. In Buddhism, according to the Tripitaka, justice refers to the potential and virtues within humans, which are inherently unbound by the physical body. In Confucianism, as taught in the Si Shu, justice is viewed as equality that must be upheld. The goal in Confucian teachings is to cultivate virtuous, loving, truthful, just, dutiful, wise, and trustworthy individuals