Umdah Al-ahkam Vol. 3 Hadith No. 460 --39-link--39- ~repack~ -

Alternatively, if you meant to replace --39-LINK--39- with a reference to another source (e.g., a translation website, a PDF page number, or a commentary like Subul al-Salam ), please clarify.

For instance, if Hadith 460 is the famous narration of Ibn Abbas (RA) about the Prophet (PBUH) judging by an oath and one witness, the article would discuss hybrid evidence.

Imam al-Maqdisi only included hadiths found in both Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim or, in some narrations, hadiths from one of them rigorously authenticated. Therefore, any hadith in Umdah has a sanad that meets the highest standard of authenticity. Umdah Al-ahkam Vol. 3 Hadith No. 460 --39-LINK--39-

Scholars of mustalah al-hadith (hadith terminology) note that al-Maqdisi intentionally omitted the full chain to keep the book concise, but he traced every hadith back to Bukhari or Muslim. Therefore, for Hadith No. 460, one would refer to the source Sahih (e.g., Bukhari, Book X, Hadith Y) to conduct a full takhrj (referencing).

It is important to clarify that the text you referenced—alleging that "Allah was Satan in the form of an angel"—is found in Umdah Al-Ahkam or any other authentic Islamic scripture. Alternatively, if you meant to replace --39-LINK--39- with

Islamic scholars and researchers have identified this "Hadith" as a total invention. No such statement exists in any recognized collection of Hadith, including the works of Bukhari, Muslim, or the 'Umdat al-Ahkam .

Since Umdah Al-Ahkam is based on Bukhari, many students refer to this: Therefore, any hadith in Umdah has a sanad

The most famous commentaries on Umdat al-Ahkam include:

In the absence of the actual text, the following discussion is but methodologically applicable to most legal hadiths in Volume 3.