The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) provided profound guidance on marriage through his words and actions. Key hadiths every Muslim should know include: "Marriage is my Sunnah, and whoever turns away from my Sunnah is not from me"; "When a person marries, he has fulfilled half of his religion"; and "The best of you are those who are best to their wives." These narrations establish marriage as a sacred act of worship, a completion of faith, and a relationship built on kindness, mercy, and mutual rights. They guide spouse selection, marital conduct, conflict resolution, and the spiritual dimension of the marital bond.
Table of Contents
- Marriage as Half the Deen: The Spiritual Foundation
- The Best Spouse: Character as the Criterion
- Kindness to Wives: The Measure of a Believer
- The Sacred Covenant: Marriage as a Sign of Allah
- Looking at a Potential Spouse: The Permission to See
- Simplicity in Mahr and Weddings: Ease Brings Barakah
- Rights and Responsibilities: The Mutual Obligation
- Intimacy as Charity: The Reward of Marital Relations
- Patience with a Spouse: A Believer Does Not Hate a Believer
- Divorce: The Most Hated Permissible Act
- The Martyr's Reward: The Wife Who Dies in Childbirth
- Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
The Quran is the constitution of Islamic marriage; the Hadith is its living commentary. The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) did not merely preach about marriage in the abstract—he lived it. He was a husband who experienced love, loss, conflict, and reconciliation. His words on marriage are not distant legal rulings but intimate guidance from a man who embodied the Quranic ideal. These hadiths form the spiritual and practical framework every Muslim should carry into their marital journey.
Marriage as Half the Deen: The Spiritual Foundation
The most famous hadith on marriage establishes its spiritual significance in the starkest terms:
"When a person marries, he has fulfilled half of his religion. So let him fear Allah in the remaining half." (Narrated by Al-Bayhaqi; classed as hasan by Al-Albani)
This profound statement reframes marriage entirely. It is not a worldly distraction from faith; it is a fulfillment of it. Why half? Scholars explain that marriage protects a person from the two greatest sources of spiritual ruin: unlawful sexual desire and the corruption of the heart through loneliness, jealousy, and emotional instability. A righteous marriage channels physical desire into worship, provides emotional stability, and creates a partnership for mutual support in obedience to Allah.
The second sentence—"let him fear Allah in the remaining half"—is a sobering reminder. Marriage is not a finish line but a new arena of accountability. The spouse becomes a test: will you be patient? Kind? Just? Faithful? The half of religion fulfilled by marriage is only secured through ongoing taqwa.
The Best Spouse: Character as the Criterion
When Muslims search for a spouse, the Prophet (PBUH) gave clear priorities:
"A woman may be married for four things: her wealth, her lineage, her beauty, and her religion. So choose the one who is religious, may your hands be rubbed with dust [i.e., may you prosper]." (Sahih al-Bukhari, Sahih Muslim)
The hadith acknowledges human nature—wealth, lineage, and beauty are real factors that attract people to each other. The Prophet did not condemn these considerations. But he gave the decisive criterion: religion (deen). The closing phrase is a gentle, emphatic command. Prioritizing deen brings true success; neglecting it courts disaster.
This teaching applies equally to women selecting a husband. The Prophet (PBUH) said:
"If someone whose religion and character you are pleased with comes to you [for marriage], then marry him. If you do not, there will be tribulation on the earth and great corruption." (Al-Tirmidhi, classed as hasan)
The combination of religion (deen) and character (khuluq) is the Prophetic benchmark. A pious person of poor character—harsh, unkind, dishonest—falls short. A charming person of weak faith may lead the family away from Allah. Both qualities are essential.
Kindness to Wives: The Measure of a Believer
The Prophet (PBUH) tied a man's treatment of his wife directly to his spiritual standing:
"The best of you are those who are best to their wives, and I am the best of you to my wives." (Al-Tirmidhi, classed as sahih)
This hadith is revolutionary in its implications. In a society where women were often treated as property, the Prophet declared that the best Muslim men are measured by their conduct in the most private, unobserved arena of life: the home. A man can be a community leader, a generous donor, a eloquent speaker—but if he is cruel, neglectful, or dismissive to his wife, he is not among the best. And the Prophet himself set the standard, saying "I am the best of you to my wives." His example includes helping with household chores, expressing love verbally, being patient during conflict, and never striking a woman.
In another profound narration, the Prophet equated kindness to women with nobility of character:
"The most complete believers in faith are those with the best character, and the best of you are those who are best to their women." (Al-Tirmidhi, classed as sahih)
Faith (iman) is completed—not just supplemented—by good character, and the primary arena for character is marriage.
The Sacred Covenant: Marriage as a Sign of Allah
The Quran describes marriage as a divine sign (ayah) and a heavy covenant (mithaqan ghalithan). The Hadith reinforces this sacredness:
"The most evil of people in the sight of Allah on the Day of Resurrection will be a man who was intimate with his wife and then spreads her secrets." (Sahih Muslim)
The gravity of the marital bond extends to its privacy. Betraying a spouse's intimate trust—by revealing private matters, discussing bedroom affairs with friends, or shaming a spouse publicly—is among the most despicable acts. The marriage covenant is a trust (amanah), and violating that trust carries severe consequences.
Looking at a Potential Spouse: The Permission to See
Islam is practical about attraction. It does not demand that a person marry blindly. The Prophet (PBUH) permitted and even encouraged looking at a potential spouse:
"When one of you proposes to a woman, if he can look at what will encourage him to marry her, let him do so." (Abu Dawud, classed as hasan by Al-Albani)
A companion reported that he was engaged to a woman from the Ansar, and the Prophet asked him, "Have you looked at her? For there is something in the eyes of the Ansar." He replied that he had, and the marriage proceeded well (Sahih Muslim).
This permission is bounded by Islamic modesty—the look should be in the presence of the woman's mahram, with the intention of marriage, and without extended private interaction. But the principle is clear: physical attraction matters, and it is permissible to ascertain it before committing.
Simplicity in Mahr and Weddings: Ease Brings Barakah
The Prophet (PBUH) consistently encouraged simplicity and warned against extravagance:
"The best of marriage is that which is made easiest." (Sahih Ibn Hibban)
"The marriage with the most barakah is the one with the least burden." (Musnad Ahmad)
He modeled this himself. His Mahr to his wives was modest. A companion with nothing to give as Mahr was married to a woman with the Mahr of teaching her what he knew of the Quran (Sahih al-Bukhari). The wedding feast (walima) was a simple meal. The culture of extravagance—tens of thousands spent on venues, dresses, and displays—directly contradicts the Prophetic Sunnah and, according to this hadith, drives away barakah rather than attracting it.
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Rights and Responsibilities: The Mutual Obligation
The Prophet (PBUH) taught that marriage is a relationship of mutual rights, not unilateral authority:
"Indeed, your wives have a right over you, and you have a right over your wives." (Al-Tirmidhi)
In his Farewell Sermon, he emphasized:
"Fear Allah concerning women, for you have taken them as a trust from Allah, and intimacy with them has been made lawful to you by the word of Allah." (Sahih Muslim)
The language of "trust" (amanah) is powerful. A wife is not owned; she is entrusted. The husband is accountable to Allah for how he handles this trust. This hadith is the foundation of Islamic marital ethics: authority is responsibility, not privilege.
Intimacy as Charity: The Reward of Marital Relations
One of the most beautiful and surprising hadiths reframes physical intimacy as an act of worship:
"In the intimacy of one of you there is charity (sadaqah)." The companions asked, "O Messenger of Allah, does one of us fulfill his desire and receive reward for it?" He said, "Do you not see that if he were to fulfill it in a forbidden manner, he would be sinful? So when he fulfills it in a lawful manner, he receives reward." (Sahih Muslim)
This hadith sanctifies marital intimacy. What might seem purely physical or even base is elevated to an act that brings divine reward. The logic is irrefutable: if the haram act is sinful, the halal act—done with the right intention—is meritorious. This removes the false dichotomy between spirituality and sexuality that exists in some religious traditions. In Islam, a husband and wife coming together with love and the intention of fulfilling each other's rights and protecting chastity are engaged in worship.
Patience with a Spouse: A Believer Does Not Hate a Believer
Marriage inevitably involves friction. The Prophet (PBUH) gave a profound psychological and spiritual instruction for these moments:
"A believing man should not hate a believing woman. If he dislikes something in her character, he will be pleased with something else." (Sahih Muslim)
This hadith is a masterclass in marital mindset. It acknowledges the reality: you will dislike things about your spouse. But it forbids the global judgment—"I hate her"—and instead reframes the situation. Focus on what you like, what attracted you in the first place, what you are grateful for. No human being is without flaws, and no spouse will ever satisfy every expectation. The believer's response to a spouse's shortcomings is not resentment but a balanced perspective that sees the whole person.
Divorce: The Most Hated Permissible Act
While divorce is permitted in Islam, the Hadith is unequivocal about its gravity:
"The most hated of permissible things to Allah is divorce." (Abu Dawud, classed as hasan)
This hadith captures the Islamic tension around divorce. It is permissible—the Sharia does not trap people in abusive or dead marriages. But it is hated. It should be the last resort, not the first option. Every effort should be made to reconcile, to seek counseling, to involve family mediators, to exercise patience—before resorting to the dissolution of a covenant that Allah calls "heavy."
The Prophet (PBUH) also warned against frivolous use of divorce:
"Any woman who asks her husband for divorce without a compelling reason, the fragrance of Paradise will be forbidden for her." (Abu Dawud, Al-Tirmidhi, classed as sahih)
This hadith, balanced by others that affirm a woman's right to seek khula for valid reasons (such as harm, neglect, or incompatibility), establishes that divorce is not a casual tool for marital dissatisfaction. It is a serious, weighty step.
The Martyr's Reward: The Wife Who Dies in Childbirth
The hadith elevates the status of women who sacrifice their lives in the course of motherhood:
"The woman who dies in childbirth is a martyr (shahidah)." (Abu Dawud, Al-Nasa'i, classed as sahih)
This hadith places the ultimate sacrifice a woman can make—giving her life to bring new life into the world—at the level of the martyr who dies in battle. It is a profound recognition of the sanctity and nobility of motherhood. The reward of shahadah—forgiveness of sins, a high station in Paradise—is granted to the woman who dies in this way.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Is it obligatory to marry in Islam? No. Marriage is highly recommended (Sunnah mu'akkadah) for those who have the desire and the capacity. It becomes obligatory if a person fears falling into sin (zina) without it. For those who have no desire or who would be unable to fulfill marital obligations, it may be discouraged or even prohibited.
What is the most important hadith about choosing a spouse? The hadith advising the selection of a religious spouse: "Choose the one who is religious, may your hands be rubbed with dust" (Sahih al-Bukhari, Sahih Muslim). It establishes the priority of deen over wealth, beauty, and lineage.
What did the Prophet (PBUH) say about Mahr? He encouraged simplicity. He told a poor companion to give "even an iron ring" as Mahr, and when the man had nothing, the Prophet married him with a Mahr of teaching Quran (Sahih al-Bukhari). The best Mahr is that which is within the husband's means.
How should a husband treat his wife according to Hadith? With the utmost kindness. "The best of you are those who are best to their wives" (Al-Tirmidhi). The Prophet modeled this by being gentle, helping with household tasks, expressing love, and never striking any of his wives.
What does the Hadith say about a wife's obedience? The Hadith speaks of mutual rights and responsibilities, not unilateral obedience. The Prophet said, "Your wives have rights over you, and you have rights over your wives" (Al-Tirmidhi). The marital relationship is one of partnership, consultation, and kindness. Obedience to the husband is required in matters of marital rights and the management of the household, but it does not extend to sin, harm, or the abandonment of personal rights.
Is it Sunnah to have a large wedding? No. The explicit Sunnah is simplicity and ease. "The marriage with the most barakah is the one with the least burden" (Musnad Ahmad). A simple walima with family and friends fulfills the Sunnah.
What is the reward for a happy marriage? A marriage built on faith, love, and mercy is a continuous source of reward. Every act of kindness, intimacy, provision, and mutual support is charity. A righteous spouse is among the greatest blessings of this world and the means to success in the Hereafter.
Author: Rakhat Bektembayev