Ruling on having a wedding in 
the masjid...
Q: What 
is the ruling on having a wedding in the mosque?
Shaykh al-Albaani:
“An innovation.”
[silsilat 
ul-hudaa wa nnoor 132/17 - 
asaheeha translations]
Conducting Marriages in the 
Mosque
by: Shaykh Haanee 
al-Jubayr, presiding judge an the Mecca District Court
Conducting marriages in mosques is a common 
practice. The people of Mecca and Jeddah, for instance, are quite keen on 
holding their marriages in al-Masjid al-Haraam, since the mosque is quite close 
to them. This has led some people who are concerned with following the Sunnah to 
ask whether this practice is actually sanctioned by the Sunnah.
First, we must consider the hadeeth 
evidence. To start with, there is a hadeeth where it is related that the Prophet 
(peace be upon him) said: “Announce the marriage, hold it in the mosques, and 
beat tambourines on its occasion.” [Sunan al-Tirmidhee (1089) and Sunan 
al-Bayhaqee (7/290 – 15065)]
However, the hadeeth has a weak 
chain of transmission, since it contains the narrator `Isaa b. 
Maymoon, who relates the hadeeth from al-Qaasim b. Muhammad from `Aa’ishah from 
the Prophet (peace be upon him).
Al-Bayhaqee says: “`Isaa b. Maymoon is a 
weak narrator.”
Al-Tirmidhee says: “`Isaa b. Maymoon 
al-Ansari is considered weak in hadeeth.”
Al-Dhahabee informs us that al-Bukhari said: 
“`Isaa b. Maymoon who relates the hadeeth ‘ Announce the marriage …’ is a weak 
narrator who amounts to nothing.” [Mizan al-I`tidal (3/326)]
Al-Dhahabee also informs us that `Abd 
al-Rahmaan b. Mahdi said: “I confronted him (`Isaa b. Maymoon) about it and 
said: ‘What are these hadeeth that you relate from al-Qaasim from `Aa’ishah?’ He 
replied: ‘I will not repeat them again.’” [Mizan al-I`tidal (3/325)]
Al-Albaani declares this hadeeth to be weak, 
both in Irwaa’ al-Ghaleel (1993) and in Silsilah al-Ahadeeth al-Da`eefah 
(978).
I 
am not aware of any authentic hadeeth where the Prophet either commanded or 
prohibited holding marriages in the mosques. I have, at least, not come across anything 
of the sort. Shaykh al-`Uthaymeen confirms this in his commentary on the 
Hanbalee legal treatise Zaad al-Mustaqni`, where he comments on the issue of 
whether it is preferred to hold marriages on a Friday, 
saying:
Ibn al-Qayyim mentions that it is 
appropriate for the marriage to be held in the mosque as well (as on a Friday) 
due to the honor of the time and the place. However, this 
is questionable on both counts, unless there is something in the Sunnah to 
establish it. If there is, 
then good and well. However, I know of nothing in the Sunnah to attest to it. 
[Al-Sharh al-Mumti` (5/132)]
With regard to the practice of the Prophet 
(peace be upon him) we have what is related in the following hadeeth about the 
woman who approached Allah’s Messenger (peace be upon him) and offered herself 
to him in marriage:
She said: “O Messenger of Allah, I have come 
to you to entrust myself to you.”
A person from amongst his Companions stood 
up and said: “O Messenger of Allah, marry her to me if you have no need of 
her.”
He (the Prophet) said: “Is there anything 
with you (which you can give to her as a dowry)?”
He said: “No, O Messenger of Allah. By 
Allah, I have nothing.”
Thereupon Allah’s Messenger (peace be upon 
him) said: “Go to your people (family) and see if you can find 
something.”
He returned and said: “I have found 
nothing.” Allah’s Messenger (peace be upon him) said: “See, even if but an iron 
ring.”
He said to him: “Do you know any part of the 
Qur’an?” He said: “I know such and such chapters (and he counted 
them).”
Thereupon Allah’s Messenger said: “Go. I 
have given her to you in marriage for the part of the Qur’an which you know.” 
[Saheeh al-Bukhari (5149) and Saheeh Muslim (1425)]
Ibn Hajar al-`Asqalani, in his 
commentary on this hadeeth, informs us that in a narration of this hadeeth from 
Sufyan al-Thawri, it is mentioned that this incident took place in the mosque. 
[Fath al-Bari (9/113)] Here we have a situation where the Prophet (peace be upon 
him) conducted a marriage in a mosque, though 
admittedly, it appears that the location was more incidental than 
intentional.
Secondly, when we turn our attention to the 
opinions of the jurists, we find the jurists of all four schools of thought to 
be agreed that it is Sunnah to hold the marriage in the mosque.
Ibn Taymiyyah says: “It is preferable to 
contract the marriage in the mosque.” [Majmoo`al-Fataawaa (32/18)]
Ibn Qasim writes: “It is Sunnah to hold it 
in the mosque. This is what Ibn al-Qayyim said, and he is a trustworthy, erudite 
scholar who does not declare something to be Sunnah except when there is a 
legitimate basis for doing so.” [Haashiyah al-Rawd al-Murbi` (6/243)]
Lastly, we need to consider that the reason 
for contracting the marriage in the mosque is to seek the blessings of doing so 
in that location. Al-Mubaarakfooree, in his commentary on Sunan al-Tirmidhee 
discusses the hadeeth “Announce the marriage, hold it in the mosques, and beat 
tambourines on its occasion” and says:
With respect to the statement “hold it in 
the mosques ”, this 
is either on account of it making the marriage easier to announce publicly or to 
attain the blessings of the location.” [Tuhfah al-Ahwadhee 
(4/210)]
Without doubt, Allah has made certain 
locations more blessed than others, and mosques are among these locations. The 
Prophet (peace be upon him) said: “The 
most beloved places in the land to Allah are its mosques.” [Saheeh Muslim (671)]
The share of blessings held by al-Masjid 
al-Haraam in Mecca is greater. Allah says:“Glory 
be to Him who betook His servant for a swift journey by night from al-Masjid 
al-Harâm to al-Aqsâ Mosque whose precincts We did bless.” [Surah al-Israa' : 1]
The Prophet (peace be upon him) said about 
Mecca : “Indeed, 
it is the best of Allah’s Earth and the most beloved of Allah’s Earth to 
Allah.” [Musnad Ahmad (4/305) 
and Mustadrak al-Haakim (3/7) with an authentic line of transmission]
What remains, however, is the question of 
how we are supposed to realize the blessings of these localities.
`Urwah relates from `Aa’ishah that she said: 
“Allah’s Messenger (peace be upon him) married me in the month of Shawwaal and 
consummated the marriage in the month of Shawwaal. So then, which of the 
Prophet’s wives was more favored by him than me?”
`Urwah then comments that `Aa’ishah used to 
prefer that the women of her acquaintance enter upon their marriages in the 
month of Shawwaal. [Saheeh Muslim (1423)]
This hadeeth provides us with two things. 
The first is that it dispenses with the superstitious hatred of contracting or 
consummating a marriage in the month of Shawwaal that used to exist amongst the 
pagan Arabs before Islam.
More important for what we are discussing is 
that the hadeeth shows us the permissibility of following the mere action of the 
Prophet (peace be upon him) even when there is no evidence that the 
circumstances surrounding the action were specifically intended or were anything 
other than a coincidence. If the Prophet (peace be upon him) had specifically 
intended the month of Shawwaal as the time for the marriage and for consummating 
the marriage, he would certainly have expressed this in unequivocal terms, since 
his words provide a more decisive indication of such things than his 
actions.
The mere fact that the Prophet (peace be 
upon him) conducted a marriage in the mosque prevents us from construing a 
person’s preference for doing so as an innovation, since giving preference to a 
place (the mosque) is no different than what `Aa’ishah did by giving preference 
to a time (the month of Shawwaal).
In brief, we say that it is permissible for 
a person to give preference to the mosque as the place to conduct a marriage. 
Doing so is not an innovation or unprecedented act. However, there 
is no evidence for saying that in Islamic Law it takes the ruling of being 
something preferred or that it is a Sunnah to hold the marriage in the 
mosque. At the same time, we 
do not censure those who regard it as being something Islamically preferred, in 
consideration of the fact that this is the opinion of many of the greatest 
scholars.