Walaiykum As-Salam brother Murteza. At MV we follow only the Quran, no Hadith. We have made this point very clear in our forum rules. Also, by the Grace of Allah, our Hadith board is very rich with information on dozens of topics revealing precisely why we look upon the man-written Hadith as profoundly discrepant and a major source of corruption. Therefor, our method of acquiring guidance is only through the Noble Quran. Alhumdulilah.
To answer your question whether we reject all Ahadith or not, well yes, we actually do reject all of them. But we haven't come to this decision blindly, simply because of our hatred for the term "hadith." We decided to reject all hadith on the basis of our analysis after reading the complete collections of Bukhari and Muslim Ahadith.
If you read carefully the following post and its entire thread, you will find the exact information you are looking for, and the answers to your query. Also please read the links to a couple of other posts on Hadith evaluation contained within this thread. Here is the link:
ARE THERE ANY GOOD AHADITH?
As-salamu 'alaykum wa rah-matul lah Sister Ruhi_Rose.
I read the link you have provided and Alhamdulillah it answered some of my questions, but some other questions have arisen.
The following is what I agree with from Sister Zeynab's post:
"Secondly, if Hadith is a reputable institution, we should not be put in a position to pick the nice ones with the label of "the Prophet's sayings" and ignore the bad ones to avoid embarrassment.
However, these good ones can be retained for drawing moral and ethical lessons, and to beautify the Islamic literature....There must be no unwarranted presumptions, guesswork and deliberate manipulations."
I do however have a question about the following statement:
"Last but not least, an important and logical reason that a hadith which is compatible with the Quran is not indispensable because if it's compatible with Quranic values, then in any case the Quran is already there for reference and recourse. So, why must we access a Quranic topic through an extra-Quranic literature when the Quran itself is available in our homes for reference and reading?"
I learned how to pray just last night (Alhamdulillah); I did so by searching it up on google (screening was done to make sure I found a legitimate source). The Quran doesn't tell you exactly how to pray, so as Muslims, how are we suppose to know how to pray? Wouldn't everyone be praying differently as a result? How would we know what to recite? Is there a right/wrong way of praying? Can we recite anything we want as long as it's from the Quran? Does it have to be verses from the Quran?
So what does the Quran say on praying and how to conduct it?
My greatest fear is that I am praying incorrectly and it wont be accepted by Allah.