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From Satan’s Steps to God’s Way: Deconstructing the Qur’anic concept of zakat

Introduction

In traditional Islamic consciousness, zakat is one of the five pillars of religion, and its connotation has stabilized in jurisprudential discourse as an obligatory financial practice that is taken from the wealthy and disbursed in specific banks. However, a careful look at the structure of the Qur’anic discourse reveals a broader and deeper horizon for the concept of zakat, beyond its material dimension to a comprehensive existential project related to the purification of the soul and its elevation from the depths of debauchery to the heights of piety.

When the Qur’an uses the verb “zakat” in the context of the mission of the messengers, it does not refer only to the purification of wealth, but it establishes a comprehensive vision of the concept of zakat as a “healing” process for the human soul from lower levels of consciousness associated with tyranny, arrogance and instinct, to higher levels of consciousness associated with wisdom, peace and love, which the Qur’an expresses by the term “the way of God”.

This research proposes a Qur’anic reading of the concept of zakat, based on the centrality of the human psyche in the divine discourse, and attempts to link the zakat verses to the paths of ascension or existential decline, based on the analysis of the following concepts: Nafs, feelings, levels of consciousness, the way of God, the juggernaut, and etaat. We will endeavor to highlight how zakat, as a process of purification, is a natural consequence of man’s movement in the stages of spiritual and human elevation, and not just a financial hypothesis separate from his psychological and moral structure.

Through an examination of the various Qur’anic contexts, it is clear that zakat does not occur in isolation from the movement of consciousness in man, and that it represents the outcome of a long process of psychological struggle and emancipation from the dominion of the leviathan.

The Human Psyche in the Qur’anic Conceptualization

This paper proposes a subtle distinction between two types of nafs in humans as they appear in the Qur’anic discourse: The human selfand the human soul. The former represents the biological and physiological structure that enables humans to live and interact with their surroundings with limited initial awareness, and is the formulation that is often referred to as “human.” The latter is the spiritual and moral entity that God equalizes in humans and qualifies them to carry the trust. The human soul is the spiritual and moral entity that God equalizes in man and qualifies him to carry the trust, assignment, elevation, or decline, according to his choice and struggle.

This distinction is made in several places in the Qur’anic text. Prophets, despite their exalted status, identify themselves as “human beings” like their people, not because they do not possess superior human qualities, but because Humanity is what everyone has in common, while humanity varies from person to person There is no symmetry.

{Their messengers said to them, “We are but human beings like you, but Allah bestows favor on whomever He chooses of His servants.}
[Ibrahim: 11]

The word “like” here refers to complete sameness in the human structure, but does not include sameness in the human psychological structure, which is the object of promotion and elevation.

The Qur’an refers to the human soul as the place of divine inspiration for immorality and piety, making it capable of rising or falling, depending on the emotions and qualities activated:

{7} So inspire her with her virtue and her piety {8} Whoever purifies her has succeeded {9} and whoever defiles her has failed {10}.
[Sun: 7-10]

With this unique psychological make-up, the human psyche becomes a field of conflict between two paths: The way of Godand the way of the oppressor, which is reflected in the feelings and behaviors that humans choose to activate or repress.

Zakat, in this context, does not only mean cleansing money, but goes beyond that to become “a process of complete healing of the soul from the steps of Satan and the path of the leviathan to rise to common senseand prepare it to interact with higher values such as mercy, justice, wisdom, and peace.

The Ladder of Emotions and Levels of Consciousness (David Hawkins): From Distortion to Healing

Human consciousness, as David Hawkins referred to it in his book“Transcending the Levels of Consciousness“, is a complex of emotions that arise in the human psyche, which either manifest momentarily and behaviorally, or take root as recurring situations that form what is known as the “level of consciousness.” This level is not just a state of mind, but an integrated system of emotions and behaviors that reflect on human life and the environment around it. This level is not just a state of mind, but an integrated system of emotions and behaviors that reflect on human life and the environment around us.

Emotions as roots of behavior

Negative emotions, if repeated, produce a low level of consciousness, and vice versa. Fear, if it occurs momentarily, can be understood as a normal emotion; but when it becomes a permanent state that dominates a person and determines their interactions, it becomes a level of consciousness and negatively affects the individual and society. This also applies to emotions such as envy, anger, shame, arrogance… and others.

In contrast, feelings such as Peace, Joy, Wisdom, Love When they are established, they form higher levels of consciousness, through which humans experience tranquility and radiate moral and spiritual light around them.

Categorizing Levels of Consciousness

The researcher presents an ascending scale of awareness levels, which can be summarized as follows:

Low (negative) awareness levels:

  1. shame
  2. Grief and remorse
  3. Envy, envy, hatred
  4. Fear and intimidation
  5. Tribal, party, or personal pride
  6. Blindly following without scrutiny
  7. Anger
  8. Arrogance and tyranny

These are what is called in the Qur’an: The Way of the Leviathan or the Steps of Satan.

Transitional levels:

  1. Preparation
  2. Courage and honesty
  3. Neutrality and acceptance

Higher levels of consciousness (positive):

  1. Peace
  2. Cheerfulness
  3. Wisdom
  4. Love
  5. The light…

These represent what the Qur’an calls: God’s way.

Healing as a Qur’anic Process

This model is based on the idea that moving from negative to positive levels of consciousness is the essence of the healing process, which is a psychological and spiritual jihad that requires knowledge, guidance, and mujahidah. This concept is contrasted in the Qur’an with the term “zakat” when it comes in the verb form, as in:

{He will make them zakatize}, {He who has zakatized}, {He who gives his wealth to be zakatized}.

Zakat here is not only an end in itself, it is The result of an inner process of healing from feelings of envy, miserliness, fear, and arrogance and enter states of peace, wisdom, and psychological balance.

True healing: Irreversible Ascension

The author emphasizes that a true rise in consciousness is neither temporary nor reversible, unless it is false or driven by appearance over substance. Turning from the path of the juggernaut to the path of God, when it is genuine, radically changes a person and produces true zakat, i.e. inner purity and pure external behavior.

Zakat as a missionary act: Tazkiyah in the mission of the prophets

In the Qur’anic discourse, zakat is not only presented as an individual obligation, but also as a missionary act performed by the prophets towards their communities. In this context, the verb “to purify them” is used to indicate a comprehensive reform function, whichis not limited to outward purification, but includes the rebuilding of souls and societies from within, i.e. the elevation of group consciousness from chaos and tyranny to balance and peace.

The task of the messengers: Recite, Teach, and Promote

In more than one place, the Qur’an arranges the mission of the messengers as follows:

{O Lord, send a messenger from among them who will recite your verses to them, teach them the Book and wisdom, and enlighten them}
[Al-Baqarah: 129]

Tazkiyah in the Civil Context: A model of fraternization

The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) provided a practical example of the process of collective nurturing when he migrated to Medina and established a new society on the basis of “brotherhood” between the Muhajireen and the Ansar, but also between the Aws and Khazraj, who had long suffered from internal strife. It was not just a social agreement, but a radical shift in the level of society’s consciousness from tribalism to brotherhood, from revenge to mercy, and from disintegration to solidarity.

{God has bestowed upon the believers when He sent a messenger from among themselves to recite His verses to them, to enlighten them, and to teach them the Book and wisdom, if before they were in a clear misguidance}.
[Al Imran: 164]

This apparent delusion that the community was living in was represented by low levels of consciousness (revenge, hatred, nervousness, anger…), so the message came to open the door to collective healing, which was represented in tazkiyah, the transition from the path of the leviathan to the path of God.

Pharaoh and the Rejection of Tazkiyah

One of the clearest examples of the rejection of tazkiyah is found in Moses’ speech to Pharaoh, when he called him to ascend:

{Go to Pharaoh, for he has become arrogant (17), and say, “Is it possible for you to become enlightened (18)?
[Al-Naza’at: 17-18]

Pharaoh’s response was a series of behaviors that reflect the lowest levels of consciousness: Disbelief, disobedience, arrogance, and divine pretense. These are all levels that indicate the mastery of the path of leviathan in the soul, and a categorical rejection of the path of healing.

Zakat as a subjective act: He who gives his money to be zakat

In other cases, zakat is a verb that expresses a conscious personal effort to break out of a negative psychological state, such as stinginess, to spend for the sake of God:

{who gives his money away}
[Night: 18]

Here, zakat is not just about taking out money, but it signifies an inner overcoming of a low level of consciousnessand a transition to a state of openness and giving, a true healing of greed and selfishness.

Qur’anic Examples of Zakat and Healing

The Qur’anic stories offer a wealth of symbolic and narrative material through which to trace the process of zakat as an internal transformation, whether in terms of its realization, rejection, or pretense. In this section, we will review selected examples that exemplify different levels of tazkiyah and healing or its opposite, showing how zakat is related to the level of consciousness rather than rituals or words alone.

Moses and the boy: Zakat as Initial Innocence

In the story of the good servant and Moses, peace be upon him, a seemingly innocent boy is killed, and Moses denounces this act by saying:

{You killed an innocent life without a life}
[Al-Kahf: 74]

The description of the boy as “Zaki” refers to his initial state, as he has not yet developed the human soul capable of distinguishing between immorality and piety. He is still in the state of “innocence of nature”, he has not yet entered the battle of consciousness, and has not yet activated negative or positive emotions. This justifies the decision of the “good servant” later when he said:

{We feared that they would become arrogant and disbelieving, so We wanted to replace them with something better from their Lord, something more merciful and closer to Him}.
[Al-Kahf: 80-81]

Zakat here is understood as a future horizon for a human soul that may be more capable of mercy and piety.

Arabians and hypocrites: Zakat between repentance and pretense

An important example that highlights tazkiyah as a process that depends on sincerity and gradualism is the account in Surah Taubah of people who “confessed their sins” and “mixed good and bad deeds”:

{Take from their wealth an alms that will purify and purify them}
[Repentance: 103]

Those on the road to recovery, self-recognition, and an honest experience of moving from corruption to purity, and zakat is a way to support them on this path.

On the other hand, others who claim to have “purified themselves,” but practice shirk and lying, are exposed:

{Have you not seen those who make themselves rich, but Allah makes whomever He wills}
[Women: 49]

PZakat is not by outward pretense, but by the sincerity of inner transformation And freeing oneself from the steps of Satan.

The Affik incident: The Conflict of Consciousness in the Prophet’s Community

The Ifk incident is a profoundly dramatic scene that highlights how negative emotions (shame, slander, misconception, rumor…) can interact to produce a collective decline in consciousness. However, the verses that followed this incident reveal that this fall would not have been possible without the intervention of divine mercy:

{Were it not for the grace and mercy of Allah, none of you would ever have made any of you wealthy.}
[Al-Noor: 21]

This expression is decisive: Zakat can only be obtained by God’s grace and mercy, and it means not only purification from rumors, but also healing from the negative emotions that fueled this sedition.

Kufr and polytheism as a sign of lack of zakat

The Qur’an links disbelief and refusal to give zakat, emphasizing that the lack of self-cultivation is a direct result of following the path of the leviathan:

{Woe to the polytheists, who do not pay the zakat, and in the hereafter they are disbelievers.}
[Faslat: 6-7]

In this context, refraining from zakat is not read as a financial stance, but as an existential stance stemming from a closed consciousness and lack of healing.

Giving: Pre-zakat giving

In the Qur’anic discourse, the concepts of alms-givingand zakatare clearly intertwined, but with a subtle difference: “giving” is the outward and direct act, while “zakat” is the final outcome of this giving, when it produces a psychological and spiritual effect within. Thus, it can be considered a behavioral prelude, while zakat is the inner fruit of this act, i.e. the process of healing and upliftment that occurs in the soul as a result of a sincere awareness of giving.

The Qur’anic Context

The context in which the verb “came” is used varies, indicating material and moral gifts. For example:

  • Giving money: {{and they pay zakat}
  • Giving the Book: {Those to whom we gave the Book}
  • Giving Wisdom: {Whoever receives wisdom, he has received a great deal of good}
  • Giving verses: {And we gave them of the signs in which there is a clear affliction}
  • Receiving mercy: {Lord, grant us from Yourself a mercy}

This diversity indicates that It goes beyond money to include knowledge, understanding, guidance, compassion, mercy, and experience This makes zakat not only a product of spending money, but of every act that is given consciously, sincerely, and unselfishly.

Zakat as an outcome of purposeful giving

With this understanding, zakat becomes the giving of something – money, knowledge, time, effort, charity – that results in the purification and elevation of the soul. Not all giving leads to zakat, but only that which stems from a positive feeling, sincere intention, and awareness of moral responsibility towards oneself and others.

{Those who give what they have received and their hearts are fearful that they will return to their Lord.}
[Believers: 60]

Here it is clear that giving alone is not enough, unless it is accompanied by fear and sincerity, i.e. a heartfelt presence that prepares the soul for zakat.

The logic of “iyat-zakat”: From Outside to Inside

Giving is a bridge between outward behavior and inward growth. Spending in the way of God, or giving in any form, is an outward practice, but if done in the context of proper awareness, it produces zakat, a healing of selfishness, a transcendence of possessiveness, and freedom from fear and anxiety.

This meaning is evident in the prayer of the people of the cave:

{O Lord, grant us mercy from Yourself, and make our affairs wise}
[Al-Kahf: 10]

They ask for the “giving” of mercy, and for “rationalization,” the inner transformation that makes for true zakat.

Zakat: A departure from the path of the leviathan to the path of God

The Qur’an presents the concept of zakat in the context of an existential struggle between two paths: The Way of God and the Way of the Leviathan. This juxtaposition is not only concerned with behavior or belief, but extends to the structure of the human psyche and the levels of consciousness that govern it. Zakat, from this perspective, is A natural result of a cumulative process of rejecting the steps of Satan, transcending fallen emotions, and walking toward the realms of light, peace, and wisdom .

Leviathan and the steps of Satan: Lower Levels of Consciousness

The verses describe those who follow the steps of Satan as living in a state of obscenity and denial:

{O you who believe, do not follow the footsteps of the devil, and whoever follows the footsteps of the devil, he commands obscenity and abomination}
[Al-Noor: 21]

These steps, according to the researcher’s division, correspond to emotions such as: Envy, envy, miserliness, arrogance, lying, blind dependence… These feelings produce a low level of consciousness that destroys the soul and society, and promotes tyranny and obliviousness.

God’s way: Ascending to higher levels of consciousness

In contrast, the “Way of God” is presented as an ascending path towards peace, wisdom, light, truth and love. It is the path of true tazkiyah, which God takes care of for His servants:

{Were it not for Allah’s kindness and mercy toward you, none of you would ever be able to make anyone of you wealthy, but Allah makes whomever He wills}.
[Al-Noor: 21]

Zakat, here, is not only a voluntary act, it is A divine gift given to those who sincerely follow the path of guidance and strive to free themselves from the dependence of Satan. .

Quran: The source of guidance and healing

This concept intersects with the function of the Qur’an as defined by God:

{Say it is guidance and healing for those who believe}
[Faslat: 44].

{And We send down from the Qur’an what is healing and mercy for the believers}
[Al-Israa: 82]

{An exhortation has come to you from your Lord and healing for what is in your hearts}
[Yunus: 57].

The Qur’an is a clear map of the path of healing, a source that illuminates the path of zakat and helps the soul overcome the lower levels of consciousness.

Who doesn’t recommend: Loss of track

Whoever does not experience zakat is either a denier of the hereafter, a snob, or a follower of Satan’s footsteps, as in the words of Almighty Allah:

{Those who do not pay the zakat and are disbelievers in the hereafter.}
[Faslat: 7]

The absence of zakat is a sign of disconnection from the healing and uplifting methodology offered by the Quran, and an implicit expression of obliviousness and self-indulgence in the lower self.

Conclusion

Through this research, it becomes clear that the concept of zakat in the Holy Qur’ an goes far beyond the traditional jurisprudential framework that confined it to the circle of financial giving, to become a project of existential transformation of the human soul, starting from an internal purification and materializing in a gradual rise in the levels of consciousness, from the lowest states of negative feeling associated with oppression to the highest states of light, love, and peace for the sake of God.

The Qur’anic verses make it clear that zakat is the natural result of an inner healing processthat involves self-discipline, curbing desires, reviewing behavior, removing low emotions such as envy, miserliness, shame, and vanity, and cultivating the virtues of courage, honesty, wisdom, and love. In this way It’s not just a ritual or a slogan, but a deep experience of human transcendence It can only be realized through divine guidance and Quranic mercy.

The act of “giving” represents a first movement towards this path, but it is not sufficient in itself, unless it results in zakat, i.e. a transformation of the soul, an increase in feelings, and a manifestation of values in individual and social behavior.

Therefore, zakat should not only be understood as a financial obligation, but should be reinterpreted as a Qur’anic indicator of the level of healing the soul has attained. Whoever leaves the path of the juggernaut for the path of God is in fact “zakatizing himself,” and whoever zakatizes himself, God zakatizes him, and it is He who said:

{Whoever purifies himself has succeeded, and whoever defiles himself has failed}
[Sun: 9-10]

الاستاذ خالد الزاحم

الأستاذ خالد الزاحم باحث مهتم بالدراسات القرءانية، كرّس سنوات طويلة في تحليل نص القرءان الكريم، ونشر العديد من المقالات المتخصصة في البحث القرءاني، حيث يتميز بأسلوب دقيق ورؤية عميقة تسعى إلى فهم النص وفق سياق النظم القرآني الداخلي.

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