Inner dimensions of Zakat
Imam Abu Hamid Al-Ghazali
Certain inward attitudes and duties are incumbent on those who
seek, through the payment of Zakat, that which leads to good in the Hereafter:
1. Knowing Zakat's purpose and significance
To
understand the necessity of paying Zakat, how it represents a test of
character, and why it has been made one of the fundamentals of Islam, even
though it is a financial transaction and not a physical? act of worship.
Three
points deserve consideration here:
(a) Testing the degree of love for Allah
To
pronounce the two sentences of the Confession of Faith(Shahada) ("There is
no God but Allah-Mohammad is God's Messenger") is obligatory as
affirmation of the Divine Unity and testimony to the singleness of the?One to
Whom all worship is due.
Complete
fulfillment of this obligation requires that he who affirms the Divine Unity
should direct his love to none but the One, the Unique.
There
is little value in mere verbal affirmation.The degree of love is tested only by
separating the lover from other things he loves.
Worldly
goods are an object of love in everybody's eyes, being the means by which they
enjoy the benefits of this world. Because of them, we become attached to life
and shy away from death, even though death leads us to meet the Beloved
(Allah).
The
truth of our claim to love God is therefore put to the test, and we are asked
to give up the wealth which is the apple our eye.
That
is why Allah said: "God has bought from the believers their persons and their
goods,
Paradise
being theirs for the price " (part of Quran: 9:111).
Allah
also says that true piety means giving away one's wealth, in spite of love for
it, to close relatives, orphans, the wayfarer and beggars, and for the
emancipation of slaves (see Quran 2: 177) .
(b) The elimination of miserliness
The
Divine decree by which Allah bids His servants to spend their wealth, is also
significant? in purging the habit of miserliness, which is a deadly sin.
"And
whosoever is saved from his own covetousness, such are they who will be the
successful" (Quran 59:9).
The
habit of miserliness is only eliminated by making oneself accustomed to
spending money, for to break an attachment one must force oneself away till a
new habit is found.
The
purity he acquires is in proportion to his expenditure, to his delight?in
giving away and to his joy in spending for the sake of Allah.
(c) Expression of gratitude
The
third factor is gratitude for benefits received, for the servant is indebted to
Allah for personal and material bounties
2. Payment of Zakat at the proper time
The
second duty with regards to Zakat concerns the time of payment .
A
good practice is to anticipate the moment when payment is due.
This
demonstrates a willingness to comply by bringing joy to the hearts of poor,
forestalling the obstacles time might place in the way of charitable action,
being aware that there are dangers in delaying payment, as the servant runs the
risk of disobedience should he or she postpone beyond the appointed moment.
Whenever
the impulse to good arises from within,the opportunity must be grasped at once
as the believers heart lies between the two fingers of the All-Merciful. Yet
how fickle is the heart! The devil threatens poverty and bids us to commit
atrocious and abominable deeds.
Demonic
suggestion follows hard on the heels of angelic inspiration. One should
therefore seize the opportunity and fix a definite month for giving Zakat (if
one is used to paying it all at once.)
One
should endeavor to choose one of the most opportune times to pay Zakat,
resulting in more closeness to Allah and compounding the value of the Zakat.
One
such favorable time would be month of Muharram, since it is the first month of
the Islamic year and one of the sacred months. Another is Ramadan.
3. Give In Secret
The
third duty is secrecy, for this is farthest removed from hypocritical display
and reputation-seeking.
Allah
says, "If you disclose your Sadaqat (alms giving), it is well, but if you
conceal it, and give it to the poor, that is better for you. (Allah) will
forgive you some of your sins. And Allah is Well-Acquainted with what you
do" (Quran 2:271).
According
to one Hadith, the Prophet said, "Seven people will be shaded under Allah's
Throne on the Day on which there will be no other shade: (1) a just ruler, (2)
a young person who worships Almighty Allah, (3) a person whose heart is
attached to Masajid, (4) two people who love one another for the sake of Allah,
and who come together and part for His sake, (5) a man who is called by a
beautiful woman of good family, but refuses her, saying ?I fear Allah', (6) a
person who gives his money in charity so secretly that his left hand does not
know what his right hand gives, and (7) someone who remembers Allah privately,
so that his eyes brim with tears." (Bukhari, Muslim).
According
to one of the scholars, " Three things are accounted among the treasures
of righteousness, one of them being to give Alms in secret."
Whenever
fame is the donor's objective, his work will be in vain, since the purpose of
alms giving is to eliminate miserliness and to weaken the love of wealth. But
the love of status has a stronger hold over the soul than the love of wealth,
and both of them have deadly consequences in the Hereafter.
4. Give openly
The
fourth duty, when one knows that such conduct will tend to encourage others to
follow suit, is to let one's giving be seen.
In
doing so, however, one must be inwardly on guard against hypocritical motives.
Apart
from the expectation of gratitude and the risk of hypocrisy, there is another
danger in visible alms giving, namely that of offending a poor man's dignity.
It may be hurtful to him to be seen to be needy.
But
someone who begs in public is bringing the disgrace upon himself; there is
therefore no sense in being wary.
5. Avoid Taunting and Hurting
The
fifth duty is not to invalidate one's alms giving through taunting and hurting.
As
Allah said, "Do not make your Alms giving void by taunting and
hurting."(part of Quran 2: 264).
Taunting
is reminding a person of a favor, while hurt lies in making it known. According
to others taunting is to exploit a person in return of a gift, while hurt lies
in making him feel ashamed of his poverty.
Still
others say that taunting means making one's gift an excuse for arrogant
behavior.
One
should therefore realize that giving alms is actually paying Allah,Great and
Glorious is He, what is due, while the poor person is actually receiving his
sustenance from Allah.
Anyone
who grasps the significance of the three points mentioned above while
discussing the purpose and importance of the Zakat, or even one of them,
realizes that he is a benefactor only to himself , through spending his wealth
either to demonstrate his love of Allah or to purge himself or herself of the
voice miserliness, or to give thanks for the blessing of wealth in the hope of
receiving more.
6. Adopt humility
The
sixth duty to think little of one's donation, for to regard it highly is to
invite that pride which is one of the deadly sins, making good deeds worthless.
It
must be recognized that ten of two and-a-half percent is a tiny fraction, and
that to pay only this is to content oneself with the least generous level of
expense as we have explained above.
This
is something to be ashamed of rather to boast about. Even if one rose to the
highest level, disbursing all or most of one's wealth, one should still reflect
on where it came from in the first place, and for what purpose it is being
spent.
For
all wealth belongs to Allah. It is to Him that one should be grateful for for
being given it and being enabled to spend it, so why pride ourselves on
spending for the sake of Allah when it is actually His property?
And,
if one's situation is such that one must look to the Hereafter, spending for
the sake of spiritual reward, why boast of giving what one expects to receive
many many times over?
As
for action, one's giving should be done with a sense of shame at one's meanness
in holding back the rest of one's wealth from God, Great and Glorious is He.
One's
demeanor should be humble and abashed, like that of someone who is asked to
hand back a deposit but returns only part of it and holds on the rest.
For
all wealth belongs to Allah and He would prefer to see us give all we possess.
If He has not commanded His servant to do so, it is only because that would be
too hard on them by reason of their greed.
As
Allah says: "If He were to ask you of it, and press you, you would
covetously withhold, and he will bring out all your (secret) ill wills'"
(Quran 47:37).
7. Give the best and the dearest
The
seventh duty is to select from one's wealth what is best and dearest to one:
the finest and most excellent part, for God,exalted is He. Allah is good and
accepts only what is good.
If
the offering has been acquired by dubious means, it may not strictly belong to
the donor and will then be disqualified.
"O
you who believe! Spend of the good things which you have (legally) earned, and
of that which We have produced from the earth for you, and do not aim at that
which is bad to spend from it, (though) you would not accept it save if you
close your eyes and tolerate therein. And know that Allah is Rich, and worthy
of all praise." (Quran 2:267).
8. Seek the Worthy and Deserving
The
eighth duty is to seek out the truly worthy recipient for one's offering
(Sadaqa), rather than be content?with just anybody who happens to fall within
the eight categories of legally qualified beneficiaries.
For
among those generally eligible there are some with special qualities. Attention
should be paid to these five qualities:
First,
one should seek out those pious people who have renounced the world and devoted
themselves exclusively to the business of the Hereafter.
Second,
the recipient should be chosen from among the people of learning, to support
him in his quest for knowledge. Learning is the noblest form of worship, so
long as it is based on right intention.
Third,
the recipient should be a person who kept his need to himself, not being given
to fuss and complaint.
Fourth,
the recipient should be someone with a large family or disabled by illness or
some other cause.
Fifth,
the recipient should be a close relative, whether paternal or maternal.
Each
of these points should therefore be taken into consideration, for they
represent the desired qualities. Within each quality there are further
gradations, so one ought to seek the highest .
If
anyone can be found in whom all these qualities are combined, that is the
greatest treasure and the supreme prize. If one does one's best and succeeds,
one gets a double reward, but even if one fails, there is still a single reward
for the effort.
Excerpted from Imam
Al-Ghazali's "Innner Dimensions of Islamic Worship".
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