Bukhl al‑qalb to Wuss‘at al‑qalb
True reliance upon Allah is not a passive state; it is a living force that shapes the inner condition of the heart. In the well-known supplication of the Holy Prophet(sa), he sought refuge not only from anxiety and grief, but also from incapacity, laziness, cowardice, and miserliness. The pairing of al‑jubn (cowardice) and al‑bukhl (miserliness) is deeply instructive. It suggests that miserliness is not merely a financial flaw, but a symptom of a deeper spiritual weakness: fear. A heart constrained (bukhl al‑qalb) is often one gripped by insecurity and distrust, whisperings rooted in satanic influence that make a person fear loss instead of trusting divine provision.
The Qur’an repeatedly redirects the believer away from this fear-based mindset toward trust and expansive reliance on Allah. As Allah states:
“And whoever puts his trust in Allah, He is sufficient for him” (At Talaq 65:4).
This verse establishes a profound principle: reliance on Allah is not abstract. It is the very means through which divine sufficiency manifests in one’s life.
Financial sacrifice becomes the most tangible expression of this trust. When a believer gives in the way of Allah, they are, in essence, declaring that their sustenance does not come from what they hold back, but from the One who provides without measure. The Prophet(sa) emphasized this spiritual reality when he said that charity does not decrease wealth; rather, it increases it in unseen and lasting ways.
The Promised Messiah(as) explained this principle with great clarity, teaching that true faith requires a person to place complete trust in Allah, even in matters of material sacrifice. He emphasized that those who spend in the way of Allah do not diminish their provision; rather, they draw closer to the fountains of divine grace, for Allah Himself becomes their sustainer.
Thus, faith itself becomes the currency of divine reserves. The more a believer relies upon Allah, the more doors of mercy and provision are opened. Trust (tawakkul) is the capital of the believer, and its returns are not limited to the material realm, they extend into spiritual contentment, courage, and inner expansion (wus‘at al‑qalb).
When this realization takes root, one understands that the quality of faith directly shapes the measure of divine blessings received. A fearful, constricted heart limits itself, while a trusting heart that is freed from cowardice and miserliness becomes a vessel for divine abundance.