In Sura Israa, Allah says: "Do not go near zina. It is an indecency and an evil path." (17:32)
Notice the wording. The verse does not say: Do not commit zina.
It says: Do not go near it.
The Qur'an addresses pathways, not just final acts. Moral collapse rarely begins with a dramatic decision. It begins with proximity:
A look.
A message.
A private conversation.
Secrecy.
Rationalization.
Allah blocks the first step.
Psychology confirms this wisdom. Behaviour follows a loop:
Cue → Craving → Behaviour → Reward.
When we repeatedly expose ourselves to triggers, desire intensifies and judgment narrows. In that moment, willpower is fragile.
A "bright line" is a clear, non-negotiable boundary. Research shows 100% rules are often easier than 90% ones. Clear limits reduce decision fatigue and prevent negotiation at moments of weakness.
Ramadan itself is a bright line. Not "eat moderately." But: no food or drink from fajr to maghrib.
The verse ends: "…and it is an evil path." A path implies steps.
Islam protects not just modesty, but family stability, attachment, and social trust.
Reflection:
Where do I usually slip?
What are my high-risk contexts?
What bright line can I draw to protect myself?
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