A practice of consulting your inner moral witness to evaluate whether economic choices align with reason and justice, preventing rationalization of excess.
Zera Yacob emphasized that each person possesses an inner capacity to distinguish right from wrong through reason and conscience. This 'internal witness' is not intuition or feeling, but a rational faculty that holds us accountable. Applied to sufficiency, the conscience check is a practical discipline: before pursuing additional income or accumulation, pause and ask yourself honestly whether this serves reason and justice or merely feeds desire. Does this choice respect others' dignity? Would I want everyone to behave this way? Am I rationalizing excess as necessity? Yacob's tradition suggests this inner consultation is more reliable than external rules or market signals. It transforms sufficiency from a number into a practice—a continuous, conscious alignment of economic behavior with your own deepest rational convictions. This concept acknowledges that knowing enough intellectually differs from honoring enough in practice; the conscience check bridges that gap through regular self-examination.
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