What happens when “doing religion right” starts to feel like anxiety, guilt, or a constant inner audit? In this conversation, Dr. Adnan A. Zulfiqar explores the meeting point between Islamic law, ethics, and mental health—and offers a more grounded, spacious way to think about moral responsibility, shame, and returning to faith.
Dr. Zulfiqar shares his personal path into Islamic studies, and why Islamic tradition can’t be reduced to a rigid checklist. We talk about how guilt and shame shape the inner life, how people get distanced from Allah through fear-based religious experiences, and what it means to create compassionate “pathways back” for those who feel overwhelmed.
Throughout, he invites listeners to approach sacred knowledge with humility, nuance, and the willingness to learn from diverse teachers and perspectives.
In this episode, we explore:
Why Islamic tradition is deeper than rules—and how ethics sits at its heart
Moral responsibility, uncertainty, and what we do with our imperfections
The psychological weight of guilt and shame—and how it can distort faith
How people become spiritually distant (and what helps them return)
What a flexible, honest relationship with Islamic law can look like
The value of seeking teachers who widen the heart, not tighten it
If this episode resonatedShare it with someone who feels exhausted by “religion as pressure,” and take one gentle step: seek a teacher, a community, or a reading that brings you back to mercy.
You can find Dr Adnan on:
https://www.bc.edu/bc-web/schools/law/academics-faculty/faculty-directory/adnan-zulfiqar.html
You can find me on:
Website: https://nouraamkieh.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nafsandtherapy