It is extravagance, and it is prohibited based on the saying of the Almighty: "Indeed, the wasteful are brothers of the devils."
: 13250: Tabthir (wastefulness): 3: Al-Manthur: (5/275-277).
: 13251: Allah: 4: Al-Manthur: (5/275-277).
: 13252: Gentle (maysuran): 5: Regarding the saying of the Almighty: "...then speak to them a gentle word," He commanded him to pray for them, meaning: make their poverty easy for them through your prayer for them. It is also said: Invoke for them a supplication that includes opening and rectification.
: 13253: His due (haqquhu): 6: Al-Manthur: (5/276-277).
: 13254: In you (fik): 7: Al-Manthur: (5/276-277).
2327: 13255: Religion (din): 1: Al-Manthur: (5/276).
: 13256: The Verse (al-ayah): 2: The previous source.
: 13257: Shackled (maghlulah): 3: Al-Qurtubi said in the exegesis of this verse: This is a metaphor used to express stinginess, where a person is unable to bring anything out of his wealth from his heart, so a likeness is struck for him of a shackle that prevents the hand from acting. In Sahih al-Bukhari and Muslim, on the authority of Abu Hurayrah (may Allah be pleased with him), who said: "The Messenger of Allah (may Allah bless him and grant him peace) struck a parable of the miser and the charitable person as two men wearing iron coats of mail, their hands constrained to their chests and collarbones. Whenever the charitable person gives charity, it expands for him until it covers his fingertips and effaces his tracks; and whenever the miser intends to give charity, it shrinks, and every ring [of the mail] takes its place." Tafsir al-Qurtubi: (6/3866).