The Quran Verses
Surah 58:11–12:
O you who have believed, when you are told, 'Make space in assemblies,' then make space; Allah will make space for you... O you who have believed, when you consult the Messenger, offer something in charity before your consultation (najwākum)...
The Assembly Etiquette: Verse 11 details how followers must physically make room for newcomers or elite companions when sitting in Muhammad's crowded presence.
The Pay-to-Play Tax: Verse 12 takes this control a step further, mandating a literal consultation fee: if a follower wants to have a private, one-on-one meeting (Najwa) with Muhammad, they are scripturally required to pay a financial tax (charity) beforehand.
The Strategic Abrogation: According to early commentators, this "consultation tax" caused immediate outrage and a severe drop-off in visitors, as only the wealthy elite (like Ali ibn Abi Talib) could afford to speak privately with the Prophet. Realizing the rule was alienating his base and choking off his intelligence pipeline, the author issued Verse 13 in the exact same sitting, completely canceling and abrogating the tax before the ink on the previous verse was even dry.
The Critique: To a political analyst, this swift legislative flip-flop exposes a human ruler fine-tuning a fiscal policy in real-time. It completely undermines the claim of an omniscient, all-wise divine lawmaker, revealing instead a highly reactive governance model adjusting to the shifting financial and social tolerances of its subjects.