Envy is a nasty disease of the heart that leads to bad conduct and behavior, all of which are sins and evils.
Envy
leads to animosity, evil thinking about others' intentions, backbiting,
spreading rumors, lying, turning back on each other's, parting with bad
terms, it may also lead the envious person to inflict physical damage
with the envied person and even murder may Allah forbid. It is a bad
seed for a terrible tree of diseases.
For
this reason, the scholars consider it from among the most dangerous,
destructive, inner diseases, and the most destructive for deen and worldly life. The Islamic ruling of envy is haram (prohibited); the degree of prohibition differs depending on the sins that result from it.
For this reason, the messenger of Allah (S.A.W.) forbade us in the authentic hadeeth that is reported by Imams Bukhari and Muslim, "Do
not envy one another and do not hate one another, and do not turn your
back on one another (in discontent) and be the servants of Allah like
brothers."
Allah
(S.W.T.) also ordered his prophet Muhammad (S.A.W.) and all the
believers to seek refuge from the evil of the envious person and envy,
so He says in surat Al-Falaq, what can be translated as, "Say: ‘I seek refuge with (Allah) the Lord of the day-break," and at the end of the surah He then says, "And from the evil of the envier when he envies."
The definition of Envy: Envy
means that you hate a blessing that Allah blessed someone with and like
for it to go away, and if you could make it go away, you would do that.
And
if you do not hate it and do not like for it to go away but you would
like for yourself something similar to it, then this is a possessive
desire that leads to competition; both of which are good and
commendable.
Sometimes the word Envy is used to tell of the strong possessive desire as mentioned in an authentic hadeeth, reported by Imams Bukhari and Muslim, "It
is not worth it, to envy anyone except in two cases. A man that Allah
blessed with money and he spent it righteously, and a man that Allah
blessed with knowledge and he implemented it in himself, and has taught
it to others."
So,
competition in the good avenues is commendable. Allah (S.W.T.), after
He mentioned to us the paradise and its everlasting blessings, says in surat Al-Mutaffiffeen, (Verse 26), what can be translated as, "And in this, let the competitors compete."
Allah (S.W.T.) scolded envy and its bad results in the Qur'an in many places, among which:
1- Many
from the people of the book, after they knew Islam was the truth,
envied the believers for the blessing of belief and guidance and wished
it could go away from them. Allah (S.W.T.) says in suratAl-Baqarah, (Verse 109), what can be translated as, "Many of the people of the Book (Jews and Christians) wish
that they could turn you away as disbelievers after you have believed,
out of envy from their ownselves, even, after the truth has become
manifest unto them."
2- Also,
one who reads the story of Prophet Yousuf (peace be upon him) and his
brothers, realizes the danger of envy upon the envious person, and how
it blinds his sight and takes away mercy from his heart, and drives him
to inflict physical pain on the envied person. Allah (S.W.T.) says in surat Yousuf, (Verse 8 & 9), what can be translated as, "When they said: Truly, Joseph and his brother are loved more by our father than we, but we are usbah (a strong group)." Then, they said, "Kill
Joseph or cast him out to some other land, so that the favor of your
father may be given to you alone, and after that you will be righteous
folk." Then, how they deceived their fathers to take Yousuf and
throw him in the well, then how they lied to their father that the wolf
ate Yousuf, and to reinforce their deceit, they came with fake blood on
Yousuf's shirt.
3- The Qur'an told
us about the first son of Adam who killed his brother because of envy,
and it was the first blood letting crime on the face of the earth. He
envied him because Allah accepted his brother's sacrifice but did not
accept it from him. He (S.W.T.) says in surat Al-Ma’eedah, (Verse 27, 28 & 30), what can be translated as,
"And (O Muhammad) recite to them the story of the two sons of Adam in truth; when each offered a sacrifice (to Allah),
it was accepted from the one but not from the other. The latter said to
the former: "I will surely kill you." The former said: "Verily, Allah
accepts only from those who are the pious. If you do stretch your hand
against me to kill me, I shall never stretch my hand against you to kill
you, for I fear Allah; the Lord of the Alamin."Then Allah said, "So the Nafs (self) of the other (latter one) encouraged him and made fair-seeming to him the murder of his brother; he murdered him and became one of the losers."
The medicine of envy:
Imam Al-Ghazali, may Allah have mercy on him, said in his book (Al-Ihya') after a number of pages on envy and its dangers, "Be
aware that envy is one of the most dangerous diseases of the hearts,
and there is no medicine for the diseases of the heart except with
knowledge and deeds.
As
to the knowledge that treats the disease of envy is to know without any
doubt that envy is dangerous for you in this worldly life and in
your deen, and there is no danger from it on the envied person in this
life nor in his deen, on the contrary, the envied person will benefit
from it.
The
fact is envy is dangerous for your deen because with envy, you hated
Allah's predestination and hated his blessings that He divided among his
servants, and you hated His justice that He established in His world
for a wisdom, so you contested that and objected it, and this is against
the true oneness and belief. In addition to that, you would have shared
with Iblees and the rest of the non-believers with their love for the
crises to fall upon the believers and for the blessings to go away from
them. These are evils in the heart that eat up the good deeds and erase
them like the night erase the day.
And
the fact that envy is dangerous upon your worldly life is that because
you suffer from your envy in this life and you are tortured by it, and
you will always be in sorrows every time you see the blessing of Allah
(S.W.T.) on the envied person."
And
as to the deeds that would treat envy, you should control yourself, so
everything that you did in the process of your envy for someone else
like any saying or action, you should now strive to do the opposite; if
envy had driven you to say something bad about your envied person, then
strive to make your tongue complement him, and if it had driven you to
look down upon him, then act with humility and apologize to him, and if
it had driven you to stop doing good things for the envied person, you
should push yourself to do good things for him.
Then, Imam Al-Ghazali said: "These
are the medicines for envy, and they are very effective, but they are
bitter on the hearts, but the effectiveness is in the bitter medicine,
so whosoever cannot be patient with the bitterness of medicine cannot
get the sweetness of the cure."
Remember the story of Abdullah Bin Amru Bnil Oass and the man that the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said, "A man will come up to you from the people of paradise." (He
repeated this everyday for three days). The same man came every time,
and Abdullah slept at this man's house to find out about what he does to
deserve paradise....
Later,
Abdullah almost belittled this man's deeds because they are not too
much, then he asked about what he does, so the man said, "It is not
except what you have seen, but I do not have for any Muslim in my heart
any deceit, or envy for good that Allah (S.W.T.) Has blessed him with.
Abdullah, then, said: I said to this man: This is what got you to
paradise." (Reported by Imam Ahmad with authentic chain of narrators.)
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