I have written about envy before and have referred
to it as “the lost sin.” Envy is a sin I am prone to, though I feel like it is
one of those sins I have battled hard against and, as I’ve battled, experienced
a lot of God’s grace. It is not nearly as prevalent in my life as it once was.
Recently, though, I felt it threatening to rear its ugly head again and spent a
bit of time reflecting on it. Here are three brief observations about envy.
Envy is Competitive
I am a competitive person and I believe it is this
competitive streak that allows envy to make its presence felt in my life. Envy
is a sin that makes me feel resentment or anger or sadness because another
person has something or another person is something that I want for myself.
Envy makes me aware that another person has some advantage, some good thing,
that I want for myself. And there’s more: Envy makes me want that other person
not to have it. This means that there are at least three evil components to
envy: the deep discontent that comes when I see that another person has what I
want; the desire to have it for myself; and the desire for it to be taken from
him.
Do you see it? Envy always competes. Envy demands
that there is always a winner and a loser. And envy almost always suggests that
I, the envious person, am the loser.
Envy Always Wins
Envy always wins, and if envy wins, I lose. Here’s
the thing about envy: If I get that thing I want, I lose, because it will only
generate pride and idolatry within me. I will win that competition I have
created, and become proud of myself. Envy promises that if I only get that
thing I want, I will finally be satisfied, I will finally be content. But that
is a lie. If I get that thing, I will only grow proud. I lose.
On the other hand, if I do not get what I want, if
I lose that competition, I am prone to sink into depression or despair. Envy
promises that if I do not get that thing I want, my life is not worth living
because I am a failure. Again, I lose.
In both cases, I lose and envy wins. Envy always
wins, unless I put that sin to death.
Envy Divides
Envy divides people who ought to be allies. Envy
drives people apart who ought to be able to work closely together. Envy is
clever in that it will cause me to compare myself to people who are a lot like
me, not people who are unlike me. I am unlikely to envy the sports superstar or
the famous musician because the distance between them and me is too great. Instead,
I am likely to envy the pastor who is right down the street from me but who has
a bigger congregation or nicer building; I am likely to envy the writer whose
books or blog are more popular than mine. Where I should be able to work with
these people based on similar interests and similar desires, envy will instead
drive me away from them. Envy will make them my competitors and my enemies
rather than my allies and co-laborers.
What’s the cure for envy? I can’t say it better
than Charles Spurgeon: “The cure for envy lies in living under a constant sense
of the divine presence, worshiping God and communing with Him all the day long,
however long the day may seem. True religion lifts the soul into a higher
region, where the judgment becomes more clear and the desires are more
elevated. The more of heaven there is in our lives, the less of earth we shall
covet. The fear of God casts out envy of men.”
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