Overcoming Envy
Overcoming Envy

Overcoming Envy

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<p>In the film <em>Amadeus,</em> aging composer Antonio Salieri plays some of his music on the piano for a visiting priest. The embarrassed priest confesses he doesn&rsquo;t recognize the tunes. &ldquo;What about this one?&rdquo; Salieri says, playing an instantly familiar melody. &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know you wrote <em>that</em>,&rdquo; the priest says. &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; Salieri replies. &ldquo;That was Mozart!&rdquo; As viewers discover, Mozart&rsquo;s success has caused deep envy in Salieri&mdash;even leading him to play a part in Mozart&rsquo;s death.</p> <p>A song lies at the heart of another envy story. After David&rsquo;s victory over Goliath, the Israelites heartily sing, &ldquo;Saul has slain his thousands, and David his tens&nbsp;of thousands&rdquo; (1 Samuel 18:7). The comparison doesn&rsquo;t sit well with King Saul. Envious of David&rsquo;s success and afraid of losing his throne (vv. 8&ndash;9), Saul begins a prolonged pursuit of David, trying to take his life.</p> <p>Like Salieri with music or Saul with power, we&rsquo;re usually tempted to envy those with similar but greater gifts than we possess. And whether it&rsquo;s picking fault with their work or belittling their success, we too can seek to damage our &ldquo;rivals.&rdquo;</p> <p>Saul had been divinely chosen for his task (10:6&ndash;7, 24), a status that should&rsquo;ve fostered security in him rather than envy. Since we each have unique callings too (Ephesians 2:10), maybe the best way to overcome envy is to quit comparing ourselves. Let&rsquo;s celebrate each other&rsquo;s successes instead.</p>

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