Introduction: The Scroll That Never Ends
A client sits across from me and describes something she cannot name. She is not depressed, not anxious in the clinical sense. She has a good marriage, a stable job, two healthy children. And yet, every time she opens Instagram after a family gathering, something tightens in her chest. The photos of a friend's new home. A cousin's vacation in Turkey. A colleague's promotion announcement adorned with congratulatory comments. She knows she should feel happy for them. She wants to feel happy for them. But what she feels instead is a quiet corrosion: a sense that their gain has somehow diminished her.
This is not a clinical disorder. It is something older and more pervasive. It is hasad (حسد): envy, the soul's imprisonment.
The distinction between cultural competence and cultural utilization is critical here. Cultural competence asks clinicians to understand their Muslim clients' backgrounds. Cultural utilization asks a deeper question: what if the Islamic tradition has already diagnosed this condition with a precision that Western psychology is only beginning to approximate? What if the theology is not a supplementary resource but the primary framework, with clinical research serving as the corroborating witness?
I posit that hasad, as described in the Qur'an, the narrations of the Ahl al-Bayt (A.S.), and the ethical literature of the Islamic tradition, constitutes not merely a moral vice but a comprehensive psychological diagnosis: one that identifies the cognitive mechanism (comparison), the affective experience (resentment of divine apportionment), the spiritual pathology (disconnection from trust in God), and the restoration pathway (return to rida, contentment with God's decree). Social comparison theory, developed by Leon Festinger in 1954, describes the mechanism. Islamic tradition explains the wound beneath it.
How This Post is Structured
To build this argument, I move through four sections, each examining a distinct dimension of envy:
- Section 1 examines the clinical reality of social comparison and its psychological consequences
- Section 2 identifies where secular therapeutic models reach their limit
- Section 3 presents the Islamic tradition's comprehensive diagnosis of hasad
- Section 4 offers an integration protocol for clinicians working with Muslim clients
Each section follows a consistent structure: I first present the psychological lens, then the theological lens, and finally an integrative synthesis.
The Clinical Reality of Social Comparison
Contemporary research on social comparison, led by Festinger and expanded by scholars such as Susan Fiske and Jan Crusius, has established that human beings are cognitively wired to evaluate themselves against others. This is not pathology; it is how the brain orients itself in social space. Upward comparison (measuring oneself against those perceived as better off) can motivate growth. But it can also produce what researchers call malicious envy: the desire not merely to possess what the other has, but to see the other deprived of it.
A 2025 predictive study by Khatatbeh, Yassin, and Freihat examined the relationship between social comparison and both types of envy (benign and malicious) among social media users, finding that upward social comparison significantly predicted malicious envy, with social media frequency amplifying the effect. The mechanism is clear: the more frequently individuals engage in upward comparison on platforms designed to showcase curated highlights, the more likely they are to experience the corrosive form of envy that erodes well-being.
This is of particular concern for Muslim communities in the post-Eid period. Family gatherings, gift-giving, travel photos, and celebratory posts create a concentrated window of upward comparison. For anyone whose Eid was lonely, financially strained, or marked by family conflict, the Instagram feed becomes a gallery of perceived inadequacy.
A 2023 study by Khan and Shafiq on the role of Islam in promoting happiness and decreasing envy among social media users found that Islamic religiosity was negatively correlated with envy and positively correlated with subjective well-being. But this finding raises a question the researchers did not fully pursue: what, specifically, within the Islamic framework addresses envy at its root? Is it merely that religious people feel generally better, or does the tradition contain a targeted diagnostic and therapeutic mechanism?
The Limitation of Secular Models
Standard cognitive-behavioral approaches address envy through cognitive restructuring: identifying the distorted thought ("Her success means my failure"), challenging its evidence base, and replacing it with a more balanced cognition ("Her success has no bearing on my worth"). Gratitude interventions redirect attention from what is lacking to what is present. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) builds psychological flexibility, helping clients hold envy without acting on it.
These are valuable interventions. They manage the symptom. But they cannot answer the question that envy, at its deepest level, is actually asking: Why does that person have what I do not?
This is not a cognitive distortion. It is a theological question. And the secular framework, by design, has no answer for it. It can teach a client to defuse from the thought. It cannot explain why the distribution of blessings is what it is, or what posture the soul should adopt toward a reality it did not choose.
This is where the Islamic tradition offers something categorically different.
The Theological Foundation: Hasad as a Disease of the Soul
Before analyzing the clinical integration, we must understand what the Islamic tradition actually says about envy. The material is extensive, specific, and remarkably precise.
Defining Hasad
Hasad (حسد) is not simply "envy" in the colloquial English sense. In the ethical literature of the Ahl al-Bayt (A.S.), hasad denotes a specific spiritual state in which a person wishes for the deprivation of a blessing that Allah has granted to another. It is distinguished from ghibtah (غبطة), which is the desire to possess a similar blessing without wishing for the other person to lose theirs. Ghibtah is permissible; hasad is a disease.
Imam Ali (A.S.) makes this distinction in Nahj al-Balagha: "Jealousy of one's friend stems from weakness in one's love" (Saying 218, Subhi Saleh edition; Mizan al-Hikmah, no. 21). The statement is diagnostic: envy between friends does not indicate excess ambition but deficient love. The envious person's relational bond has weakened to the point where the friend's joy registers as a threat rather than a shared blessing.
The Qur'anic Foundation
The Qur'an addresses envy explicitly. In Surah al-Falaq (113:5), the believer seeks refuge "from the evil of the envier when he envies":
"And from the evil of the envier when he envies" (Surah al-Falaq, 113:5)
Envy is named alongside witchcraft and darkness as a force requiring divine protection. In Surah al-Nisa (4:54), Allah asks:
"Or do they envy the people for what Allah has given them of His grace?" (Surah al-Nisa, 4:54)
The framing is critical: envy is directed not at people but at God's distribution. The envious person's quarrel is ultimately with the divine.
The Sacred Hadith: Envy as Rebellion Against Divine Apportionment
The most precise diagnosis of envy in the Shia hadith tradition comes in a sacred hadith (hadith qudsi) recorded in Al-Kafi:
In a narration from Abu Abdillah (Imam al-Sadiq, A.S.), the Prophet (S.A.W.) said:
"Allah, Mighty and Exalted, said to Musa son of Imran (A.S.): 'O son of Imran! Neither should you envy the people upon what I have Given them from My Grace, nor should you extend your eyes towards that, and do not follow it yourself, for the envying one gets angered at My Bounties, blocks My Apportionment which I have Apportioned between My servants. And the one who is such as that, I am not from him and he is not from Me.'"
(Al-Kafi, Usul, Vol. 2, Kitab al-Iman wa al-Kufr, Bab al-Hasad [Chapter 122], Hadith #6. Hadith grading: Muwaththaq per al-Majlisi, Mir'at al-'Uqul; Hadith Qudsi.)
The theological precision here is extraordinary. Envy is defined as three concurrent pathologies:
- Anger at God's bounties (ghadib 'ala ni'ami): The envious person does not merely want what another has; they are angered by the fact that God gave it to someone else. This is an emotional posture directed at the divine, not at the human target.
- Blocking God's apportionment (saddun li qismati): The envious person's inner state constitutes a rejection of how God has distributed blessings among His servants. This is not a cognitive distortion; it is a spiritual rebellion.
- Severed relationship with God ("I am not from him and he is not from Me"): The consequence is not punishment as an external sanction but disconnection as a natural result. The soul that quarrels with divine distribution has placed itself outside the relationship of trust.
Envy Consumes Faith
The first two hadith in the same chapter establish the severity:
Imam al-Baqir (A.S.) said:
"The man comes to a sin hastily so he (gradually) disbelieves, but the envy consumes the Iman (so fast) just as the fire consumes the firewood."
(Al-Kafi, Usul, Vol. 2, Kitab al-Iman wa al-Kufr, Bab al-Hasad [Chapter 122], Hadith #1. Hadith grading: Sahih per al-Majlisi, Mir'at al-'Uqul.)
Imam al-Sadiq (A.S.) said:
"The envy consumes the Iman just as the fire consumes the firewood."
(Al-Kafi, Usul, Vol. 2, Kitab al-Iman wa al-Kufr, Bab al-Hasad [Chapter 122], Hadith #2. Hadith grading: Sahih per al-Majlisi, Mir'at al-'Uqul.)
The metaphor is not incidental. Fire does not merely damage wood; it transforms it into something categorically different. Envy does not merely weaken faith; it transmutes it. This is consistent with the broader body of narrations in the same chapter, including the parable of Prophet Isa (A.S.) and his companion (Hadith #3), where a man who walked on water alongside Isa (A.S.) sank the moment self-conceit and envy entered his heart. The envious thought did not produce a gradual decline; it produced immediate submersion.
The Prison Metaphor
Imam Ali (A.S.) offers what may be the most clinically resonant description of envy's phenomenology:
"Jealousy is the spirit's imprisonment."
(Ghurar al-Hikam, no. 372; cited in Mizan al-Hikmah)
And further:
"I have not seen a wrong-doer resemble a wronged person more than the jealous one: he has an exhausted spirit, a wandering heart, and an inherent sorrow."
(Bihar al-Anwar, Vol. 76, p. 256, no. 29; cited in Mizan al-Hikmah)
The clinical observation embedded here is remarkable. The envious person is simultaneously perpetrator and victim. Their spirit is exhausted (not energized, as one might expect of an aggressor), their heart wanders (it cannot settle, because contentment requires trust in divine distribution), and their sorrow is inherent (built into the condition itself, not caused by external events). This maps directly onto what positive psychology researchers describe as the paradox of envy: it produces suffering in the envier without conferring any benefit.
| Theological Concept | Clinical Parallel | Practical Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Hasad (حسد): malicious envy | Malicious envy (Crusius et al.) | Wanting the other deprived, not just wanting what they have |
| Ghibtah (غبطة): aspirational admiration | Benign envy (van de Ven et al.) | Wanting a similar blessing without ill-will |
| Anger at divine bounties | Upward social comparison + resentment | Quarreling with reality as distributed |
| Spirit's imprisonment | Rumination, reduced well-being | The envier suffers more than the envied |
| Consuming faith like fire | Erosion of meaning-making framework | Envy destroys the capacity for gratitude |
The Integration: What Clinicians and Believers Can Do
Having established how hasad functions in both Western psychology and Islamic theology, I now bring them together in a practical framework.
The Parable of Isa (A.S.) and the Companion: A Clinical Reading
The third hadith in Bab al-Hasad tells the story of Prophet Isa (A.S.) traveling with a short-statured companion who, seeing Isa (A.S.) walk on water, invoked the name of God and walked on water himself. But when the thought entered his heart ("This is Isa, the Spirit of God, walking on water, and I am walking on water; what is his merit over me?"), he immediately sank. Isa (A.S.) rescued him and said: "You had placed yourself in other than the place which God had placed you in, therefore God detested you upon what you said."
(Al-Kafi, Usul, Vol. 2, Kitab al-Iman wa al-Kufr, Bab al-Hasad [Chapter 122], Hadith #3. Hadith grading: Hasan per al-Majlisi, Mir'at al-'Uqul.)
The clinical reading is precise: the companion's error was not comparison itself (noticing the parallel between himself and Isa A.S.) but the evaluative conclusion he drew from it ("what is his merit over me?"). He repositioned himself in a station God had not placed him in. The consequence was not divine punishment but natural gravitational reality: the water could no longer hold someone who had abandoned the trust that made walking on it possible.
For clinicians, this offers a powerful therapeutic narrative. The question to explore with clients is not "How do I stop comparing?" (comparison is cognitively automatic) but "What am I concluding from the comparison, and does that conclusion honor where God has placed me?"
The Envy Diagnostic: Five Questions
Drawing from the hadith literature and clinical research, these five questions are designed for clinicians working with Muslim clients who present with envy-related distress:
- What specific blessing are you focused on? (Identifying the target of comparison)
- Do you want something similar for yourself, or do you want the other person to lose it? (Distinguishing ghibtah from hasad)
- When you imagine the other person losing this blessing, does that bring you relief? (Testing for malicious envy)
- Do you feel that God's distribution is unfair to you specifically? (Identifying anger at divine apportionment)
- Has this feeling affected your ability to feel grateful for what you have? (Assessing erosion of shukr)
Signs of Therapeutic Engagement vs. Warning Signs
| Signs of Healthy Processing | Warning Signs Requiring Attention |
|---|---|
| Client can identify the comparison trigger | Client denies any comparison but shows persistent resentment |
| Client distinguishes ghibtah from hasad | Client wishes harm on the envied person |
| Client connects envy to their relationship with God | Client frames the problem as entirely the other person's fault |
| Client reports moments of genuine joy for others | Client avoids all social media and gatherings to prevent exposure |
| Client engages in du'a for the envied person | Client's envy has generalized to multiple areas of life |
Integration Protocol: Seven Steps
For clinicians integrating Islamic and clinical approaches to envy:
1 Psychoeducation on social comparison
Normalize the cognitive automaticity of comparison. Explain upward and downward comparison. Reduce shame about having envious thoughts.
2 Theological distinction
Introduce hasad vs. ghibtah. Frame ghibtah as permissible and potentially motivating. Frame hasad as a condition requiring attention, not a character verdict.
3 Cognitive restructuring with theological grounding
When the client identifies an envious thought, the standard CBT challenge ("Is this thought evidence-based?") is augmented with: "Does this thought reflect trust in God's distribution?"
4 The Isa (A.S.) reframe
Use the parable to explore where the client may have "placed themselves in other than the place God placed them." This is not about accepting inequality passively; it is about recognizing that one's station before God is unique and non-comparative.
5 Du'a practice
The narrations consistently recommend praying for the person one envies. This is not suppression of feeling; it is active redirection. As Imam Ali (A.S.) states: "Indeed your good-doing to the enemies and the jealous ones who scheme against you is more irritating to them than your taking an offensive stance against them, and it is also a motivation for their reform" (Ghurar al-Hikam, no. 3637; Mizan al-Hikmah). The principle extends inward: doing good toward the envied person reforms the envier.
6 Gratitude as counter-mechanism
The Qur'anic injunction "If you are grateful, I will increase you" (Ibrahim 14:7) is not merely devotional; it is psychologically precise. Gratitude and envy cannot coexist in the same cognitive frame. Structured gratitude practice (shukr) targets the specific mechanism that envy exploits.
7 Reassessment of social media engagement
Not as avoidance, but as intentional curating. The hadith's instruction not to "extend your eyes" toward what God has given others is directly applicable to scroll behavior.
For Clinicians: What You Are and Are Not Doing
You are not:
- Telling clients their envy is a sin they need to repent from (that is a scholar's role)
- Using theology to bypass clinical distress
- Suggesting that faith alone will resolve envy
- Pathologizing normal human comparison
You are:
- Helping clients access their own theological framework as a clinical resource
- Providing psychoeducation that normalizes comparison while honoring its spiritual dimension
- Offering a diagnostic language (hasad vs. ghibtah) that is more precise than "envy"
- Integrating evidence-based techniques with the client's existing value system
Frequently Asked Questions
The tradition distinguishes between ghibtah (wanting a similar blessing for oneself without ill-will toward the other) and hasad (wanting the other person deprived of their blessing). Ghibtah is not sinful and can be motivating. Hasad is identified as a disease of the soul requiring spiritual attention. Having the passing thought is human; nurturing it is the concern.
Both. Social comparison is a cognitive process that CBT, ACT, and gratitude interventions can address effectively. The spiritual dimension, specifically the question of whether one trusts God's distribution of blessings, adds a layer that faith-integrated therapy can engage. Neither domain replaces the other.
Imam Ali (A.S.) describes the envious person as resembling "a wronged person more than a wrongdoer": exhausted, restless, and inherently sorrowful (Bihar al-Anwar, Vol. 76, p. 256). The tradition recognizes envy as a condition that harms the envier first. The goal is not blame but restoration.
The sacred hadith in Al-Kafi instructs: "Do not extend your eyes" toward what God has given others (Al-Kafi, Usul, Vol. 2, Bab al-Hasad, Hadith #6). The "extension of eyes" maps directly onto the endless scroll: a visual environment designed to present curated highlights that trigger upward comparison. Intentional engagement with social media is a contemporary application of this 1,400-year-old guidance.
This is precisely ghibtah. The desire to emulate someone's spiritual practice, knowledge, or charitable giving, without wishing them deprived, is healthy and encouraged. The tradition's precision on this point prevents the conflation of all comparison with sin.
The narrations suggest that recognizing envy is itself a function of the self-reproaching soul (nafs al-lawwama), which the Qur'an honors: "And I swear by the reproaching soul" (Al-Qiyamah 75:2). The awareness of the problem is evidence of spiritual health, not spiritual failure. The danger is not in the feeling but in the nurturing.
The Restoration: The Soul That Learns to Celebrate
Imam Ali (A.S.) said:
"How capable jealousy is! And how just it is, that it starts off with its perpetrator and ends up killing him!"
(Sharh Nahjul Balaghah li Ibn Abi al-Hadid, Vol. 1, p. 316; cited in Mizan al-Hikmah)
The justice of envy is that it consumes its host. The fire does not travel outward; it burns inward. And this, paradoxically, is the beginning of restoration. Because the suffering is self-generated, the remedy is also within reach.
The secular therapeutic framework offers cognitive tools: restructure the thought, practice gratitude, limit exposure. These are valuable and should be used.
But the Islamic tradition goes further. It identifies envy not as a thought error but as a relational rupture: between the soul and its Sustainer. The envious person has, in the words of the sacred hadith, "gotten angered at God's bounties" and "blocked God's apportionment." The remedy, then, is not merely cognitive but ontological: a return to rida (رضا), contentment with God's decree, and tawakkul (توكل), trust in divine wisdom.
Imam al-Hasan (A.S.) said:
"He who trusts whatever Allah has chosen for him to be good, will never wish to be in any situation other than what Allah has chosen for him to be in."
(Bihar al-Anwar, Vol. 78, p. 106, no. 6; cited in Mizan al-Hikmah)
This is not passive resignation. It is the active recognition that the One who distributed blessings knows what He is doing, that your portion was selected for you by the same Wisdom that sustains the universe, and that the soul's natural state (fitrah) is trust, not competition.
And in Nahj al-Balagha, addressing the community directly, Imam Ali (A.S.) warns:
"Don't envy one another, for envy consumes faith just as fire consumes kindling. Don't hate one another, for hate destroys."
(Sermon 83, Qutbuddin 2024 translation)
The command is communal and the imagery is elemental. Envy is fire. Faith is wood. You do not negotiate with fire; you starve it. And you starve it by feeding the soul what it actually hungers for: not what the other person has, but the certainty that what you have been given is sufficient, intentional, and held in the hands of a Lord who does not err.
May your eyes find rest from comparison, your heart find its station, and your soul recover the joy it was created to feel: not because others have less, but because your Lord has given you exactly what He, in His infinite knowledge, determined you need.
And Allah knows best.
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