People are driven by envy. We see ourselves as in competition, struggling against our fellow humans, in order to possess the world's goods. In this struggle, we are tempted to cut corners, to trample on others or to use others as pawns in our plans.
But envy doesn't go away when it is fed; rather, it becomes yet more insatiable. The antidote lies elsewhere. We have to start telling ourselves - I have enough. I'm not going to seek more. Above all, I won't do wrong in order to get more.
Of course, you can't give up altogether. Complete idleness is not the answer. If you are idle, you will harm yourself. You must be responsible; you must provide for yourself and your family. You cannot be idle, but when you have enough, rest content with your one handful of tranquility. You may miss out on much by ignoring envy's voice, but you will also spare yourself much misery.
A lonely striver. Envy and greed have consumed this person. He doesn't enjoy what he has because he is always looking for more. He senses that this is pointless, that he is only making himself miserable. But, like many modern over-achievers, he has been toiling for so long that he doesn't know how to stop; indeed, he is driven by a fear of what he will miss out on if he relaxes his efforts. What he does not see is that beyond a certain point, more is less.
Often humans end up embroiled in an unhappy business through their own bad choices. Not because God has arbitrarily intervened and engineered a bad outcome. Yes, our choices do have consequences - that is how God has made the world - but when we don't like the consequences we should repent, rather than blame God.
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