The 365 · Tazkiyah · Day 43 · Pride
'Uluww · Seeking Superiority on Earth
The disease
الْعُلُوّ
al-'Uluww
The story
Qarun (Day 2 reference) is the archetype of 'uluww. Wealth so vast the keys burdened a group of strong men, used to seek superiority over his people. His own kinsmen warned him; he refused. The earth swallowed him and his house (Q 28:81). The Quran's verdict came in the very next verses (28:82-83): those who had envied his position now thanked Allah for not granting them his fate. The story closed with the criterion: the Hereafter for those who do not seek 'uluww.
Why it's named first
'Uluww is the soul's quest for elevation over others on the earth: in status, in wealth, in power, in reputation. The Quran in Q 28:83 names the Hereafter as reserved for those who do not seek 'uluww. The disease is structural cousin to kibr: kibr is the inner state, 'uluww is the active pursuit. Treating 'uluww requires not just internal humility but external restraint of the pursuit.
In the Qur'an
Q 28:83: تِلْكَ الدَّارُ الْآخِرَةُ نَجْعَلُهَا لِلَّذِينَ لَا يُرِيدُونَ عُلُوًّا فِي الْأَرْضِ وَلَا فَسَادًا ۚ وَالْعَاقِبَةُ لِلْمُتَّقِينَ
Abdel Haleem: 'We grant the Home in the Hereafter to those who do not seek superiority on earth or spread corruption...'
The verse closes the Qarun passage. The criterion for the Home of the Hereafter: not desiring 'uluww. The verb yuridun ('they desire') is the operative word: the disease is in the desire, not in the position.
In the Sunnah
The Prophet ﷺ said: 'Whoever humbles himself one degree for the sake of Allah, Allah will raise him one degree, until He places him in the highest of ranks.' (Sahih Muslim 2588.) The structural principle: the cure for 'uluww is its opposite. Lower yourself; Allah raises. Raise yourself; Allah lowers.
The cure
1. When offered a position purely for status, refuse or downgrade. 'Umar appointed governors who wept at the appointment.
2. When tempted to take credit publicly, share or yield. The cumulative practice retrains the soul.
3. Read the biographies of those who refused positions: Abu Dharr, Ibn 'Umar, 'Abdullah ibn al-Mubarak. Their disposition is the cure.
What is at stake
The Hereafter is closed to those who seek 'uluww. The verse 28:83 names the criterion. There is no negotiation. The pursuit and the Home of the Hereafter are mutually exclusive.
A du'a for this day
Same as Day 4 (hubb al-jah) and Day 41: 'Allahumma ij'alni fi 'ayni saghiran.' The diseases share treatment.
The door of mercy
The Prophet ﷺ said humbling earns elevation (Muslim 2588). The exchange is structural. Practice the lowering; the elevation operates automatically. Try the experiment for forty days; the heart shifts.
A reflection to carry
ʿUluww is seeking superiority on earth: pursuing dominance over others. Q 28:83: 'That home of the Hereafter, We assign it to those who do not seek ʿuluww on earth (ʿuluwwan fī al-arḍ) or corruption. The good ending is for the muttaqīn.'
Read the longer reflection
The verse explicitly conditions Paradise on the absence of ʿuluww-seeking. The diseased state is the structural orientation toward dominance: in business (crush competitors), in relationships (be the alpha), in community (be the leader at all costs). The cure: orient toward service rather than dominance; the Prophet ﷺ was the most powerful Muslim of his time and modeled service: he mended his own clothes, helped his wives with chores, sat among the poor. Modern leadership-culture is structurally ʿuluww-promoting; the believer's leadership style should be Prophetic: serve more than command, listen more than dictate.
Sources: Quran, Sahih Muslim. The Qur'an and its translation are verified; the scholarship is retold faithfully in our own words and credited to its sources, never reproduced verbatim.
A verse, a healing, and a Sunnah, every morning.
Subscribe, free