The 365 · Tazkiyah · Day 172 · Envy
Sectarian Envy · Envy Between Muslim Groups
The disease
حسد بين الفرق الإسلامية
Ḥasad bayna al-Firaq al-Islāmiyyah
Why it's named first
Sectarian envy is one of the most structurally damaging forms in the modern ummah. Different Muslim groups (madhhabs, daʿwah-movements, ideological-tendencies) compete for influence, audience, and platform; the competition often crosses from healthy aspiration into structural envy. One group envies another's growth; one daʿwah-movement envies another's audience; the disease produces inter-Muslim hostility, undermining of legitimate work, and structural fragmentation of the umma. The Prophet ﷺ: 'The believer is to the believer like a building; each part strengthens the others' (Bukhārī 481, Muslim 2585). Sectarian envy is the structural opposite of this strengthening.
In the Qur'an
Allah said: 'And hold firmly to the rope of Allah all together, and do not be divided' (Āl ʿImrān 3:103). And: 'Indeed, those who divided their religion and become sects, you are not, [O Muḥammad], associated with them at all' (al-Anʿăm 6:159). The verses establish the structural unity-imperative and warn against sectarian-divisions.
In the Sunnah
The Prophet ﷺ: 'The believer is to the believer like a building; each part strengthens the others; the Muslims in their mutual love, mercy, and compassion are like a single body' (Bukhārī 481, 6011). And he warned about the future ummah: 'My ummah will divide into 73 sects; all in the Fire except one'. The Companions asked who. He said: 'those upon what I and my Companions are upon' (Tirmidhī 2641, classed ḥasan). The structural warning: division is the path of the Fire; the structural unity-on-the-Prophetic-path is the protection.
The cure
(1) Recognize the structural unity of the umma over the structural-differences of madhhab or movement. The unity is foundational; the differences are secondary. (2) When you encounter another Muslim group's success, make duʿā for them: 'O Allah, bless them in their work for the umma; align our hearts; make us mutual supporters'. (3) Cooperate where possible; the salaf cooperated across differences while maintaining their specific scholarly positions. (4) Refuse the structurally divisive discourse: 'they are deviant', 'they are not real Muslims', 'their work is harmful'. The discourse fuels the envy and damages the umma.
What is at stake
Sectarian envy produces structural umma-fragmentation. The modern Muslim community spends enormous energy on inter-group competition; the energy could be spent on collective service of Islam and on outreach to non-Muslims. The envy is structurally a tax on the umma's capacity.
A du'a for this day
Allāhumma allif bayna qulūbină, wa-ajʿalnă mu-ta-ʿaa-w-enīn ʿală al-birr wa-l-taqwă. O Allah, unite our hearts, and make us mutual-helpers on righteousness and God-fearing.
A reflection to carry
Sectarian envy is one of the most structurally damaging forms in the modern ummah. Different Muslim groups (madhhabs, daʿwah-movements, ideological-tendencies) compete; the competition often crosses from healthy aspiration into structural envy. One group envies another's growth; one daʿwah-movement envies another's audience; the disease produces inter-Muslim hostility and structural fragmentation. Allah commanded: 'Hold firmly to the rope of Allah all together, and do not be divided' (Āl ʿImrān 3:103). The Prophet ﷺ: 'The believer is to the believer like a building; each part strengthens the others' (Bukhārī 481). Sectarian envy is the structural opposite. The cure: recognize the umma's structural unity over the secondary-differences; when another group succeeds, make duʿā for them and ask Allah to align hearts; cooperate where possible; refuse divisive discourse ('they are deviant', 'their work is harmful'). The salaf cooperated across differences. Today, audit your relationship with other Muslim groups; convert envy to duʿā; work for the umma's structural unity.
Read the longer reflection
There is a disease that has, in the modern ummah, reached structural-tax proportions: sectarian envy among Muslim groups. The forms are multiple. Madhhab-envy: one of the four madhāhib competes for adherents; the believers of one school may envy another's success. Daʿwah-movement envy: organizations and movements compete for funding, audience, platform; the disease produces inter-organizational hostility. Ideological-tendency envy: salafi, sufi, modernist, traditionalist tendencies among Muslims often compete; the competition crosses into envy. Geographic-cultural envy: Arab-Muslim vs South-Asian-Muslim vs convert-Muslim communities; the structural-cultural differences become envy-fuel. Personality-based envy: the followers of one scholar envy the followers of another. In each form, the disease operates as Day 156's ḥasad: the wish that the other group lose what they have, dressed often in scholarly-critique or methodological-disagreement vocabulary. Allah's structural commandments are direct. He said: 'wa-iʿtaiṣimū bi-ḥabli Allăhi jamīʺăn wa-lă tafarraqū' (Āl ʿImrān 3:103). And hold firmly to the rope of Allah all together, and do not be divided. The verb tafarraqū is forbidden in the imperative-negative form; division is structurally forbidden. And: 'inna al-lădhīna farraqū dīnahum wa-kănū shiyaʺăn lasta minhum fī shayʾin' (al-Anʿăm 6:159). Indeed those who divided their religion and became sects, you are not associated with them in anything. The verse addresses the Prophet ﷺ; the structural-Islamic position is to be free of the sectarian-fragmentation pattern. The Prophet ﷺ amplified the unity-commandment with structural metaphors. 'al-muʾmin li-l-muʾmin ka-l-bunyăn yashuddu baʿḍuhu baʿḍă' (Bukhārī 481, Muslim 2585). The believer to the believer is like a building; each part strengthens the others. The image: a building's stones are not in competition; they support each other; the structural unity holds the whole. The umma is the structural building; the believers are the stones; sectarian-envy is the disease that pits stones against each other and weakens the structure. 'mathalu al-muʾminīna fī tawădudihim wa-tarăḥumihim wa-taʿăṭufihim ka-mathali al-jasadi al-wăḥid' (Bukhārī 6011, Muslim 2586). The believers in their mutual love, mercy, and compassion are like a single body. The single-body metaphor is even more direct; the umma is structurally one body; one organ envying another is the body diseasing itself. And the Prophet's ﷺ structural warning about the 73 sects: 'My ummah will divide into 73 sects; all in the Fire except one' (Tirmidhī 2641, ḥasan). The Companions asked: who is the one? He said: 'those upon what I and my Companions are upon'. The structural Sunnah-path is the one; the other 72 are the structural-fragmentation pattern. Now consider the cure. The cure has four motions. First, recognize the structural unity-imperative. The umma's foundational unity (tawhīd, Prophet ﷺ, fundamental practices) is structurally primary; the differences among the four madhāhib, among daʿwah-movements, among ideological-tendencies are secondary; legitimate scholarly differences are part of Islam's depth, not its fragmentation. The believer who internalizes this hierarchy refuses to elevate secondary-differences into primary-divisions. Second, when another Muslim group succeeds, make duʿā for them. 'O Allah, bless them in their work for the umma; align our hearts; make us mutual supporters'. The duʿā cannot coexist with envy; the recitation forces the conversion. Third, cooperate where possible. The salaf cooperated across legitimate differences. Imăm Mălik prayed behind Imăm al-Shăfiʿī despite differences in fiqh-positions; Imăm Aḥmad prayed behind those who held different positions on his issues. The structural cooperation is the Sunnah-model. Fourth, refuse the divisive discourse. 'They are deviant', 'they are not real Muslims', 'their work is harmful'. The discourse is often the cover for envy; refuse to participate. Where legitimate critique is needed, it should be from established-scholarly-authority and with the structural-Sunnah of preserving the umma's unity. Pray today: Allāhumma allif bayna qulūbină, wa-ajʿalnă ʿală al-sunnati al-jamăʿah, mu-ta-ʿaa-w-enīn ʿală al-birr wa-l-taqwă, lă muhă-ribīn ʿală al-shahawăt. O Allah, unite our hearts, and make us on the Sunnah of the unified community, mutual-helpers on righteousness and God-fearing, not warriors over desires. The sectarian-envy is the structural disease; the umma's unity is the structural cure.
Sources: Quran, Sahih Bukhari, Sahih Muslim, Tirmidhi. 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.
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