You know what I hate? I hate getting on a plane, walking to my seat, and having to pass all the first class passengers. I mean, who do they think they are? Sitting there with their giant seats and overly polite flight attendants. And of course, as I make my way to row 32B, I can see the special treatment happening right in front of me. The plane isn’t even fully boarded yet and they’re already getting drinks, warm cookies the size of dinner plates, and personal jokes from the crew. Frankly, it’s a disgusting display of opulence. And no, I’m not jealous. I’m simply deeply saddened by the inequity. But when I fly first class. Oh, I love it. I sit there proudly as people walk past me. “Yes, that’s right. I am first class.” One of the most powerful influences Egypt has over us is the allure of temporal blessing. The pull of comfort, status, privilege, and comparison is strong. And when we become consumed with covetousness—when we fixate on what others have and what we think we deserve, it reveals a heart that has lost sight of eternal things. Envy, jealousy, entitlement… these are cancers of the soul. They rob us of gratitude. They distort our view of God. They make us believe that blessing is something we earn, something we’re owed, something we should demand. This week we learn how to live in true gratitude—and how to escape the grip of envy, jealousy, and entitlement. Joseph’s story shows us that real blessing isn’t found in Egypt’s first class seats. It’s found in a heart anchored to God, satisfied in Him, and free from the comparison game Egypt wants us trapped in.