Do you know what the Seven Deadly Sins are? It is valuable to name and begin to understand these deep drives of sin within us because the more we do so the more we can grow in self-knowledge. Further, it helps us to “know their moves” and gain mastery over them. As they stir deep within us we can recognize evidence of this and begin to take greater authority over them.
Too many Christians know little about twisted nature of sin. They just know they’re a little (or very!) messed up and can’t seem to figure out why. Have you ever gone to the doctor, not knowing what was wrong with you, and left feeling better just because you finally knew that what ailed you had a name and a cure? Being able to name our demons is an essential part of growth and healing.
Here are the Seven Deadly Sins, with a brief description of each:
- Pride – the quality of loving and esteeming oneself more than is proper and at the same time denigrating the goodness of others
- Pride also stirs us to reject the lawful authority of others, including God, over us and to refuse appropriate submission.
- Greed – excessive desire for wealth and possessions
- It is not wrong to desire what we need, but through greed we acquire far beyond what is reasonable and fail to be generous. Through greed we can also come to see the things of this world as more precious than the things of Heaven. Greed has been well described as the insatiable desire for more.
- Lust – excessive or inappropriate desires or thoughts of a sexual nature
- It is not wrong to experience sexual desire per se but Lust moves this to become excessive (all that matters), or for the object of it to be inappropriate (g. sexually fantasizing about someone other than a spouse). More broadly, lust is thought of as an excessive love of others that makes the love of God secondary.
- Anger – inordinate and uncontrolled feelings of hatred and wrath
- It is not always wrong to experience anger, especially in the presence of injustice. But anger here is understood as a deep drive which we indulge and wherein we excessively cling to angry and hateful feelings for others. This kind of anger most often seeks revenge.
- Gluttony – overindulgence in or overconsumption of anything to the point of waste.
- We usually think of gluttony in terms of food and drink, but it can extend to other areas as well. This sin usually leads to a kind of laziness and self-satisfaction that allows little room for God and the spiritual life. It may also cause us to be less able to help the poor.
- Envy – sorrow or sadness at the goodness or excellence of another person because one believes it makes him appear to be less so.
- If I envy someone I want to diminish or undermine his excellence. Note that envy is not the same as jealousy. If I am jealous of you I want what you have. In contrast, if I am envious of you, I want to diminish or destroy what is good or excellent in you. St. Augustine called envy the diabolical sin because of the way it seeks to eliminate excellence and goodness in others.
- Sloth – sorrow or sadness at the good things God wants to do in one’s life
- Most people think of sloth as laziness, but it is really an avoidance of God. In sloth, I avoid God because I fear or dislike what He can do for me. Some people avoid God through laziness, but others avoid Him by becoming workaholics, claiming that they are too busy to pray, to attend Mass, or to think about spiritual things.
Full story at Monsignor Charles Pope’s blog.
Liberalism should be the eighth deadly sin; modernism the ninth. Both of those movements are amalgamations of several of the traditional deadly sins, though; maybe all of them.
Conservatism should be the eighth deadly sin; Trumpism the ninth. Both of these aberrations of humanity are amalgamations of the seven deadly sins, perhaps, involving all of them but most prominently greed and lust.
Turning everything into a political argument should be the 10th,
To bad they don’t teach and reteach these 7 deadly sins in all the catechism classes in all ages in the classrooms and from the pulpits, but then again who wants to hear negative sermons? A few sinners out their have, and others will get turned off and nolonger attend. In reality these sins need to be discussed in the classrooms and pulpits, otherwise members view point of sin is only murder and robbery, making them think they don’t sin, so no cofession of sin is needed, and no graces received at the risk of eternal damnation.
Gee, what about homophobia, Islamophobia, elitism, wealthism, sexism, ageism, genderism, racism, and designated hitterism?
None on the “bad ones” list? As the Pope is wont to do, let’s revise the list (just after redoing the Lord’s Prayer, or adding another group of “mysteries” to the Rosary — too bad Our Holy Mother was so limited).
Stop worrying about these other things and focus on the Seven Deadly Sins. Try, at least, to be holy, not political.
St. Christopher, I understand your disgust at too much political correctness, but I think St. John Paul II did a good thing when he encouraged the Luminous Mysteries. If you noticed, one of the Luminous Mysteries is the the Marriage Feast at Cana. What better mystery to bring to mind in these times when Holy Matrimony is being trashed than the Marriage at Cana between one man and one woman. Those mysteries are not new, you can google the reasons for Pope John Paul encouraging them without making them obligatory.
I used to teach all my classes about the 7 Cardinal (Capital or Deadly) Sins using the mnemonic PLACES G. Pride, lust, anger, covetousness, envy, and Sloth. I used to then go over the contrasting Heavenly Virtues.
All of this was definitely not part of the religious curriculum of a Catholic school and always irked the principal.
It seems to me that his definition of jealousy may be a little off. The Bible says that God is a jealous God. A jealous wife is one who is possessive of her husband not one who wants someone else’s husband.
I learned in my Catholic elementary school Catholic Catechi classes more decades than I care to think about ago (before the V2 “Pastoral” Reformation) that all real offenses against God (known in english as sins and iniquities) were derive able from the 7 deadly sins. As far as the secular, politically incorrect viewpoint sins of modern prideful, agnostic man which counter God’s point of view like homophobia and islamophobia, I don’t believe God has changed His eternal position on what offends Him. They are against God, and consequences will be wrought. Read the Douay-Rheims RC Holy Bible