Posted on 02/08/2005 7:23:05 AM PST by dead
LONDON - The Seven Deadly Sins - anger, gluttony, sloth, envy, pride, lust and greed - are out of date and should include cruelty, adultery and bigotry, the results of an opinion poll suggest.
Greed is the only one of the seven that should remain a sin in today's Britain, according to the poll by the Mori organisation for BBC television's "Heaven and Earth" programme.
Cruelty was ranked the worst sin by 39% of respondents, followed by adultery (11%), bigotry (8%), dishonesty (seven percent), hypocrisy (six percent), greed (6%) and selfishness (5%).
"Attitudes towards sin have changed. We're less concerned with the seven deadly sins and more concerned with actions that hurt others," said Ross Kelly, presenter of "Heaven and Earth", a religion and ethics programme.
Of the 1,001 adults interviewed, only 9% said they had not committed any of the sins. 79% said they were guilty of anger - while 41% of men and 26% of women said lust was the sin they "most enjoy committing".
AFP
And "hypocrisy" is just something that infantile leftists use everytime someone promoting values falls short because they are only human.
Pop Quiz for the group:
Who first published the Seven Deadly Sin list, and When?
Aquinas I believe.
More secular humanist - relativism crap.
The Seven Deadlies were originated by Pope St. Gregory the Great. The following are Roman Catholic web pages regarding him: http://www.monksofadoration.org/gregory.html http://christdesert.org/noframes/scholar/benedict/st.gregory.html
(This is a quote from a Catholic regarding their origin) He apparently was familiar with an early list made by St. John Cassian, both men had been thinking about the basic attitudes behind sin.
(Another quote from a Catholic) The list does not exist in Scripture as such, but all seven are proscribed throughout, especially in the Epistles of St. Paul and James.
Why not? The western christanity seems to be doing it. The RCC itself went from being timeless to "contempory".
When Pope Gregory defined the seven deadly sins that we should avoid, he also included a counter-balancing set of values that we should espouse and adopt. These are:
The first three of these are known as the Spiritual Virtues, whilst the last four are called the Chief or Natural Virtues.
The Natural Virtues had already been defined by Greek philosophers. The Spiritual Virtues are a slight variation on St. Paul's trio of Love, Hope and Faith (strange how love has disappeared!).
There are also a number of other sets of seven virtues, including:
The Seven Contrary Virtues which are specific opposites to the Seven Deadly Sins:
The Seven Corporal Works of Mercy are a medieval list of things you can do to help others:
The Seven Bushido Virtues:
http://changingminds.org/explanations/values/seven_virtues.htm
"Ignoring the checkpoint in Fallujah" #8 added by W. George Bush the nearly Great 2004
No one ever said that cruelty and adultery weren't sins.
But the essence of this revision is in this statement: "Attitudes towards sin have changed. We're less concerned with the seven deadly sins and more concerned with actions that hurt others." It's just another version of "victimless crimes" and "consenting adults."
The problem is, of course, that all sins hurt the perpetrator as well as those near to him. Revisionists want to pretend that they don't, but according to long experience they do.
Take adultery, for instance. Many moderns have argued that it does no harm, but of course it does. Evidently those who were polled recognized that. Nothing here about incest, but presumably most people would recognize that that does harm too. And so forth. Traditional morality is built on a basis of long historical experience as well as divine revelation.
I've never understood why pride is a sin. You shouldn't take pride in yourself and life? That's crazy!
Once the liberals are done, the only sin will be calling anything a sin.
Thanks, so why is lust a sin?
These "preferred" sins are all merely subheadings of the original seven.
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