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Religion See other Religion Articles Title: Seven new deadly sins: are you guilty? Pope Benedict XVI said that an increasing number of people in the secularised West were making do without God Richard Owen in Rome Drug pushers, the obscenely rich, environmental polluters and manipulative genetic scientists beware you may be in danger of losing your mortal soul unless you repent. Christians are exhorted instead to adhere to the seven holy virtues: chastity, abstinence, temperance, diligence, patience, kindness and humility. The Pope also complained that an increasing number of people in the secularised West were making do without God. Source: The Picture Book of Devils, Demons and Witchcraft; Ernst and Johanna Lehner
Poster Comment: The Vatican has brought up to date the traditional seven deadly sins by adding seven modern mortal sins it claims are becoming prevalent in what it calls an era of "unstoppable globalisation". Those newly risking eternal punishment include drug pushers, the obscenely wealthy, and scientists who manipulate human genes. So "thou shalt not carry out morally dubious scientific experiments" or "thou shalt not pollute the earth" might one day be added to the Ten Commandments. The new mortal sins were listed by Archbishop Gianfranco Girotti at the end of a week-long training seminar in Rome for priests, aimed at encouraging a revival of the practice of confession - or the Sacrament of Penance in Church jargon. According to a survey carried out here 10 years ago by the Catholic University, 60% of Italians have stopped going to confession altogether. The situation has certainly not improved during the past decade. Catholics are supposed to confess their sins to a priest at least once a year. The priest absolves them in God's name. Talking to course members at the end of the seminar organised by the Apostolic Penitentiary, the Vatican department in charge of fixing the punishments and indulgences handed down to sinners, Pope Benedict added his own personal voice of disquiet. "We are losing the notion of sin," he said. "If people do not confess regularly, they risk slowing their spiritual rhythm," he added. The Pope confesses his sins regularly once a week. Greatest sins of our times In an interview with the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano, Archbishop Girotti said he thought the most dangerous areas for committing new types of sins lay in the fields of bio-ethics and ecology. He also named abortion and paedophilia as two of the greatest sins of our times. The archbishop brushed off cases of sexual violence against minors committed by priests as "exaggerations by the mass media aimed at discrediting the Church". "I think the major point is that priests who are hearing confessions are not sufficiently attuned to some of the real evils in our world," he told the BBC News website. "They need to be more aware today of the social face of sin - the inequalities at the social level. They think of sin too much on an individual level. "I think priests who hear confession should have a deeper sense of the violence and injustice of such problems - and the fact that people collaborate simply by doing nothing. One of the original deadly sins is sloth - disengagement and not getting involved," Father O'Collins said. The Jesuit professor now teaches at St Mary's University in Twickenham. "It was interesting that these remarks came from the head of the Apostolic Penitentiary," he said. "I can't remember a time when it was so concerned about issues such as environmental pollution and social injustice. It's a new way of thinking." Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 16.
#3. To: robin (#0)
(Edited)
Thay do not say whether the snakes are poisonous, what the temperature is, how deep the pit is, how big the pit is, whether the bottom of the pit has sharp rocks, or how many snakes there are. Looks like an appeal for bribes.
Either way it does sound like a cure for sloth.
... it does sound like a cure for sloth Unless one verges into the metaphorical, at which point it becomes somewhat clergisexual*. *Word that does not yet show up on google.
I wonder if multiple sins had punishments handed out individually or if they received special group rates.
I use anger to avoid rage, plus I'm unusually persuasive, verbally, when I'm angry. There is a pill for all of that.
My mother used to become positively erudite when she was in a rage - and her eyes turned green too. Two strokes took care of that.
I'm sorry to hear that. She sounds like a wonderful person. I never had the wherewithall to be a parent. Life is all about money these days, it's a breeze when you have lots of it. I can remember living in a crowded tiny crackerbox house on a tiny lot with not enough concrete for a complete driveway, and later dreaming of owning a place that was even smaller and living alone. Now I could buy the house with one credit card, yet it still makes no sense to me to start a family. Maybe I've just gotten greedy, or maybe it's our MSM-driven society.
#17. To: nobody (#16)
A family is an increasing burden in our society. We are not replacing ourselves, except by immigration.
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