Seven Deadly Sins and Seven Heavenly Virtues

I have come to accept myself for what I am: human. I am not perfect. I am not immune to fate, but I am not automatically doomed for being alive.


Corey Taylor, Seven Deadly Sins: Settling the Argument Between Born Bad and Damaged Good
Image Source: Pexels free photo library


Seven Deadly Sins and Seven Heavenly Virtues

Delving deeper into the dark and light of human nature after examining the Seven Social Sins, I thought we might slip further into the past to examine what bedevilments come to light. Here, I would like to draw attention to our current struggles with conflict of political ideologies, cultures, violence, crime, and most of all, our personal fall into the dark nature of human instinct.

Seven deadly sins came from Roman Catholic theology as the seven vices that lead to other sins and immoral behaviour. Pope Gregory I first documented the seven great sins of humanity in the 6th Century CE and St. Thomas Aquinas, also elaborated on the list in the 13th Century CE. I find it interesting that from the first acknowledgement by Pope Gregory I to Thomas Aquinas is roughly 700 years.

A lot of advancements were made in civilization in those 700 years and yet the same dark nature still existed and would soon get much worse in the 14th to the 19th Century CE. What does this say about human nature? Yet in this same period, Western Civilization experienced a phenomenal awakening in the Age of Discovery, Renaissance, Age of Reason, and the Romantic period where the concept of personal liberty and freedom emerged in Germany and codified in the American Bill of Rights and Constitution.

Today we are still struggling with the internal conflict of virtue and selfish choice. The seven sins are a part of everyday life and seven virtues still hold on to those who partake of the light of human endeavors roughy 1,400 years later.

The Seven Deadly Sins are:
(1) vainglory, or pride,
(2) greed, or covetousness,
(3) lust, or inordinate or illicit sexual desire,
(4) envy,
(5) gluttony, which is usually understood to include drunkenness or drug use,
(6) wrath, or anger
(7) sloth which is simple laziness or a desire to avoid a necessary effort.

Overcome each of the seven deadly sins with the seven heavenly virtues of:
(1) humility,
(2) charity,
(3) chastity,
(4) gratitude,
(5) temperance,
(6) patience, and
(7) diligence.

The seven deadly sins were thought to lead people toward more dark behaviors and separation from God. As an example, lust led to adultry, which destroyed trust and love often becoming an indelible mark on the person wronged and any children victimized by an errant parent. Such an act could have cascading consequences.

The deadly sins were a popular theme in the morality plays, literature, and art of the Middle Ages in Europe. This was a means to mirror to all who would see, that the choices we make can lead us to darkness or love and joy.

As with everything that exists in the known universe, there is a Yin and Yang, a dark and light, a shadow and exaltation. The dark force is our nature, we are driven to it with subconscious thoughts that become conscious acts. The counter to darkness is a conscious effort to follow the light of life.

We can and must choose to counter the personal and social sins, to live in the moment with positive virtues. We can be an example that leaves permanent impressions for good or bad. We only need to choose and do, knowing that the way of the light is still difficult but infinitely better for ourselves and the world we will ultimately leave behind.

15 responses to “Seven Deadly Sins and Seven Heavenly Virtues”

  1. I agree with you 100%. I like how you broke it all down and then told us we have a choice to make. Really good article. 🧡🌷

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      Thank you Kymber. Positive Virtue is not dead yet and we can always choose to be kind and accept we aren’t perfect. I have a whole series of posts planned that examines the power of human nature versus our desire to be good natured.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. That sounds like just what we need. 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

  2. An excellent blog post, Daniel.

    It is interesting that Pope Gregory I was the first to mention the 7 Deadly Sins and it was only talked about again 700 years later by Thomas Aquinas.

    Aquinas was quite the scholar who read a lot of earlier writings and books.

    No doubt being the logician he was, he was impressed by Gregory’s analysis and classification of sins narrowing them down to seven basic sins from which all other manner of sins and even crimes spring from.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      I believed that Pope Gregory I’s classification of deadly sins did proliferate across the many diocese of the day and that they were still active and relevant in daily life 700 years later and again today 1400 years later. We do indeed progress very slowly if ever at all when it comes to human nature and sin. Thomas Aquinas seemed to focus on important things and his acknowledgement of the Pope’s work indicates its importance to at least Aquinas in his commentaries. Definitely those sins are rampant today. Less noticeable are the antidotes, the Seven Heavenly Virtues.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Yes for all the virtue signalling going on by woke people today, the Seven Heavenly Virtues are something they never signal.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Hyperion Avatar
          Hyperion

          Sadly, they rarely turn the page to see the rest of the story.

          Liked by 1 person

  3. “I have come to accept myself for what I am: human.” To accept that you are human and to understand history and understand your nature is to accept that you are the beast. Do you choose to revel in it and embrace it, or do you strive to better it?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      An excellent comment my Friend. I am reminded of two men on opposite ends of the human nature spectrum. We have the Marquis de Sade whose philosophy of reveling in our true nature led to the happiest life and Thomas Aquinas as the scientist-philosopher-theologian. One seems to speak the truth for the beast within and the other provides an example of the consciousness exalted. In both examples we know that today one would face legal charges if his quest went too far with a non consenting person and the other would face a withering fire of cancellation and invalidation. What is left to allow? This is the challenge we face. The pursuit of liberty, freedom, and as a result a contented joy is best pursued in silence out of view of prowling ideologies in search of victims. Regardless, we are first of all the beast and we should accept that. Then the effort to feed the beast’s yearning or refine the beast with disciplined study is a matter of preference, I suppose.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. On the spectrum of humanity, I’m right in there with SpongeBob. Cute, loveable, and easy to take advantage of.

        Liked by 2 people

        1. Hyperion Avatar
          Hyperion

          lol 😂. I purposefully let people take advantage of me so they can feel good about themselves. It’s a cheap and easy win for them.

          Liked by 1 person

  4. Presently Most religions simply ignore the seven deadly sins, eliminating the potential for applying them to the rich and powerful. They safely stay away from gluttony, greed, envy, anger. The only “deadly sin” which most have retained is lust and even that is dealt with carefully.
    Enjoyed the post.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      Thank you Rene. You always clearly and concisely get to the heart of the matter. What is a religion without its practitioners? There in lies the problem. We are always governed by our nature first. Thankfully, Love and compassion are also natural instincts we can bring to bear.

      Like

  5. Love and compassion, I can definitely buy into that. There’s very little going on except maybe among the Woke.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hyperion Avatar
      Hyperion

      We do seem to have a shortage of love and compassion in the world. Probably China is holding back on production to punish us for trade sanctions. 😏

      Like

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