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Showing posts from March, 2026

Gluttony

  Friends, we’re up to week 5 of this sermon series I’ve put together for Lent about the ancient Church’s teachings on the seven deadly sins. So far we’ve talked about pride, greed, envy, and sloth. One note of housekeeping: this sermon series ends next week, on Palm/Passion Sunday, with the sin of wrath. I’m cooking up quite the sermon about “lust”, but because it’s so important to me that you’re in the right headspace to hear that message, and that you’re hearing it by your own choice, instead of delivering that one from the pulpit, I’m posting it next weekend to my Substack, as well as to Facebook for those accustomed to reading my sermons there.  Today, a day when we are NOT having a big lunch after service, we’re talking about gluttony. What on earth is gluttony? Our first impression is that gluttony has something to do with food. Our pedestrian understanding is that it’s the Cookie Monster sin. And sure, Cookie Monster is impulsive, and he’s smashed a few plates in pursu...

Sloth

  Friends, we’re now in the 4th week of this Lenten sermon series about the seven deadly sins. So far we’ve talked about pride, greed, and envy. Now this week we’re talking about sloth! Notice how I didn’t pick “gluttony” for a week when we’re having a potluck after church? Sloth stands out for me among the seven deadly sins for a few reasons, the first and primary among them being that we don’t have a great understanding of what “the sin of sloth” is. And that became even more clear to me when I researched it in depth. Five, and arguably six, of the words we use to describe the other deadly sins–pride, greed, envy, lust, wrath, and even gluttony–are words that might sound old-timey, but that we still use in common parlance. But we don’t tend to describe any behavior or thoughts as “slothful.” If anything, “sloth” isn’t a sin to us, it’s a really, really cute animal that moves so notoriously slowly that moss starts to grow on its fur. So if “sloth” is a sin, then it’s the sin of be...

Envy

  Friends, we’re now in week 3 of this Lenten sermon series I put together about none other than the seven deadly sins! An intimidating premise, for sure, but I hope we find some light here together. The ancient Church taught that all sin flows out of these seven errors of judgment. First piece of Good News? We’re all in this together. These ways of wrong thinking are universal. Second piece of Good News? If we all err together, then we can all help one another make better choices. The third of the seven deadly sins that we’re looking at together is envy. The Oxford dictionary defines “envy” as “a feeling of discontented or resentful longing aroused by someone else’s possessions, qualities, or luck.” The Catechism of the Catholic Church employs the Latin word “invidia” to describe envy, and adds that not only is envy a longing for what someone else has, but, worse, a feeling that if you can’t have what they have, then you’d like to take theirs away so they won’t have it either. Yik...