Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Lustful men, proud women - 7 deadly sins

The Straits Times
Feb 20, 2009

Lustful men, proud women

Vatican report lists their different vices

VATICAN CITY: Lust leads men to sin. For women, pride is their biggest downfall.

This, according to a new Vatican report, is how the sexes struggle differently with the seven deadly sins of pride, envy, gluttony, lust, anger, greed and sloth.

The report was based on a study of confessions carried out by a 96-year-old Jesuit scholar, British media reported.

Pope Benedict XVI's personal theologian has backed the report. Monsignor Wojciech Giertych said there was 'no sexual equality' when it came to sin.

'Men and women sin in different ways,' he wrote in L'Osservatore Romano, the Vatican newspaper.

Pride ranks only at No. 5 for men, who are likely to have indulged in so much lust and gluttony that they are too slothful to feel angry, proud, envious or avaricious, the Times of London said.

Women are not averse to lust, but are primarily occupied with pride, envy and anger. Sloth does not set in until after gluttony and avarice, the British newspaper added.

'When you look at vices from the point of view of the difficulties they create, you find that men experiment in a different way from women,' Monsignor Giertych said.

His own observations had confirmed the survey, an analysis of confessional data carried out by Father Roberto Busa, 96, a Jesuit priest celebrated for his computerised study of the works of St Thomas Aquinas.

He said: 'Diverse cultural contexts generate diverse habits - but human nature remains the same.'

Monsignor Giertych said that human weaknesses could 'purify faith' provided that they were 'admitted and offered up to God'.

The Roman Catholic Church teaches that the seven deadly sins, which carry the threat of eternal damnation, can only be forgiven by confession and penance, the Daily Mail said.

However, 30 per cent of Catholics no longer considered confession to a priest necessary, and 10 per cent even said that it 'impeded their personal dialogue with God', the Times report said.

Many believers accept the broad seven deadly sins or 'capital vices' laid down in the 6th century by Pope Gregory the Great and popularised in the Middle Ages by Aquinas, and by Dante in The Inferno. These are:

# Lust: Excessive thoughts or desires of a sexual nature.

# Gluttony: Over-consumption of or overly indulging in anything to the point of waste.

# Sloth: The failure to utilise one's talents and gifts.

# Anger: Inordinate and uncontrolled feelings that can manifest as vehement denial of the truth or self-denial, or generally wishing to do evil or harm to others.

# Pride: The desire to be more important or attractive than others, failing to compliment others and excessive love of self.

# Envy: Resentment of another person for having something one lacks, and wishing the other person to be deprived of it.

# Greed: Excessive acquisition of material goods.

Last year, the Vatican added seven new ones: genetic modification; human experimentation; polluting the environment; social injustice; causing poverty; 'financial gluttony'; and taking or selling drugs.

Bishop Gianfranco Girotti, head of the Apostolic Penitentiary, the Vatican body that oversees confessions, said that two mortal sins which continued to preoccupy the Vatican were abortion and paedophilia.

The latter had even infected the clergy itself, and so had exposed the 'human and institutional fragility of the Church'.

Pope Benedict, who reportedly confesses his sins once a week, last year issued his own voice of disquiet on the subject.

'We are losing the notion of sin,' he said. 'If people do not confess regularly, they risk slowing their spiritual rhythm.'

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Exorcism, Anyone?

If you are possessed by evil spirits or demons, you cannot just walk into a church and ask for an exorcism. There are certain protocols to follow.

And there is a difference between exorcism and deliverance. Hmmmm...interesting....

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The New Paper
04 July 2008

'EXORCISM' TRIAL

Priest: No 'exorcism on demand' here

Priest involved says protocols have to be observed before approval for exorcism given

By Arul John

THERE'S no such thing as exorcism on demand. You cannot just walk into a Roman Catholic church here and ask for one. Certain procedures had to be followed, including first informing the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Singapore of the exorcism, and getting his permission to appoint a priest authorised to perform the procedure.

The priest appointed must be properly distinguished for his piety, and must fast and pray for sometime before performing the exorcism, said Father Simon Tan. The victim must also undergo a psychological evaluation, to exclude any possibility of medical conditions or mental illness, he added.

Father Tan, 45, was testifying at the Novena Church exorcism trial in the High Court yesterday. Madam Amutha Valli Krishnan claims she was the victim of a forced exorcism at the church on 10 Aug 2004. She is suing the Redemptorist Order, which runs the church, two priests and six church-goers who allegedly helped in the ritual.

Father Tan, one of the priests allegedly involved, told Mr R S Bajwa, Madam Amutha's lawyer, that because he did not follow these protocols, he had not performed any exorcism on Madam Amutha when she was at the church. Instead, he said he had only said prayers of deliverance over her.

Mr Bajwa, however, said that aside from the protocols, what Father Tan did to Madam Amutha that day - telling the spirit possessing her to leave her body - constituted an exorcism. Father Tan agreed that he 'engaged the spirit' in her and asked it to leave her body, but claimed that was a deliverance, not an exorcism.

He defined deliverance as 'praying (for someone) without engaging the devil', as opposed to exorcism, which he said was 'engaging the devil' and 'taking out an evil spirit from a person'. In his affidavit, Father Tan stated how Father Jacob Ong, the other priest allegedly involved in the case, had informed him on the night of 10 Aug 2004, that a woman was behaving strangely at the church.

Father Tan said that Father Ong asked him if he could help and he did so. He said in his affidavit that he saw a woman shaking the grille gate at the church and shouting. Father Tan said that the woman's daughter, son and a man claiming to be her brother were standing some distance away.

SPIRIT OF DEAD SOLDIER

The man claiming to be Madam Amutha's brother told him she was possessed by a soldier's spirit and he asked him to help them and pray for her, he added. He told the court how, while praying for Madam Amutha, she suddenly said that she was Koh Chee Meng, the spirit of a dead soldier.

Father Tan said: 'In our line of work, we meet people who behave strangely. I cannot confirm that the plaintiff was possessed with the long dead soldier's spirit.' When Mr Bajwa again told Father Tan that he had performed an exorcism on Madam Amutha, he denied it.

Father Tan said: 'My prayers with Amutha were not to get the spirit of Koh Chee Meng out of her but they were prayers of deliverance to give her hope. I prayed for the dead soldier's spirit, to commend the soul of Koh Chee Meng to God.'

He also added that he was not always speaking to 'Koh Chee Meng' that day but that Madam Amutha had 'come to herself' at least three times and she was able to speak lucidly to him. He said: 'During those times, she asked where she was and when I told her, she asked me to help her.' Father Tan's cross-examination continues today.