All About Gluttony Part
1
by Ryan
Andrews
What is
gluttony?
Gluttony is the excessive
consumption that deprives another being of a life-giving
necessity. Gluttons devour more, leaving others with less. It’s
immoderation.
Beyond consumption,
gluttony describes worship of food and deriving excessive
pleasure from it.
In this
painting, The Last Judgement, the gluttons have
actually become food. Heaven is on the left, and hell
on the right. On the right, the eaters are being eaten.
Click to enlarge.
Gluttony also extends into
material goods and other physical pleasures. “-aholic” is the
suffix attached to the glutton’s “meal” of choice.
Those with excess body fat
often carry the burden of gluttony, but weight doesn’t
necessarily indicate gluttonous patterns. “Healthy” eaters can
be immoderate too. Just as someone can be angry about the right
thing but express it in the wrong way, someone can eat healthy
food in a way that is gluttonous.
The more natural and
necessary the activity (e.g., eating and sex), the more
pleasurable it is. If we didn’t get pleasure from eating and
procreating, we’d have a population of 100 and suffer from
rickets.
Gluttony creeps in when our
desires spiral out of control and get excessive with food. This
is challenging in modern society, since our appetite is subject
to external authoritative psychological influences. For more,
see All About Appetite
Part 1 and
Part 2.
Grasping
gluttony
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Does “gluttony”
involve simply how much we
eat?
Or should it
apply more broadly to our overall
consumption patterns?
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Thinkers, philosophers, and
social regulators have struggled for centuries with how to
define and understand gluttony.
- Is it a normal, acceptable part
of human nature?
- Should we view gluttony as a
natural response to abundance or as a moral or personal
failure of self-control?
- Is it harmful to individuals or
society?
Late Roman and medieval European thinkers
in particular were quite preoccupied with this question, as
attempts to impose new, more austere religious regimes on rural
societies conflicted with traditional, often highly indulgent,
“pagan” celebrations held by people whose “nasty, brutish, and
short” daily lives were organized by the feast-famine cycles of
harvest.
However, other world religions and
spiritual traditions have also offered their thoughts on what
gluttony means. (More on this below.)
Generally, gluttony can
include:
- Not savouring a reasonable amount of
food
- Eating outside of a prescribed time
(mindless eating)
- Anticipating eating with preoccupied
longing
- Consuming costly foods (eating
lavishly simply for the purpose of conspicuous
consumption)
- Not being content with “common”
foods; always seeking delicacies (or, perhaps,
Supersizing)
- Paying too much attention to food
(which includes paying too much attention to how we look –
which, they argue, can become idolatry)
In the Bible, the word “glutton” is used
to portray someone who eats because they want food rather than
need it. Christian religious thinker Thomas Aquinas, writing
in the 1200s, equated gluttons to children, since they are
governed by pleasure from appetite and their behavior is ruled
by it.
Interestingly, many of these insights
sound very familiar to those of us trying to teach and practice
“mindful eating” and the PN-style way of living.
Such insights also raise questions about
our own consumption habits.
Does
“gluttony” involve simply how much we eat?
Or should it
apply more broadly to our overall consumption
patterns?
For instance, what about:
| The massive fast
food burger? |
The expensive
coconut ice cream? |
The apple shipped from New
Zealand? |
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Gluttony as a sin
The concept of “sin” is a contentious
one. In 2010, we think of the world differently than, say,
medieval Europeans.
The Christian concept of seven “deadly
sins” originated from early Christian monk
Evagrius’ original list of eight
evil thoughts (later modified by Saint John Cassian and Pope Gregory to what
we’re familiar with). Gluttony is considered a deadly
sin.
(For reference, the other deadly sins
include are pride (vanity), greed (covetousness), lust, envy,
anger, and sloth.)
In the original context, a sin was only
deadly if it opposed one’s love of God (their higher
power).
For example, if someone merely ate more
than necessary, they have committed an “excusable” sin. It’s
only “deadly” when they’re so taken by the pleasure of eating
that it turns them away from spiritual instructions.
In the modern context, we might say that
when something governs our life, it can become a destructive
habit that undermines our goodness of character, getting worn
in over time. And really, at its core, gluttony is about
separating ourselves from others (family, friends, culture,
etc.).
For instance, writers such as
Geneen Roth
and Allen Zadoff
describe isolating themselves socially —
locking themselves into their homes alone — so that they can
over-consume food. Nowadays, we might call this “binge
eating disorder”. But the outcome — self-harm and
social/spiritual isolation — is the same.
Gluttony and spiritual
traditions
Given the philosophical importance of the
concept of gluttony, it’s no surprise, then, that world
spiritual traditions have often tackled the question of
gluttony. Here’s a sampler.
Buddhism
One of the
Buddhist precepts is: “To abstain from taking food at
inappropriate times.” They also encourage avoiding sensory
excess. Some Buddhists say that if gluttony cannot be
conquered, any ambitious spiritual pursuit is doomed to fail.
Gluttony is referred to as one of the vices.
General
Christianity
Jesus taught
humans that they cannot live by bread alone.
Gluttony
(related to food) is rarely mentioned in the Christian Bible.
You’ll see more about enjoying food rather than warning against
excess. (After observing the donut spread at a Methodist church
last Sunday, this doesn’t surprise me.)
Still, the New
Testament encourages one to be sensible with intake and observe
the body as a temple. The concept of willpower actually came
from Christian teachings about temptation. Deuteronomy 21:20
ordains that “a glutton and a drunkard” is to be stoned to
death by the elders in his city. Yikes.
Hinduism
Hinduism
considers greed a root of other evils and discusses the
importance of avoiding excess in all areas.
Islam
Those of Islam
faith practice regular fasting and discourage overeating. They
claim that gluttony feeds on itself, with the appetite growing
when indulged. When appetite is restrained, it becomes
frail.
Judaism
Eating is a
sacred act and the idea of keeping kosher relates to
self-control. Still, on the holiday of Purim, overconsumption
is encouraged.
Why is gluttony important?
If someone is preoccupied with food, they
tend to neglect relationships with others. This includes
relationships with significant others, society and the more
intangible dimensions of life. Gluttony resembles any form of
disordered eating, since they all reflect disordered
relationships.
Faith vs food
| Nearly all religions
have sanctions against gluttony. Still, data
indicate that those who claim to observe organized
religion are more likely to be overweight than
other Americans. |
Around the world, people devote their
entire lives to a spiritual doctrine. Many say that there is
nothing more powerful than spiritual pursuits.
As we’ve seen, major world faiths
generally suggest that their adherents avoid immoderation. Yet
based on current food/drink consumption trends in developed
nations, it appears that most people don’t believe eating too
much food is a crime against anyone or anything.
Indeed, this is a paradox: Nearly all
religions have sanctions against gluttony. Still, data indicate
that those who claim to observe organized religion are more
likely to be overweight than other Americans.
- 78% of U.S. adults claim to be
Christian
- 67% of U.S. adults are overweight or
obese
- 1 out of 2 adults in industrialized
countries die of either cancer of heart disease (diseases
generally due to excess)
(Note: 16% of U.S. adults say they are
unaffiliated to any organized religion; 5% of U.S. adults claim
to follow other religions)
In religion, we’re often reminded about
wrongdoing — lying, stealing, cheating, murder, abortion, and
so forth. Gluttony is forgotten.
Or is it?
For every one book about adultery,
stealing, or abortion – we have nearly 10 covering
diet/overeating. We also have many books about dealing with the
consequences of social and spiritual isolation.
Cultural language has replaced moral
language in our society. We hear about diets, nutrition and
eating disorders – but little about gluttony and sins. Our way
of offsetting gluttony is with dieting, Weight Watchers and
gyms… until the next plunge into immoderation and
excess.
Excessive tendencies
Gluttony is about excess. And beyond
weight, we tend to get excessive in North America with many
areas related to food.
- In the U.S., we waste about 20-25%
of all food purchased for the home. This equates to about
474.5 pounds per year.
- Added sweeteners comprise nearly 20%
of the U.S. diet.
- Americans eat over 220 pounds of
meat per person, per year.
- The U.S. diet is primarily processed
and animal foods.
- The average American consumes 12.28
lb of chocolate per year.
- Nearly 70% of those above the age of
18 years in most industrialized countries drink
alcohol. Chronic liver disease and cirrhosis is the
12th leading cause of death in the U.S.
- A study of 19-30 year olds revealed
that 45% of men and 27% of women reported heavy drinking in
the past two weeks.
- Today, 18,000 kids will die because
they are malnourished. That’s 6 times the number killed on
September 11th.
Many wealthier nations not only fail to
solve these problems, they fail to even look for them. Does
gluttony feed into this ignorance?
Summary
“A glutton is one
who raids the ice box in search of a cure for
spiritual malnutrition.”
–Frederick Buechner |
It may seem strange to use an “old”
concept in a modern world. Yet the notion of gluttony, and what
it implies, is still very relevant in a food-saturated world
where people are searching for health and a higher
purpose.
Regardless of your spiritual leanings,
gluttony can thus be defined as some kind of excessive
consumption that:
- harms us physically and
psychologically;
- isolates us from ourselves and
others;
- shifts our focus to unhealthy
domains and preoccupations; and
- wastes resources.
Before part 2, here are a few questions
to establish where you stand with gluttonous
tendencies:
- Do you consume food/drink (or other
things) past the point of
fullness/satiation/satisfaction?
- Do you focus excessively on this
consumption?
- Is your consumption harming your
body?
- Is it harming your
relationships?
- Is the well-being of others
compromised by your food/drink cravings?
- Are your food/drink habits dedicated
to serving your own immediate gratification rather than
serving your life mission and deeper values?
For more information on adapting
healthy eating habits check out the
Precision Nutrition
System. Everything is
spelled out in easy to understand language that can be applied
immediately.
Dr.
Bryan Dingsor is
the owner of Watertown
Chiropractic P.C. in Watertown, SD. He specializes in the
treatment of many musculoskeletal conditions and weight
loss. For an appointment, please call 605-882-2304
Today.
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