On
Wednesdays on the blog I have been going through my book Idol Thoughts, on
the patterns of thinking that lead us away from the freedom and joy that comes
from life in God into other illusory ways of seeking and finding happiness.
This
very ancient doctrine of these thoughts, eight in number, and their power over
us was later adapted to the doctrine of the seven deadly sins, and the lists
have a lot of overlap. So today we come to the thought of gluttony.
Gluttony
is not simply over-eating, or enjoying food for that matter. God made food not
only to nourish the body but to delight the palate. It would be silly, not to
mention impossible, for us not to enjoy food that tastes good. Gluttony may
well lead to the practice of over-eating (and as I say in my book, I do indeed
struggle with this thought, and so am a little bit over-weight as a result),
but the thing itself resides not in the body, but in the mind.
It
is the fixed certainty that happiness lies in the immediate satisfaction of the
body. That there is nothing worse than to be hungry, to have a physical need
unmet, to be uncomfortable in one’s own flesh.
Gluttony
is in itself the least serious of the thoughts and leads to what generally are
the least serious sins, but there is a dynamic within gluttony that must be
mastered if we are to ever break through this immediate grasping for instant
happiness, bacon-bliss, so to speak.
Namely,
the dynamic in which we have a desire, see the object of our desire, grab it,
stuff it in, and are satisfied. I want-I see-I grab-I stuff-yay! That is the
dynamic that can run through all of our desires, all the thoughts of our minds,
and it is a powerful illusion, a dreadful mistake. It is expressed in its most
immediate form in our relationship to eating, as well as how we navigate our
way through the next thought, lust. But it applies to all of the thoughts – as
long as desire runs rampant and unchecked in us, we are seriously impaired in
our journey to true happiness.
This
is because true happiness does not come from the immediate satisfaction of
desire. God and our communion in love with Him is our true happiness, and He is
not a consumer product that we can grab and stuff in to ourselves. He comes to
us, gives Himself to us, but that is quite a different affair.
And
so, fasting. This is why fasting is an integral part of every religious
tradition. Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists all fast. I believe
that there is a spiritual intuition in all the serious wisdom traditions, borne
out by lived experience, that some degree of physical hunger breaks us through
the level of the superficial and the immediate to transcendent reality.
In
our Christian faith, this means communion with God through Jesus Christ, expressed
in its fullest and deepest aspect through the gift of the Eucharist. This is
why the Church asks us to fast before receiving communion, even though at the
moment the fast asked of us is so minimal that there is no actual experience of
hunger involved in it (I maintain that this is a pastoral problem). And why we
have a season of fasting before we celebrate the great feast of the year,
Easter.
A
modicum of hunger, a small experience of that emptiness, that slight weakness,
that little bit of ache—this is vital to the spiritual life. And to never, ever
be hungry—to live our relationship with food in such a way that our bodies are
continually full to the brim—this has a deadening effect in our lives. This is
not a particularly Christian observation – the united testimony of all the
world religions happens to agree on this point.
And
so, ‘blessed are the hungry, for they shall be filled.’ (Luke 6: 21). We have
to enter a little bit into the reality of hunger now, so as to be filled later.
To want now, so as to want nothing (Psalm 23:1) later.
Anyhow,
I have quite a bit more to say on the subject, and you can read all about it, if you
so desire.
Fr. Denis, is there a way to get your book in the States? Is Madonna House selling it at the NY address?
ReplyDeleteYes, Madonna House does do it's US mailings through that address, and the prices on our website are all in US dollars, so you should be good to go!
DeleteI refer to the phenomenon you mention as "bacon glee" because, as you say, it seems to go further than mere enjoyment of a common food. Often we PETA types are accused of being sentimental about animals, but I think we are not nearly so emotionally attached to our food as these bacon worshippers! In my view, if there is anything in your life that you feel you "can't live without", be it meat or your phone or your partner, then you have become attached. This will invariably cause you problems because one thing that is observably true is that nothing in the material world is permanent. Not even bacon.
ReplyDeleteYes, indeed. While I'm not a vegetarian, I do find that kind of bacon fetish... a little bizarre, frankly. And what you say about attachment to material things I wholly agree with - this is one of the areas where the Venn diagram of Buddhism and Christianity intersects quite neatly, in fact!
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