Lust
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Lust is any intense desire or craving for self gratification and excitement. Lust can mean strictly sexual lust, although it is also common to speak of a "lust for men", "lust for blood (bloodlust for short)" or a "lust for power", or other goals and to "lust for love". The Greek word which translates as lust is epithymia (επιθυμια), which also is translated into English as "to covet".
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[edit] Lust in the context of religion
[edit] Christianity—General
Catholic tradition considers lust to be one of the main sins or vices. In the Old Testament, adultery was punishable by stoning. In the New Testament, Jesus included looking "lustfully at a woman" as adultery. (Matthew 5:28) The "woman" is a "Married" woman.
[edit] Christianity—Protestantism
Protestants hold that all sins, including lust, can be forgiven only by God through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. If a person believes in Jesus as his only Savior, then that person, regardless of what he has done, will receive Jesus' righteousness and will be able to enter heaven. But to enter the heaven of God , One must receive the Spirit of God . The Holy Bible tells of this in Luke 7:36-50, where the Lord Jesus Christ forgives a sinful woman.
[edit] Punishment in the afterlife
According to some Christian sources [1], reprobates whose chief unforgiven sin is lust are punished in Hell by being "smothered in fire and brimstone." However, while most Christian traditions agree that at some point after death the damned individuals find themselves in a hell where they suffer punishment for their sins, most traditions also agree that one can only speculate regarding the precise nature of any punishment above and beyond the principal torment, which comes simply from being totally separated from God.[citation needed]
In Dante's Inferno, the first Canticle of the Divine Comedy, the lustful are punished by being continuously swept around in a whirlwind, which symbolizes their passions.
[edit] Repentance in Purgatory
According to The Divine Comedy, penitents who are guilty of lust cleanse their soul of the sin by walking through flames, thereby purging their minds of all lustful thoughts.[citation needed]
[edit] Judaism
According to traditional Judaism, nothing on Earth was created without a purpose. This includes basic human drives. Lust is only sinful when it is after another man's possessions or wife. Lust is not only not sinful, but a mitzvah, when one lusts after their spouse.
[edit] Symbolic representations
A frequent visual symbol for the sin of lust is the color blue, as with the cover of the book Lust in The Seven Deadly Sins series published by the Oxford University Press.
Another symbol of lust is the animal cow (or bull). An example of this appears in the engraving Shamelessness [1] by the 16th century artist Georg Pencz.[citation needed]
Also, lust can be seen in the eponymous Eighth ATU in the Thoth Tarot card of Aleister Crowley.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ A. von Bartsch, J. Heller, and R. Weigel, Le peintre graveur, vol. 8, ed. J. A. Barth (Leipzig, 1866). see the "L'impudicité" heading.
- Froböse, Gabriele, Rolf Froböse, and Michael Gross (translator). Lust and Love: Is it more than Chemistry? Royal Society of Chemistry, 2006. ISBN 0-85404-867-7.
[edit] External links
- "The Seven Deadly Sins: Lust" National Public Radio feature
- Lust - Ethics wikia
- "Lust". Catholic Encyclopedia. (1913). New York: Robert Appleton Company.
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