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Holly3278
Guest
Hi everyone. Is gluttony a grave sin? Last night I cooked too many french fries and ate them all. I ate more than I should have eaten. Did I commit a mortal sin? 
No I certainly didn’t set out intending to sin. I guess I am good! Thanks!Holly, did you set out to cook too many fries because you wanted to eat them all, thinking it was wrong and deciding after full reflection to do it anyway?
Or did you cook more than you realized and, rather than let them go to waste (they’re never good warmed over), you just kept eating?
Normally, I would think a larger than usual serving of a food would not be grave matter if it only happens occasionally, without much thought. True gluttony would be making a kind of god of your food. Did you do that?
Also, remember that you cannot commit a mortal sin without knowing it. The fact that you have to ask makes me think you did not sin mortally.
Betsy
I think God is a lot more forgiving then that. Gluttony is more desiring more than you need in a greedy way.Hi everyone. Is gluttony a grave sin? Last night I cooked too many french fries and ate them all. I ate more than I should have eaten. Did I commit a mortal sin?![]()
I never thought of it that way. I guess that a deliberate obcession with anything could become grave matter.but those who follow the latest fads in diets and nutrition should be very, very careful that they are not committing a strange form of idolatry or becoming gluttonous themselves.
Exactly right, Betsy! Great minds think alike!Excellent point, Jason. Was it in the *Screwtape Letters *that the counter-intuitive glutton was described as an insufferable old woman who said, “All I want is a piece of really crisp toast.”
Betsy
I doubt that the Catholic Church would deem such a peccadillo as a mortal sin.Hi everyone. Is gluttony a grave sin? Last night I cooked too many french fries and ate them all. I ate more than I should have eaten. Did I commit a mortal sin?