A
alabaster
Guest
Is self hatred a sin? Or is it laudable as it may lead to repentance?
*Self-hatred *can have two very opposite meanings.
St. Catherine of Siena and other saints know that self-hatred (hatred of one’s vanity, conceit, arrogance, pride, pettiness and selfishness in general) is a good thing (meritorious). I see this and agree.
Self-hatred can also be meant to be something quite the opposite: actually hating your very self by not taking care of your very soul and body, which is the opposite - and a very detrimental thing (and sinful.)
The first kind is motivated by true love for God and self in the proper way. The second is quite the opposite.
Praised be the Lord! Good for you!hate the sin not the sinner…also applies to oneself. something which has taken me,a long enough time to learn.Actually this is something i learned (applying hate the sin not the sinner to myself) from a dear friend who does not live a christian faith,(long story)
Illness itself is not sin - mental illness can even diminish your culpability of sin, as the Catholic Catechism points out.I’m not saying this applies to the original poster, but wanted to throw this out on the topic of self hatred. If one has a mental illness, such as depression, couldn’t that be the cause of self hate? If that were the case, having an illness (or side effects of an illness) couldn’t be a sin, right?
Nevertheless, I agree discussing this with a priest would be beneficial.
Hatred is never good. God loves you and God never wants us to hate something He loves. Don’t get humility and hatred mixed up. If you are humble and know that God is great and you acknowledge our need for Him in order to avoid sin and repent, that is not hating oneself, but hating the sins one commits. That is humility.Is self hatred a sin? Or is it laudable as it may lead to repentance?![]()
I don’t know if it is a sin, but…Is self hatred a sin? Or is it laudable as it may lead to repentance?![]()
I think I was wrong in referring to hatred of one’s vanity, conceit, arrogance, pride, pettiness, and selfishness in general as actually being self-hatred. Forgive me, please, I wasn’t thinking. Those negative qualities of selfishness are referred to a forms of self-love by the saints…not a healthy form of loving self but a selfish one.*Self-hatred *can have two very opposite meanings.
St. Catherine of Siena and other saints know that self-hatred (hatred of one’s vanity, conceit, arrogance, pride, pettiness and selfishness in general) is a good thing (meritorious). I see this and agree.
Self-hatred can also be meant to be something quite the opposite: actually hating your very self by not taking care of your very soul and body, which is the opposite - and a very detrimental thing (and sinful.)
The first kind is motivated by true love for God and self in the proper way. The second is quite the opposite.