Sin in Motivation
Armodoxy for Today: Finding the Sin in Motivation
The Prodigal Son, a parable offered to us by Jesus and recorded in the Gospel of St. Luke, chapter 15. We continue this dive into the story today by looking at the sin of the Prodigal son.
The prodigal lifestyle that the younger son adopted is usually thought of as his sin, if not, but only by the popular name of the parable. The word prodigal is characterized by profuse or wasteful spending. The word describes someone who is addicted to wasteful expenditure, as of money, time, energy or strength. I propose that these are only manifestations of the true sin, which can be found in a list compiled by the Church, name Pride, Envy, Anger, Gluttony, Lust, Covetousness, and Laziness. Start off with the youthful pride that made him demand his share of inheritance, a pride which deceived him into thinking that he knew better than his father. And as you go through this list, which the Church identifies as “deadly sins” transfer the same measure on your life. Look at the motivations that make you do the things you do.
The Prodigal son was wasteful with the inheritance his father gave him. Think of the talents, the graces, the gifts given to us by God. How do we use them? How do we abuse them? Or perhaps, not even use them? Are we squandering the gifts of God on reckless living?
We pray, from the Armenian Church’s form of Confession, I have also sinned by the seven-fold transgressions of the deadly sins: by pride and all its forms, envy and all its forms, anger and all its forms, sloth and all its forms, covetousness and all its forms, gluttony and all its forms, and lust and all its forms; I have sinned against God. Lord have mercy.

2026 Epostle
2009 Fr. Vazken



2025 Fr Vazken

2025 Fr Vazken
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