Seven Deadly Sin: Sloth

Sloth (Latin, Socordia) can entail different vices. While sloth is sometimes defined as physical laziness, spiritual laziness is emphasized. Failing to develop spiritually is key to becoming guilty of sloth. In Christian faith, sloth rejects grace and God. Sloth has also been defined as a failure to do things that one should do. By this definition, evil exists when good men fail to act.

In the city of Al-Kal'as in Western region of China, there lived Mustapha, a tailor, with his wife and young son, Aladdin. When Aladdin reached his tenth year, Mustapha decided to teach him his trade. Aladdin was lazy, and whenever Mustapha left his shop Aladdin would sneak out and play with his friends. This behavior saddened the tailor, and he eventually sickened and died. Finding herself a widow, Aladdin's mother sold the shop and took to spinning cotton into yarn to provide for her and the boy.

When Aladdin was in his fifteenth year, a magus from Maghrib came to the city. The magus was a sorcerer and astrologer who wielded great and terrible magic. He saw Aladdin playing in the street with his friends and thought to him, “This is just the boy I need.” He questioned one of the boys about Aladdin, and after discovering his history, pretended to be the brother of Aladdin's dead father. He gave Aladdin money and promised to visit him and his mother the next day.

The next day, the Magus again found Aladdin in the streets and gave him money to prepare a supper for that evening. When he arrived for supper, the magician fabricated a story about his travels and inquired what trade Aladdin had learned to provide for his mother. Upon learning of Aladdin's idleness, the magician offered to finance him in the merchant business.

Over the next couple of days, the magician took Aladdin to the gardens outside the city. When they stopped at a hill beyond the gardens, the Magus told Aladdin to build a fire, and opened the Cave of Wonder, a chasm in the ground with magic. At the bottom of the chasm was a golden ring attached to a marble slab. The magician told Aladdin he was the only one who could lift the slab, behind which lay a great treasury.

Once the slab was raised, Aladdin entered the cavern with the ring on his finger and instructions not to touch any of the treasure until he had the lamp from the far chamber in his hands. While returning to the cavern's entrance, Aladdin filled his pockets with all manner of jewels. Finding himself burdened by their weight and unable to climb the last step, he asked the magician for help. The Magus told Aladdin to throw him the lamp to lighten his load, but Aladdin couldn't reach it for all the jewels piled on top in his pockets. In anger, the magician closed the chasm, sealing Aladdin inside.

Realizing the magician's deception, Aladdin set about looking for another entrance to the cavern. After wandering, Aladdin discovered the Magus had sealed all of the other doors by magic. He fell to crying and accidentally rubbed the ring. The slave of the ring, the Jinn, appeared, offering to perform whatever task Aladdin required of him. Aladdin wished to be released from the cavern, and immediately found he standing on the hill near the remains of the fire.

Rushing home, he told his mother of his adventure and showed her the lamp. They determined to sell the lamp to get money for food. When Aladdin's mother rubbed the lamp to clean it, a Jinni appeared and declared himself the slave of the lamp. Aladdin requested food, which the Jinni quickly brought on gold platters. When they were done eating, Aladdin's mother advised him to get rid of both the ring and the lamp, but Aladdin refused. When the food was gone, he took the platters and sold them in the market. This continued for some time, and all the while Aladdin spent his days in the market street learning to become a merchant.

He asked for and received a magnificent palace and the hand of the sultan's daughter in marriage. The sorcerer, meanwhile, was determined to gain control of the magic lamp. He tricked Aladdin's wife into exchanging the lamp for a new one and then commanded the genie of the lamp to move Aladdin's palace to Africa. In time, Aladdin and his wife defeated the sorcerer and recovered the lamp. Then they had to prevent the sorcerer's wicked younger brother from seizing it. From that time on, Aladdin and his wife were free from danger. When the Sultan died, Aladdin was given the throne, and they lived happily and in peace until their deaths.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

History of Homosexual: Ancient Greece

Daily life of Roman life: Slavery

History of GLBT in the World