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"accidie" Definitions
  1. ACEDIA

6 Sentences With "accidie"

How to use accidie in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "accidie" and check conjugation/comparative form for "accidie". Mastering all the usages of "accidie" from sentence examples published by news publications.

For Ms. Didion, that was not just a literary but a spiritual exercise, conducted in opposition to what she calls the "accidie" — the moral torpor — of the late 1960s.
According to the Oxford Concise Dictionary of the Christian Church"accidie" The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. Ed. E. A. Livingstone. Oxford University Press, 2006. Oxford Reference Online.
The term acedia all but died out in common usage by the beginning of the 20th century. "In the 1933 Oxford English Dictionary, accidie was confidently declared obsolete, with references dating from 1520 and 1730. But by the mid-twentieth century, as civilized people were contending with the genocidal horror of two world wars, accidie was back in use." No longer the exclusive property of theologians, the word appears in the writings of Aldous Huxley and Ian Fleming.
It appears in Dante's Divine Comedy not only as a sin to be punished in the damned but as the sin that leads Dante to the edge of Hell to begin with. Chaucer's parson includes acedia in his list of vices. It follows anger and envy in the list and the parson connects the three vices together: > For Envye blindeth the herte of a man, and Ire troubleth a man; and Accidie > maketh him hevy, thoghtful, and wrawe. / Envye and Ire maken bitternesse in > herte; which bitternesse is moder of Accidie, and binimeth him the love of > alle goodnesse.
Acedia, engraving by Hieronymus Wierix, 16th century Acedia (; also accidie or accedie , from Latin , and this from Greek , "negligence", "lack of" "care") has been variously defined as a state of listlessness or torpor, of not caring or not being concerned with one's position or condition in the world. In ancient Greece akidía literally meant an inert state without pain or care. Early Christian monks used the term to define a spiritual state of listlessness and from there the term developed a markedly Christian moral tone. In modern times it has been taken up by literary figures and connected to depression.
Sloth is referred to in Latin as accidie or acedia, which vice tempts a self-aware soul to be too easily satisfied, thwarting charity's purpose as insufficiently perceptible within the soul itself or abjectly indifferent in relationship with the needs of others and their satisfaction, an escalation in evil, more odious than the passion of hate #Avarice (covetousness, greed): a desire to possess more than one has need or use for (or according to Dante, "excessive love of money and power"). In the Latin lists of the Seven Deadly Sins, avarice is referred to as avaritia. #Gluttony: overindulgence in food, drink or intoxicants, or misplaced desire of food as a pleasure for its sensuality ("excessive love of pleasure" was Dante's rendering). In the Latin lists of the Seven Deadly Sins, gluttony is referred to as gula.

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