The verdict
The Bible does not contain a list called the seven deadly sins. The canonical Western Christian list — pride, envy, wrath, sloth, greed, gluttony, and lust — was developed by Christian theologians in the centuries after the New Testament, not given as a unified grouping in any biblical text.
Origin
The list’s history runs through several stages:
- Evagrius Ponticus (4th century), a monk in the Egyptian desert, compiled an early list of eight evil thoughts (logismoi) that monks should resist: gluttony, lust, avarice, sadness, anger, sloth/acedia, vainglory, pride. This is the most influential ancestor of the later list.
- John Cassian (early 5th century) brought Evagrius’s framework to the Latin-speaking Western church in his Institutes and Conferences, modifying the list of eight.
- Pope Gregory I (Gregory the Great, c. 540-604), in his Moralia in Job (c. 590 CE), refined the list to seven by combining and reorganising elements. Gregory’s version became the basis of the standard Western list.
- Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274), in the Summa Theologiae, gave the classical theological articulation of the seven capital vices and their relations.
The list became canonical in Western Christian moral teaching, took central position in medieval catechesis, and entered the broader culture through Dante’s Purgatorio (early 14th century), where the seven cornices of Mount Purgatory each correspond to one of the deadly sins.
None of this development took place in the biblical text. The list is a Christian-theological construct, developed by named individuals over six centuries.
What the Bible does include
The Hebrew Bible’s closest analogue is Proverbs 6:16-19 — sometimes called the seven things the LORD hates:
“There are six things the LORD hates, seven that are detestable to him: haughty eyes, a lying tongue, hands that shed innocent blood, a heart that devises wicked schemes, feet that are quick to rush into evil, a false witness who pours out lies, and one who stirs up discord among brothers.” (Proverbs 6:16-19, BSB)
The list contains seven items but is a different list from the traditional seven deadly sins:
- Haughty eyes corresponds roughly to pride
- A lying tongue corresponds to dishonesty (not in the standard list)
- Hands that shed innocent blood corresponds to murder (a specific act, not a vice category)
- A heart that devises wicked schemes corresponds to malicious planning
- Feet quick to rush into evil corresponds to impetuous wrongdoing
- A false witness who pours out lies corresponds to perjury
- One who stirs up discord corresponds to social disruption
This list omits sloth, gluttony, and lust entirely. It includes social-disruptive behaviour (stirring up discord) that does not appear in the traditional seven. The two lists overlap somewhat at pride and at general malice but are otherwise different.
The New Testament’s equivalent passages are vice lists in Paul’s letters — most fully Galatians 5:19-21 (the works of the flesh) and 1 Corinthians 6:9-10. Galatians 5 names fifteen items in its list. 1 Corinthians 6 names ten. Neither list matches the seven of medieval Western theology.
What the popular usage assumes
Citing the seven deadly sins as a biblical category is a category mistake. The Bible has multiple vice lists. None of them is the seven of medieval tradition. The traditional list is a useful theological synthesis with a long history of Christian usage — Dante, Chaucer, medieval mystery plays, contemporary catechesis — but its source is Gregory I and his successors, not the Bible.