Is Gluttony a Sin? What the Bible Really Says

Yes. Gluttony is a sin.

The Bible never states this in a single blunt sentence, but when the relevant texts are laid out clearly, the conclusion is unavoidable.

Gluttony is not the same as enjoying food, being overweight, or eating a large meal.

It is the condition of the heart in which physical appetite has displaced God as the governing priority.

That condition, Scripture addresses directly.

What Gluttony Actually Means

The word glutton appears in both Testaments, and it carries a consistent meaning.

In Hebrew, the word zolel (used in Proverbs 23:20–21) comes from a root meaning “loose,” “wasteful,” or “without restraint in consumption.”

It describes someone whose appetite governs their behavior rather than wisdom or self-control.

In Greek, the word phagos (used in Matthew 11:19) means “an eater,” someone defined by their eating.

The English word gluttony itself comes from the Latin gula, meaning to gulp.

Every angle of the word points to the same thing: appetite that has outrun its proper limits and taken control.

Gluttony is not occasional overindulgence.

It is the habitual yielding to appetite beyond what is necessary or right, rooted in a disordered desire for the pleasure food provides.

What the Bible Actually Says

Proverbs 23:20–21

ESV “Be not among drunkards or among gluttonous eaters of meat, for the drunkard and the glutton will come to poverty, and slumber will clothe them with rags.”

Solomon places gluttony alongside drunkenness as behaviors that share the same root: appetite without self-governance.

Both lead to ruin, not because food is evil, but because overindulgence always extracts a cost.

Philippians 3:19

NIV “Their end is destruction, their god is their belly, and their glory is in their shame. Their mind is set on earthly things.”

Paul is describing people who have made appetite into an idol.

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“Their god is their belly” is not rhetorical excess; it is a precise theological diagnosis.

When the stomach becomes the organizing center of life, something other than God occupies the throne.

1 Corinthians 6:19–20

ESV “Or do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit within you, whom you have from God? You are not your own, for you were bought with a price. So glorify God in your body.”

This verse is often cited in other contexts, but its logic applies directly to gluttony.

The body belongs to God.

Consistently overindulging in ways that harm or dishonor it is not a neutral private matter.

Romans 13:14

NIV “Rather, clothe yourselves with the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh, to gratify its desires.”

Making provision for the flesh means deliberately arranging your life to satisfy bodily appetite.

Gluttony, by definition, does exactly that.

Galatians 6:7–8

ESV “Do not be deceived: God is not mocked, for whatever one sows, that will he also reap. For the one who sows to his own flesh will from the flesh reap corruption, but the one who sows to the Spirit will from the Spirit reap eternal life.”

Sowing to the flesh means consistently investing your life in satisfying physical cravings.

The harvest of that sowing is not abundance; it is corruption.

What Gluttony Is Not

This distinction is important enough to state plainly.

Gluttony is not body size or weight.

Physical appearance and body composition are affected by genetics, health conditions, medication, and dozens of other factors outside a person’s control.

A person can be large-bodied and temperate. A person can be thin and gluttonous.

The sin is not in the body; it is in the orientation of the heart toward appetite.

Gluttony is not enjoying food.

God explicitly named food as good (Genesis 1:29) and gave wine to gladden the human heart (Psalm 104:15).

Celebrating a feast, eating with joy, or taking genuine pleasure in good food is not gluttony.

Gluttony is not overeating once.

Eating too much at a meal does not make someone a glutton.

The category the Bible has in mind is habitual, unchosen, unresisted yielding to appetite as a governing force.

Gluttony is not limited to food.

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The pattern of making bodily appetite into a controlling priority can apply to anything consumed: food, entertainment, comfort, stimulation.

The stomach is representative; the problem is appetite as master.

Why the Church Has Often Stayed Silent on This

Gluttony has historically been one of the seven deadly sins, a classification introduced by the early church theologian Evagrius Ponticus (a fourth-century monk who catalogued sins threatening the spiritual life) and later formalized by Gregory the Great (a sixth-century pope and theologian).

Yet it is one of the most rarely preached in modern churches.

The silence is not theological.

It is sociological: gluttony is a sin that visibly marks some people and is entirely invisible in others.

A thin person whose relationship to comfort food is functionally idolatrous faces no external accountability.

The inconsistency of applying this standard selectively to visible body size is a failure of pastoral integrity.

Scripture applies it uniformly to the heart, not the mirror.

What the Bible Calls Believers Toward Instead

The answer to gluttony in Scripture is not shame, rigid dieting, or food restriction.

It is the fruit of the Spirit, specifically self-control (Galatians 5:22–23).

Self-control is not the suppression of desire but the governance of desire under the Lordship of Christ.

Paul describes his own practice in 1 Corinthians 9:27: “I discipline my body and keep it under control.”

The word he uses for discipline is hypopiazo, a Greek term meaning to strike under the eye, to bring into submission through firm action.

This is not a passive resolution.

It is active, daily, Spirit-enabled stewardship of the body for the glory of God.

The goal is not to eat less.

The goal is to eat, drink, and do everything else in a way that reflects who your Master is (1 Corinthians 10:31).

Common Questions About Gluttony

Is gluttony one of the seven deadly sins?

Yes, though the “seven deadly sins” list is a church tradition, not a biblical text. The list was developed by early church theologians and formalized in the medieval period. The Bible condemns gluttony directly (Proverbs 23:20–21, Philippians 3:19) without ranking it against other sins.

Does the Bible say gluttony is worse than other sins?

No. Scripture does not rank gluttony above other sins, and it does not single it out as uniquely severe. It is treated alongside other failures of self-governance. The danger is that it is often ignored in the church while other sins receive significant attention, which creates an unbiblical double standard.

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Was Jesus accused of gluttony?

Yes. In Matthew 11:19, Jesus’ critics called him “a glutton and a drunkard” because he ate and drank with tax collectors and sinners. This was a false charge made by people offended by his association with the social outcasts of his day, not a legitimate critique of his habits.

Is it a sin to enjoy food?

No. God created food as a good gift, and Scripture celebrates meals, feasts, and the pleasure of eating (Ecclesiastes 9:7, Psalm 104:15). The sin is not in enjoyment but in appetite becoming a governing master. Enjoying food gratefully and moderately is entirely consistent with biblical faithfulness.

How do I know if I am struggling with gluttony?

The key question is not how much you eat but what role appetite plays. If eating is your primary comfort or stress relief and you cannot moderate it, appetite may have taken a governing role Scripture reserves for God. Honest prayer is the starting point.

What is the difference between gluttony and an eating disorder?

They are not the same. Eating disorders, such as binge eating disorder, are medical and psychological conditions requiring clinical care. Gluttony is a spiritual category describing a heart orientation. A person with an eating disorder is not necessarily guilty of gluttony, and treating them as identical causes real harm.

A Prayer for Self-Control Over Appetite

Lord, my appetites are real and You made them.

But You did not make them to be my master.

Where I have arranged my life around satisfying cravings that belong under Your Lordship, forgive me.

I do not want food, comfort, or pleasure to sit where only You belong.

Give me the Spirit’s fruit of self-control.

Not to punish my body but to govern it as a temple that belongs to You.

Teach me to eat, drink, and live in a way that says: You are God, and these things are gifts.

Amen.

Consulted Sources

DeYoung, R. K. (2020). Glittering vices: A new look at the seven deadly sins and their remedies. Brazos Press.

Plantinga, C. (1995). Not the way it’s supposed to be: A breviary of sin. Eerdmans.

Schreiner, T. R. (2010). Galatians (Zondervan Exegetical Commentary). Zondervan.

GotQuestions.org. (n.d.). Is gluttony a sin? What does the Bible say about overeating?

Christianity.com. (n.d.). What is gluttony and is it a sin?

Crosswalk.com. (n.d.). What does the Bible say about gluttony?

Bible Study Tools. (n.d.). What is gluttony and is it a sin?

The Gospel Coalition Africa. (2024). Their god is their belly: Gluttony and faith. TGC Africa Blog.

(2025). 21 Bible verses about gluttony: The sin of overindulgence. Faith on View Blog.

(2025). Feeling out of control? What the Bible says about gluttony. The Bible Chat Blog.

(2025). Philippians 3:17–21: Gluttony: When you like it too much. Dillingham Presbyterian Church Blog.

Pastor Eve Mercie
Pastor Eve Merciehttps://scriptureriver.com
Pastor Eve Mercie is a minister and biblical counselor with over 15 years of experience in local church ministry. She holds a Master of Divinity from Liberty University, which laid the foundation of her theological training and shaped her ability to teach Scripture with clarity and depth. She has served in both Associate Pastor and Lead Pastor roles across congregations in the United States. Her studies in counseling psychology gave her the tools to sit with people in real pain, and over the years she has walked alongside hundreds of individuals working through anxiety, depression, grief, identity struggles, and seasons of spiritual doubt. With a background in philosophy, she has strengthened her ability to engage hard questions about faith with honesty and without easy answers. Training in leadership and organizational management has also helped her build and sustain healthy ministry environments where people genuinely grow. Her studies in history and sociology have given her a broad understanding of the world her congregation actually lives in, making her teaching grounded and relevant. Through her ministry blog, Pastor Eve addresses the questions believers carry into their daily lives, including the ones rarely spoken aloud in church. Her writing is practical, and rooted in Scripture, shaped by everything she has studied and everyone she has served. She is committed to helping Christians build a faith that is theologically solid, emotionally healthy, and strong enough for real life.
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