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Daily Inspiration Quote by John Chrysostom

"Slander is worse than cannibalism"

About this Quote

Slander is worse than cannibalism is the kind of moral provocation John Chrysostom loved: a grotesque comparison that forces the listener to feel the stakes of speech in the body. As a fourth-century preacher in a culture that prized rhetoric and lived on reputation, Chrysostom understood that words were not decorative. They were weapons. By reaching for cannibalism, he drags gossip out of the parlor and into the realm of ritual horror, making the point that the tongue can do a kind of eating.

The intent is pastoral but also disciplinary. He is not simply condemning lying; he is attacking the casual social economy of insinuation, the half-truth, the pious rumor passed along as concern. Cannibalism violates nature once, in a moment of extremity. Slander, by contrast, can be habitual, leisurely, even pleasurable. It consumes a person in public: their credibility, relationships, livelihood. In late antiquity, where legal protections were uneven and honor functioned as social currency, a damaged name could mean real material danger. Chrysostom’s hyperbole is strategic: it reframes speech as an act with mortal consequences, not a minor sin of manners.

The subtext is theological. Christianity treats the body as sacred, yet Chrysostom suggests the soul can be wounded more deeply than flesh. Slander mimics diabolical work: accusation, division, the turning of neighbor against neighbor. The line’s power comes from collapsing the distance between talk and violence. It insists that cruelty does not require blood on your hands; it can be accomplished with a sentence, delivered politely, and repeated for sport.

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TopicHonesty & Integrity
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Slander is worse than cannibalism
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John Chrysostom is a Clergyman from Greece.

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