Look, this was the iniquity of your sister Sodom: She and her daughter had pride, fullness of food, and abundance of idleness; neither did she strengthen the hand of the poor and needy. And they were haughty and committed abomination before Me; therefore I took them away as I saw fit. (Ez 16,49-50) ... And the Lord said, “Because the outcry against Sodom and Gomorrah is great, and because their sin is very grave... (Gen 18,20)
A man is truly a strange being. Considering that it was difficult for Lot to date Abram, his own uncle, the man who introduced him to the new land, gave him patronage, was his counselor, introduced him to his God, and was ready to show generosity and give him priority in choosing the territory— after all, one does not live badly with such! And yet Lot chose Sodom, where orgies and dangerous violence took place ...
It is likely that Lot kept his distance from the worst of what was happening in the city. He was of a different species, his origins, and perhaps his religion left a mark on him. But Lot did not walk near God like Abram, and God did not use to visit Lot in the same way. If he experienced anything of communion with God, it was only because he stayed close to his uncle. He was able to write it all off when he broke up with him. At the same time, it must have been clear to him that he would not find another place in the whole of Canaan that God visits besides Abram - but he did not look for the place anyway ... And yet we are struck when we observe someone he is willing not to see, not to hear. Not to see the various signals that must have indicated him long ago: beware, that's not a good way, you're heading for doom here. And not to hear the cries of the oppressed that came from Sodom.
Contrary to the often accepted view that the destruction of Sodom was a punishment for homosexual practices, a careful look at the text reveals that the cause was in fact violence as a result of sexual orgies (presumably of all kinds, as the term "sodomy" indicates).
Today, the theories of the boom and bust cycles of civilizations are revived. The stage of modesty, sacrifice for the community, work, development and growth is replaced by a stage of enjoyment of wealth and all its benefits, followed by moral decline and decay. Thus ended the once richest Rome, and many see parallels to our contemporary western civilization. Sodom was a sure example of this, for it is clear that if it had something to offer its inhabitants, it was a high level of prosperity ("pride, fullness of bread, and confident peace..."). It was, in short, the prestigious address of the world at that time. Whoever had a house here meant something. But there are pitfalls to affluence, one of which is over-saturation, which leads to the search for more and more pleasures. When Lot came to Sodom, it was certainly not a good place for a good man even then, but he probably would not have willingly entered into such horrible conditions as Genesis 19 portrays for us. Rather, it is more likely that it was only here that he witnessed the gradual decline of the city toward public orgies and pervasive violence.