The Ministry of Healing
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 23: Diet and Health
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Grains, fruits, nuts, and vegetables constitute the diet chosen for us
by our Creator. These foods, prepared in as simple and natural a
manner as possible, are the most healthful and nourishing.
Illustration —
Chrissi Nerantzi |
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Our bodies are built up from the food we eat. There is a
constant breaking down of the tissues of the body; every movement of every
organ involves waste, and this waste is repaired from our food. Each organ of
the body requires its share of nutrition. The brain must be supplied with its
portion; the bones, muscles, and nerves demand theirs. It is a wonderful
process that transforms the food into blood and uses this blood to build up the
varied parts of the body; but this process is going on continually, supplying
with life and strength each nerve, muscle, and tissue. {MH 295.1}
Selection of Food
Those foods should be chosen that best supply the elements
needed for building up the body. In this choice, appetite is not a safe guide.
Through wrong habits of eating, the appetite has become perverted. Often it
demands food that impairs health and causes weakness instead of strength. We
cannot safely be guided by the customs of society. The disease and suffering
that everywhere prevail are largely due to popular errors in regard to diet. {MH 295.2}
In order to know what are the best foods, we must study
God's original plan for man's diet. He who created man [296] and
who understands his needs appointed Adam his food. "Behold," He said,
"I have given you every herb yielding seed, . . . and every
tree, in which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for
food." Genesis 1:29, A.R.V. Upon leaving Eden to gain his livelihood by
tilling the earth under the curse of sin, man received permission to eat also
"the herb of the field." Genesis 3:18. {MH 295.3}
Grains, fruits, nuts, and vegetables constitute the diet
chosen for us by our Creator. These foods, prepared in as simple and natural a
manner as possible, are the most healthful and nourishing. They impart a
strength, a power of endurance, and a vigor of intellect that are not afforded
by a more complex and stimulating diet. {MH 296.1}
But not all foods wholesome in themselves are equally suited
to our needs under all circumstances. Care should be [297] taken
in the selection of food. Our diet should be suited to the season, to the
climate in which we live, and to the occupation we follow. Some foods that are
adapted for use at one season or in one climate are not suited to another. So
there are different foods best suited for persons in different occupations.
Often food that can be used with benefit by those engaged in hard physical
labor is unsuitable for persons of sedentary pursuits or intense mental
application. God has given us an ample variety of healthful foods, and each
person should choose from it the things that experience and sound judgment
prove to be best suited to his own necessities. {MH 296.2}
Nature's abundant supply of fruits, nuts, and grains is
ample, and year by year the products of all lands are more generally
distributed to all, by the increased facilities for transportation. As a result
many articles of food which a few years ago were regarded as expensive luxuries
are now within the reach of all as foods for everyday use. This is especially
the case with dried and canned fruits. [298] {MH 297.1}
Nuts and nut foods are coming largely into use to take the
place of flesh meats. With nuts may be combined grains, fruits, and some roots,
to make foods that are healthful and nourishing. Care should be taken, however,
not to use too large a proportion of nuts. Those who realize ill effects from
the use of nut foods may find the difficulty removed by attending to this
precaution. It should be remembered, too, that some nuts are not so wholesome
as others. Almonds are preferable to peanuts, but peanuts in limited
quantities, used in connection with grains, are nourishing and digestible. {MH 298.1}
When properly prepared, olives, like nuts, supply the place
of butter and flesh meats. The oil, as eaten in the olive, is far preferable to
animal oil or fat. It serves as a laxative. Its use will be found beneficial to
consumptives, and it is healing to an inflamed, irritated stomach. {MH 298.2}
Persons who have accustomed themselves to a rich, highly
stimulating diet have an unnatural taste, and they cannot at once relish food
that is plain and simple. It will take time for the taste to become natural and
for the stomach to recover from the abuse it has suffered. But those who
persevere in the use of wholesome food will, after a time, find it palatable.
Its delicate and delicious flavors will be appreciated, and it will be eaten
with greater enjoyment than can be derived from unwholesome dainties. And the
stomach, in a healthy [299] condition, neither fevered nor
overtaxed, can readily perform its task. {MH 298.3}
In order to maintain health, a sufficient supply of good,
nourishing food is needed. {MH
299.1}
If we plan wisely, that which is most conducive to health
can be secured in almost every land. The various preparations of rice, wheat,
corn, and oats are sent abroad everywhere, also beans, peas, and lentils.
These, with native or imported fruits, and the variety of vegetables that grow
in each locality, give an opportunity to select a dietary that is complete
without the use of flesh meats. {MH 299.2}
Wherever fruit can be grown in abundance, a liberal supply
should be prepared for winter, by canning or drying. Small fruits, such as
currants, gooseberries, strawberries, raspberries, and blackberries, can be
grown to advantage in many places where they are but little used and their
cultivation is neglected. {MH
299.3}
For household canning, glass, rather than tin cans, should
be used whenever possible. It is especially necessary that the fruit for
canning should be in good condition. Use little sugar, and cook the fruit only
long enough to ensure its preservation. Thus prepared, it is an excellent
substitute for fresh fruit. {MH
299.4}
Wherever dried fruits, such as raisins, prunes, apples,
pears, peaches, and apricots are obtainable at moderate prices, it will be
found that they can be used as staple articles of diet much more freely than is
customary, with the best results to the health and vigor of all classes of
workers. {MH 299.5}
There should not be a great variety at any one meal, for
this encourages overeating and causes indigestion. {MH 299.6}
It is not well to eat fruit and vegetables at the same meal.
If the digestion is feeble, the use of both will often cause [300]
distress and inability to put forth mental effort. It is better to have the
fruit at one meal and the vegetables at another. {MH 299.7}
The meals should be varied. The same dishes, prepared in the
same way, should not appear on the table meal after meal and day after day. The
meals are eaten with greater relish, and the system is better nourished, when
the food is varied. {MH
300.1}
Preparation of Food
It is wrong to eat merely to gratify the appetite, but no
indifference should be manifested regarding the quality of the food or the
manner of its preparation. If the food eaten is not relished, the body will not
be so well nourished. The food should be carefully chosen and prepared with
intelligence and skill. {MH
300.2}
For use in breadmaking, the superfine white flour is not the
best. Its use is neither healthful nor economical. Fine-flour bread is lacking
in nutritive elements to be found in bread made from the whole wheat. It is a
frequent cause of constipation and other unhealthful conditions. {MH 300.3}
The use of soda or baking powder in breadmaking is harmful
and unnecessary. Soda causes inflammation of the stomach and often poisons the
entire system. Many housewives [301] think that they cannot make good
bread without soda, but this is an error. If they would take the trouble to
learn better methods, their bread would be more wholesome, and, to a natural
taste, it would be more palatable. {MH 300.4}
In the making of raised or yeast bread, milk should not be
used in place of water. The use of milk is an additional expense, and it makes
the bread much less wholesome. Milk bread does not keep sweet so long after
baking as does that made with water, and it ferments more readily in the
stomach. {MH 301.1}
Bread should be light and sweet. Not the least taint of
sourness should be tolerated. The loaves should be small and so thoroughly
baked that, so far as possible, the yeast germs shall be destroyed. When hot or
new, raised bread of any kind is difficult of digestion. It should never appear
on the table. This rule does not, however, apply to unleavened bread. Fresh
rolls made of wheaten meal without yeast or leaven, and baked in a well-heated
oven, are both wholesome and palatable. {MH 301.2}
Grains used for porridge or "mush" should have
several hours' cooking. But soft or liquid foods are less wholesome than dry
foods, which require thorough mastication. Zwieback, or twice-baked bread, is
one of the most easily digested and most palatable of foods. Let ordinary
raised bread be cut in slices and dried in a warm oven till the last trace of
moisture disappears. Then let it be browned slightly all the way through. In a
dry place this bread can be kept much longer than ordinary bread, and, if
reheated before using, it will be as fresh as when new. {MH 301.3}
Far too much sugar is ordinarily used in food. Cakes, sweet
puddings, pastries, jellies, jams, are active causes of indigestion. Especially
harmful are the custards and puddings in which milk, eggs, and sugar are the
chief ingredients. The [302] free use of milk and sugar taken
together should be avoided. {MH
301.4}
If milk is used, it should be thoroughly sterilized; with
this precaution, there is less danger of contracting disease from its use.
Butter is less harmful when eaten on cold bread than when used in cooking; but,
as a rule, it is better to dispense with it altogether. Cheese is still more
objectionable; it is wholly unfit for food. {MH 302.1}
Scanty, ill-cooked food depraves the blood by weakening the
blood-making organs. It deranges the system and brings on disease, with its
accompaniment of irritable nerves and bad tempers. The victims of poor cookery
are numbered by thousands and tens of thousands. Over many graves might be
written: "Died because of poor cooking;" "Died of an abused
stomach." {MH 302.2}
It is a sacred duty for those who cook to learn how to
prepare healthful food. Many souls are lost as the result of poor cookery. It
takes thought and care to make good bread; but there is more religion in a loaf
of good bread than many think. There are few really good cooks. Young women
think that it is menial to cook and do other kinds of housework, and for this
reason many girls who marry and have the care of families have little idea of the
duties devolving upon a wife and mother. {MH 302.3}
Cooking is no mean science, and it is one of the most
essential in practical life. It is a science that all women should [303]
learn, and it should be taught in a way to benefit the poorer classes. To make
food appetizing and at the same time simple and nourishing, requires skill; but
it can be done. Cooks should know how to prepare simple food in a simple and
healthful manner, and so that it will be found more palatable, as well as more
wholesome, because of its simplicity. {MH 302.4}
Every woman who is at the head of a family and yet does not
understand the art of healthful cookery should determine to learn that which is
so essential to the well-being of her household. In many places hygienic
cooking schools afford opportunity for instruction in this line. She who has
not the help of such facilities should put herself under the instruction of
some good cook and persevere in her efforts for improvement until she is
mistress of the culinary art. {MH 303.1}
Regularity in eating is of vital importance. There should be
a specified time for each meal. At this time let everyone eat what the system
requires and then take nothing more until the next meal. There are many who eat
when the system needs no food, at irregular intervals, and between meals,
because they have not sufficient strength of will to resist inclination. When
traveling, some are constantly nibbling if anything eatable is within their
reach. This is very injurious. If travelers would eat regularly of food that is
simple and nutritious, they would not feel so great weariness nor suffer so
much from sickness. {MH
303.2}
Another pernicious habit is that of eating just before
bedtime. The regular meals may have been taken; but because there is a sense of
faintness, more food is eaten. By indulgence this wrong practice becomes a
habit and often so firmly fixed that it is thought impossible to sleep without
food. As a result of eating late suppers, the digestive process is continued
through the sleeping hours. But though the stomach works constantly, its work
is not properly accomplished. The sleep [304] is
often disturbed with unpleasant dreams, and in the morning the person awakes
unrefreshed and with little relish for breakfast. When we lie down to rest, the
stomach should have its work all done, that it, as well as the other organs of
the body, may enjoy rest. For persons of sedentary habits, late suppers are
particularly harmful. With them the disturbance created is often the beginning
of disease that ends in death. {MH 303.3}
In many cases the faintness that leads to a desire for food
is felt because the digestive organs have been too severely taxed during the
day. After disposing of one meal, the digestive organs need rest. At least five
or six hours should intervene between the meals, and most persons who give the
plan a trial will find that two meals a day are better than three. [305]
{MH 304.1}
Wrong Conditions of Eating
Food should not be eaten very hot or very cold. If food is
cold, the vital force of the stomach is drawn upon in order to warm it before
digestion can take place. Cold drinks are injurious for the same reason; while
the free use of hot drinks is debilitating. In fact, the more liquid there is
taken with the meals, the more difficult it is for the food to digest; for the
liquid must be absorbed before digestion can begin. Do not eat largely of salt,
avoid the use of pickles and spiced foods, eat an abundance of fruit, and the
irritation that calls for so much drink at mealtime will largely disappear. {MH 305.1}
Food should be eaten slowly and should be thoroughly
masticated. This is necessary in order that the saliva may be properly mixed
with the food and the digestive fluids be called into action. {MH 305.2}
Another serious evil is eating at improper times, as after
violent or excessive exercise, when one is much exhausted or [306]
heated. Immediately after eating there is a strong draft upon the nervous
energies; and when mind or body is heavily taxed just before or just after
eating, digestion is hindered. When one is excited, anxious, or hurried, it is
better not to eat until rest or relief is found. {MH 305.3}
The stomach is closely related to the brain; and when the
stomach is diseased, the nerve power is called from the brain to the aid of the
weakened digestive organs. When these demands are too frequent, the brain
becomes congested. When the brain is constantly taxed, and there is lack of
physical exercise, even plain food should be eaten sparingly. At mealtime cast
off care and anxious thought; do not feel hurried, but eat slowly and with
cheerfulness, with your heart filled with gratitude to God for all His
blessings. {MH 306.1}
Many who discard flesh meats and other gross and injurious
articles think that because their food is simple and wholesome they may indulge
appetite without restraint, and they eat to excess, sometimes to gluttony. This
is an error. The digestive organs should not be burdened with a quantity or
quality of food which it will tax the system to appropriate. {MH 306.2}
Custom has decreed that the food shall be placed upon the
table in courses. Not knowing what is coming next, one may eat a sufficiency of
food which perhaps is not the best suited to him. When the last course is
brought on, he often ventures to overstep the bounds, and take the tempting
dessert, which, however, proves anything but good for him. If all the food
intended for a meal is placed on the table at the beginning, one has
opportunity to make the best choice. {MH 306.3}
Sometimes the result of overeating is felt at once. In other
cases there is no sensation of pain; but the digestive organs lose their vital
force, and the foundation of physical strength is undermined. [307]
{MH 306.4}
The surplus food burdens the system and produces morbid,
feverish conditions. It calls an undue amount of blood to the stomach, causing
the limbs and extremities to chill quickly. It lays a heavy tax on the
digestive organs, and when these organs have accomplished their task, there is
a feeling of faintness or languor. Some who are continually overeating call
this all-gone feeling hunger; but it is caused by the over-worked condition of
the digestive organs. At times there is numbness of the brain, with
disinclination to mental or physical effort. {MH 307.1}
These unpleasant symptoms are felt because nature has
accomplished her work at an unnecessary outlay of vital force and is thoroughly
exhausted. The stomach is saying, "Give me rest." But with many the
faintness is interpreted as a demand for more food; so instead of giving the
stomach rest, another burden is placed upon it. As a consequence the digestive
organs are often worn out when they should be capable of doing good work. {MH 307.2}
We should not provide for the Sabbath a more liberal supply or
a greater variety of food than for other days. Instead of this the food should
be more simple, and less should be eaten in order that the mind may be clear
and vigorous to comprehend spiritual things. A clogged stomach means a clogged
brain. The most precious words may be heard and not appreciated because the
mind is confused by an improper diet. By overeating on the Sabbath, many do
more than they think to unfit themselves for receiving the benefit of its
sacred opportunities. {MH
307.3}
Cooking on the Sabbath should be avoided; but it is not
therefore necessary to eat cold food. In cold weather the food prepared the day
before should be heated. And let the meals, however simple, be palatable and
attractive. Especially in [308] families where there are children,
it is well, on the Sabbath, to provide something that will be regarded as a
treat, something the family do not have every day. {MH 307.4}
Where wrong habits of diet have been indulged, there should
be no delay in reform. When dyspepsia has resulted from abuse of the stomach,
efforts should be made carefully to preserve the remaining strength of the
vital forces by removing every overtaxing burden. The stomach may never
entirely recover health after long abuse; but a proper course of diet will save
further debility, and many will recover more or less fully. It is not easy to
prescribe rules that will meet every case; but, with attention to right
principles in eating, great reforms may be made, and the cook need not be
continually toiling to tempt the appetite. {MH 308.1}
Abstemiousness in diet is rewarded with mental and moral
vigor; it also aids in the control of the passions. Overeating is especially
harmful to those who are sluggish in temperament; these should eat sparingly
and take plenty of physical exercise. There are men and women of excellent
natural ability who do [309] not accomplish half what they
might if they would exercise self-control in the denial of appetite. {MH 308.2}
Many writers and speakers fail here. After eating heartily,
they give themselves to sedentary occupations, reading, study, or writing,
allowing no time for physical exercise. As a consequence the free flow of
thought and words is checked. They cannot write or speak with the force and
intensity necessary in order to reach the heart; their efforts are tame and
fruitless. {MH 309.1}
Those upon whom rest important responsibilities, those,
above all, who are guardians of spiritual interests, should be men of keen
feeling and quick perception. More than others, they need to be temperate in
eating. Rich and luxurious food should have no place upon their tables. {MH 309.2}
Every day men in positions of trust have decisions to make
upon which depend results of great importance. Often they have to think
rapidly, and this can be done successfully by those only who practice strict
temperance. The mind strengthens under the correct treatment of the physical
and mental powers. If the strain is not too great, new vigor comes with every
taxation. But often the work of those who have [310]
important plans to consider and important decisions to make is affected for
evil by the results of improper diet. A disordered stomach produces a
disordered, uncertain state of mind. Often it causes irritability, harshness,
or injustice. Many a plan that would have been a blessing to the world has been
set aside, many unjust, oppressive, even cruel measures have been carried, as
the result of diseased conditions due to wrong habits of eating. {MH 309.3}
Here is a suggestion for all whose work is sedentary or
chiefly mental; let those who have sufficient moral courage and self-control
try it: At each meal take only two or three kinds of simple food, and eat no
more than is required to satisfy hunger. Take active exercise every day, and
see if you do not receive benefit. {MH 310.1}
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Strong men who are engaged in active physical labor are not
compelled to be as careful as to the quantity or quality of their food as are
persons of sedentary habits; but even these would have better health if they
would practice self-control in eating and drinking. {MH 310.2}
Some wish that an exact rule could be prescribed for their
diet. They overeat, and then regret it, and so they keep thinking about what
they eat and drink. This is not as it should be. One person cannot lay down an
exact rule for another. Everyone should exercise reason and self-control, and
should act from principle. {MH
310.3}
Our bodies are Christ's purchased possession, and we are not
at liberty to do with them as we please. All who understand the laws of health
should realize their obligation to obey these laws which God has established in
their being. Obedience to the laws of health is to be made a matter of personal
duty. We ourselves must suffer the results of violated law. We must
individually answer to God for our habits and practices. Therefore the question
with us is not, "What is the world's practice?" but, "How shall
I as an individual treat the habitation that God has given me?" {MH 310.4}
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"Flesh as Food"
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