Friday Feature: Change for Your Health

My mom has always thought I was different. Of course we know that to be true; we are all different; God made us that way, but for my mama I just seemed to stand out from my siblings and her with my food choices. She would (and sometimes still does) say “Where did you come from?” She knows. I wasn’t adopted, but it’s just hard for her to understand why I like garlic and eastern spices when we never used them in my childhood home. She doesn’t understand why my favorite foods are Ethiopian, Indian and Mediterranean. She doesn’t understand why I dine at these restaurants and even cook some of my favorite dishes at home and serve them to my family. She can’t understand why I don’t serve a white dinner roll or cornbread with every meal. And how can something be sweet without white sugar? And how can you manage or cure pain without a prescription drug? And how can anything taste good not made the old-fashioned way? Though she may have wanted to say “Blah, blah, blah” when I would tell her of certain benefits to my health regime, she has begun to listen after listening to the experts.

Her occupational therapist, Manoj, has a doctorate in occupational therapy, has a best friend who is a naturopathic doctor and himself has studied natural remedies for gout, a form of arthritis. This week he told her to cut out of her diet pork, seafood (except salmon), and beef, to include vegetables like celery and those from the sea and drink plenty of water and tart cherry juice. Manoj, a native of India, and I talked about our favorite Indian dishes and our mutual love for Ethiopian food. Everything Manoj said my mom had heard from me and heeded some, but from the surprise in her eyes that her “different” daughter had told her the same things, I believe she will begin to incorporate more of these remedies.

Her nurse, Kate, made sure to emphasize the importance of dental hygiene for a healthy heart, saying she has to brush her teeth before going to bed so the mouth bacteria won’t travel to her heart and possibly set up an infection there. This is particularly important for my mom who has stents in her heart arteries to push away the blockages there. Earlier that week I had just told my mom how poor dental hygiene could cause a host of health problems, like diabetes and abscesses, and she gave me the side eye. After Kate, who has been a nurse for 30 years, spoke to her she gave me wide eyes and admitted that I had just told her something similar. Now my mom may fall asleep before taking care of her teeth, but she has popped up in the middle of the night to handle her business.

So if you have a granola-loving friend who is picky about the way she eats and is always trying to get you to try something you have never done, let alone heard of, be open. She might just be telling you what the experts have uncovered and are now sharing with their patients. Remember, God told us what we needed to know before the emergence of any “experts.” In Genesis He told us that He gave us plants and seeds for meat and He later added meat for food (1:29-30, 9:3). His ordering seems to speak to the primacy of food grown from the ground. Regardless, we can’t deny the proliferation of reports on the benefits of fruits and vegetables. Just this week I heard a news report on the benefit of blueberries and apples: preventing and ridding the body of disease, giving energy and providing mental clarity.

If you are that health kick person, keep doing what you’re doing, including sharing your benefits with friends. They may talk about and shun your advice, but, like my mom, they may eventually take heed. You have God, experts, your changes for the better and the food itself on your side. Your words to them are not in vain.

Friday Feature: The Cleansing Power of Water


The other day a great correlation between water and the Holy Spirit came to me. I had been drinking what I thought was a lot of water but my skin still looked horrible. I decided to drink more than usual and for the last few days my skin has been almost flawless. The more water I drink the better my insides are cleansed and the result of the internal cleaning shows up externally. The same thing goes with the Holy Ghost. The more we allow Him to fill us up our insides become clean and the internal cleansing of our spirit then reflects externally on our face, in our attitude, in our speech, in our overall demeanor. We see in Scripture how water is equated to the Holy Spirit, with references to the Spirit being a fountain, well, spring of water, poured and poured out, among others (Proverbs 1:23, Isaiah 12:3, 32:15, Joel 2:28, John 7:37-39). Fountains, wells, springs of water and whatever is poured upon are all consumed with water. The water completely takes over whatever it fills, even to overflowing. The water now dominates. But fountains, wells and springs are meant to have water, be dominated by water. If they don’t have water—if water doesn’t dominate them—we know that something is wrong with them. The same is true for us. We were meant to have water, physical and spiritual, but so many of us don’t like water and do whatever we can to avoid drinking it.

We dress water with lemon or some other flavor to make it palatable. We do the same with the Holy Spirit. We sometimes only accept His ministry by adding to His word to us, maybe rationalizing what we think He meant so that we can receive a portion of what He actually said. But, just like water, the Holy Spirit doesn’t need any additions. God gave us the Holy Spirit, who is perfect and perfect to cleanse us from all unrighteousness if we allow Him to fill us. Pure water has no taste; it’s simply refreshing. We have polluted it, though, by dumping trash and chemical waste in it. As a result, we have had to strip the water of the toxins and then add nutrients to it so we can simulate what God intended for us to have. We do the same with the Holy Spirit. We strip Him of his majesty by fashioning Him in our own image, realize how inadequate our Holy Spirit version is then try to add some super-spiritual sounding ideas to whatever we’re doing and call that the Holy Spirit’s doing. But we can’t “water down” water or the Holy Spirit. They are complete in and of themselves. We need to consume these great resources God has given us to flourish.

So as we drink water I want us to think of it as the Holy Spirit filling us. Each glass we drink is like an infusion of the Holy Ghost traveling through our insides, covering, filling and taking over every part until He is fully seen. We want the Holy Spirit to be seen in us. We must make room for Him by allowing Him the space to operate in us fully so He can be fully seen in us. May the cleansing power of the Holy Spirit do a perfect work in us as we allow Him to consume us (1 Thessalonians 5:19).

Friday Feature: Three Amazing Thoughts

As you may know I completed a raw food program last month and experienced amazing results, including a 17 pound drop in weight. I feel lighter physically, emotionally, mentally and spiritually. In my post My Raw Food Journey, I listed some general things I had learned, including new food preparations and philosophies. During the program’s conference calls I would share some of the delightful and surprising changes that happened to me while on the program: Being full fast and having amazing energy where I no longer need to take naps. I didn’t understand what with raw foods made me so full eating so little and being so energized, but the program director let gave me these reasons:

1) Raw food metabolizes faster than cooked food so it gives your body its needed nutrients quickly and thus signals to the brain that your stomach is full.
2) The body can break down raw food easier because the digestive enzymes that are necessary for this process are still intact. Most of these enzymes, however, are destroyed when cooking food. When eating cooked foods, the body has to work harder to digest these because the body has to produce digestive enzymes that should come from the consumed food. This is the reason you may want to go to sleep after a meal, particularly a big one. Whereas with raw foods, the normal digestive process takes place, leaving you with energy to expend on activities instead of on breaking down food.

When I told her my plan was not to be 100 percent raw, she suggested I make sure to eat some raw food along with my cooked food for the following reason: She said for whatever reason the body reacts to cooked foods like a foreign invader and the body works hard to rid itself of the foreign invader like it would a virus. If you eat raw food along with cooked food, the body no longer treats the cooked food like a foreign invader. Of the three theories she gave, this one gave me pause. I have yet to research any of her theories for scientific support, but my empirical evidence can testify to what she has said, even on this last thought. I cooked some black eyed peas last night and ate some with some tabbouleh; I felt fine. I ate some more peas today with some carrot slaw; I felt fine; I ate two spoonfuls of peas alone and my stomach was upset. It was in knots and hurt something awful. Again, I haven’t checked out the science behind my director’s statements but my hunger satisfaction, energy and physical comfort agree with her words. Science or no science, I like how my body is working with the good, uncooked foods I have been eating. If you have yet to try more raw foods in your diet, perhaps try to eat at least one raw food with your cooked foods. You definitely don’t have anything to lose (except for unwanted weight) and, as I have experienced, much to gain.

Friday Feature: Food’s Higher Purpose

Food has a higher purpose than for pleasure. I know some of you don’t want to hear that, especially those of you who say, “But I love food.” It’s okay to love food, but how do we allow our love for food to line up with the word of God? Look at the scripture where food is discussed and see what the purposes were:

for meat (to curb hunger)—Gen. 9:3
for sacrifice—Exodus 30:34
for celebration—Genesis 21:8
for worship—Genesis 29:18
for memorial—Exodus 12:14
for hospitality—Genesis 18:1-8
for dedication—Daniel 1:8-16
for bribery (Genesis 25:30-34)
for pleasure—(1 Samuel 2:12-17, 4:18)

When you read the above scriptures, notice there was immoral behavior and gluttony the times food was used for pleasure apart from God’s sanctioning. God gave us food to eat and taste buds for pleasure, but we have to look to God to tell us how to use our food. As far as I can see, God mostly sanctioned food to sustain and honor life. Emotional masking, boredom, and gluttonous pleasure are things God wouldn’t have us engage in so surely we can’t use food toward these ends. When we do (which I’m sure we all have done at one time or another), we are guilty of elevating food to a higher status than what God intends.

Once we recognize that food has a higher purpose, we can then redefine our relationship with it. Food is neither our friend nor our enemy. It is a tool God gave us to master. Food is our slave and we have to master it. We humans have to understand that God gave us dominion, which means we have charge over anything non-human, and that includes food. We can control, must control, food for our health and not allow food to control us. We are the lord of food, but in order for us to operate like we are lord requires that we submit our lordship to the lordship of our Master. He will tell us what to eat, when to eat, how much to eat, where to eat, and with whom to eat. He will tell us when our food program needs to change and how to change it. As we seek God to control this area of our life, our schedules, taste buds, emotions or boredom will have less influence over how we eat. Like with anything in life, God will direct our path regarding food. He wants us to have the best food for our bodies so our bodies work best in the body of Christ and for the Kingdom of God. Truly, having an ultimate working body for the body of Christ and God’s Kingdom is a higher purpose for food. I believe when we seek to grasp that food has a higher purpose than for pleasure, we will see an increase in service to our Lord, better attitudes about and while working with others, and an increase in the spirit of wisdom and revelation for our lives, the lives of others and God’s greater plans. And I believe that these are but a few of the divine impartations we will experience. With Jesus as Lord of ALL of our life, just imagine all the great wonders we will see.

How would you define your relationship to food? How do you believe you would be an increased benefit to the body of Christ and the Kingdom of God with Jesus being the ultimate Lord over food in your life?

Friday Feature: Roundup Twelve

My three Friday Feature posts this month told you about the benefits of my raw food journey and challenged you to choose satisfying hunger above satisfying taste and to make godly food choices. To give you more information about eating raw, satisfying hunger and making godly food choices, here are some links to help you:

Raw Vegan Radio with Steve Prussack

The Garden Diet

The Vegan Food Enthusiast

Love Connection

One Another