NUTRITION
"And God
said, Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face
of all the earth, and every tree, in which is the fruit of a tree yielding
seed; to you it shall be for meat." Genesis 1:29.
We
see here that God gave man herbs, fruits, nuts and vegetables as the proper
diet to maintain the image we were created in. The consumption of these foods
provides all the nutrients our bodies need to maintain a Godly image with
clarity of mind to discern the like
Why do we eat? Because we enjoy it. And we enjoy it
enough that very few would want to give up the habit if they could. Thank God
He created us with the ability to taste and smell and that He put such
delightful flavors and aromas into the food He has appointed for us to eat. But
even if we didn't enjoy it, we would still have to eat. Food is needed to
furnish fuel to supply energy to the body, to provide material to repair and
build tissues, and to supply substances that act to regulate body processes.
Any chemical substance found in foods that functions
in one or more of these ways is known as a nutrient. The seven basic classes of
nutrients are carbohydrates, fats, proteins, vitamins, minerals, fiber, and
water.
Only carbohydrates, fats, and proteins provide
energy or calories. Sugars and starches are both carbohydrates. Carbohydrates
and proteins yield about four calories per gram, and fats yield about nine
calories per gram. As these figures show, fats are a much more concentrated
source of energy. Fiber, long regarded as a nonessential, is now recognized as
an important body regulator. It helps to control blood sugar and cholesterol
levels, and also aids in colon hygiene. A low-fiber diet is associated with
increased risk of colon cancer, as well as other bowel diseases.
When food is properly selected and prepared, so that
the basic nutrients are consumed in the correct ratios and amounts, we can be
assured of good nutrition. All natural foods contain all seven essential
nutrients. However, the different amino acids (the building blocks of
proteins), fatty acids, vitamins, and minerals are found in varying amounts in
different foods. So we need to eat a variety of food to get all the nutrients
in sufficient quantities.
Malnutrition means we are not getting
the proper intake of nutrients, or in some cases that the nutrients are not
utilized as they should be in the body. Undernutrition means there is a lack of
certain nutrients. In under-developed countries the most common problem is
simply not getting enough food to eat or not enough variety. Starvation is a
tragic health problem for millions of people in the world. less frequent, but
equally serious, are the problems of protein or vitamin/mineral deficiency
diseases. Usually, as long as people are getting enough unrefined calories to
eat, these diseases are not common.
Overnutrition means too many nutrients.
In developed countries it is usually related to the excess consumption of
refined foods. For millions of the well-fed people of the world overnutrition
is the root cause of much premature death and disease. The top three killer
diseases in the U.S. each have strong contributing dietary factors. They are
heart disease, cancer, and strokes. Hypertension and diabetes also have strong
dietary links. The specific dietary excesses that tend to promote or cause
these diseases involve cholesterol, animal fat, too much total dietary fat, too
much sugar, too much protein, and too much salt. Basically, just too many
calories in general. It is possible to get a toxic overdose of specific
vitamins or minerals. Usually one would have to be taking vitamin/mineral pills
or highly concentrated foods for this to happen.
Obesity is one
of the most common side effects of overnutrition. A combination of proper
diet and exercise is needed to correct the problem. Briefly, the food in the
diet should be low in fat and high in fiber. High-protein diets are no more
effective than any other diet except that there is rapid initial water loss.
Excess protein is harmful to the body in several ways; in time it weakens the
kidneys, heart, bones, and immune system. Instead, eat a regular, balanced diet
that is low in fat and sugar and high in fiber. In terms of food this regimen
means sticking to mainly fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and legumes. Most
people who are obese need to eat less. They probably need to learn to accept
being slightly hungry most of the time-at least until their body adjusts to
less food, and they become physically fit through an exercise program.
We can briefly summarize what we have learned about
proper nutrition thus: "With a calm, thankful attitude and at
proper times, eat a wide variety of mostly unrefined foods, prepared in a
simple, attractive, and palatable way, in sufficient quantity to maintain ideal
body weight and good health."
Our attitude about the food we eat and our attitude
while eating is important. If we are nervous or in a hurry or upset about
something, the digestive process is impaired. It is better not to eat at all,
unless we can do so in a positive frame of mind and take our time. Hurried
eating tends to overeating. Since digestion begins in the mouth, it is
important to chew your food slowly and well.
A good
breakfast
should come early in the day. There is no such thing as "breakfast
food" either. Many people enjoy potatoes, or beans, or other vegetables,
and a main entree at breakfast. Why not? Such food gives your body the
nutrients it needs to restore itself after the night's fast and sets the
nutritional tone for the day. Usually, another main meal should be consumed no
sooner than five hours later. Most people could get by very well on two meals
per day. Those who do not need many calories for their daily occupation or who
are overweight should try this two-meal-a-day plan. If a third meal is necessary
it should be lighter and smaller and at least two hours before bedtime. Eating
big meals late at night or before going to bed is not a good practice.
Digestion during sleep is not efficient because the metabolic rate is falling.
Sleep can be disturbed, and often one feels the effects the next morning. The
same amount of calories eaten in the evening are more fattening than if they
were eaten in the morning. This fact can easily be explained on the basis of
the rise and fall in the metabolic rate between morning and evening. Also, most
bodies are energy-conservation conscious, meaning that it is easier to store
fat than to get rid of it once it is there.
Eating between
meals or
having too many meals in a day interferes with digestion. Sour stomachs and sour
attitudes are often the result. Smaller, lighter meals do digest more rapidly.
The rule is that the stomach should be allowed sufficient time to completely
empty itself of one meal and rest for maybe an hour before more food is eaten.
Factors that slow the stomach's emptying time are
the fat content of the meal, amount of food eaten, liquid drunk with the meal,
and sedentary occupations. Fruit or vegetable meals usually leave the stomach
in about two hours, whereas higher fat and protein meals take four to five
hours.
To prevent overeating and indigestion there should
not be too many varieties of food eaten at once. It is true that we should eat
a wide variety of food from meal to meal and from day to day, but three or four
different kinds of food at one time is plenty.
A good variety
of plain, unrefined plant food is more nutritionally balanced than the animal
products and manmade processed foods. Whole grains, fruits, vegetables, beans,
peas, nuts, and seeds contain high-quality protein, a better fatty-acid profile
(thus decreasing the risk of heart disease and cancer), no cholesterol, plenty
of complex carbohydrates and fiber, and are rich in vitamins and minerals and
water. Animal products and man-made foods are often high in fat, cholesterol,
sugar, salt, and harmful additives, and are lacking in fiber. Sometimes we
cannot obtain an ideal diet. People shouldn't be made to feel guilty about what
they eat if they are doing the best that they can with what knowledge and
resources they have. Certainly it is not unhealthful to use some refined
products like white flour, sugar, or oil in small amounts to prepare healthful
and tasty dishes. A moderate amount of salt can be used by most people. The
problem is that the average American taste bud has been conditioned through
overuse to expect and demand far too much of these things. It would be well to
gradually re-educate people to require much less.
The U.S. Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and
Human Needs in 1977 issued these recommendations to all Americans: Reduce salt
intake by about 50-85 percent, cut fat consumption by at least 10 percent,
slash sugar ingestion by 40 percent, and limit cholesterol to 300 mg. daily
(equivalent to one egg).
These guidelines suggest that major changes are in
order for the average American diet. The benefits of making such significant
changes in the types of food in the diet are amazing. The Adventist Health
study has shown that pure vegetarians (no animal products) have only one-third
as many deaths from cancer and one-fourth as many deaths from coronary heart
disease as non-vegetarians. In these studies other variables such as tobacco
and alcohol were accounted for, so that we know that the tremendous health
advantage of the pure vegetarian group is due to the fact that they are not
using animal products in their diet. These same studies have shown that the
vegetarians who do not smoke or drink have only 14 percent as many heart-attack
deaths and 9 percent as many cancer deaths and live an average of l2 years
longer than the general population.
Traditionally, most people measure the nutritional
status of their diet by the Four Food
Group Plan. The four food groups are: Milk and milk products, meat or
protein, fruits and vegetables, and bread and cereals. The idea is to eat a
certain number of servings from each group every day to ensure balanced
nutrition. This plan does ensure that we will meet the daily requirements for
all nutrients. Its chief drawback is that it does not guard very well against
overnutrition, which is the greatest nutritional problem in the U.S. today. We
can easily consume too much protein, fat, cholesterol, and salt on this plan.
Do we really need four food groups when we can obtain all our nutrients from
just two groups-the fruit and vegetable and bread and cereal group—just as the
vegetarians do who are so much healthier than the nonvegetarians? It is an
elemental fact of nutrition science that there is no such thing as an essential
food. There are only essential nutrients. We can get them all from two groups
or four.
The chief concern then should be "What are the
best sources available to me to get the nutrients I need?" We now know the
answer to that question, "A well-balanced vegetarian diet that includes a
variety of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, legumes, nuts, and seeds."
Although vitamin
B12 deficiencies are very rare, even among vegetarians, there is still a
question as to whether or not there are any good vegetarian sources of this
vitamin. Small amounts of low-fat dairy products or a vitamin supplement would
take care of this. But there is evidence that the vitamin is produced in the
human body, and vitamin B12 is also found in some drinking water, which may
account for the rarity of such vitamin deficiencies.
The case in
favor of the vegetarian diet can be summarized by the American Dietetic
Association, "The (ADA) affirms that a well-planned diet, consisting of a
variety of largely unrefined plant foods supplemented with some milk and eggs
(lacto-ovo vegetarian diet), meets all known nutrient needs. Furthermore, a
total plant dietary can be made adequate by careful planning, giving proper
attention to specific nutrients which may be in a less available form or in
lower concentrations or absent in plant foods. The (ADA) recognizes that a
growing body of scientific evidence supports a positive relationship between
consumption of a plant-based dietary and the prevention of certain
diseases."
You may be
saying, " But, God permitted flesh foods." I thought this too, until
God revealed to me that flesh foods are the result of sin. In Genesis 9:3,
after the flood, you see a direct reverse of God's original diet and plan for
the human race, as flesh foods were allowed. You see, "The flesh of dead
animals was not the original food for man. Man was permitted to eat it after
the flood, because all vegetation had been destroyed. . . Since the flood the
human race has been shortening the period of its existence. Physical, mental,
and moral degeneracy is rapidly increasing in these last days." - HL, page 99
These were
God's exact words in Genesis 9:5 when after the permission of flesh eating meat
was given. "And surely your blood of your lives will I require; at the
hand of every beast will I require it..." This was confirmation that the
life span of man would decrease, as they began to consume meat.
Let'stake
a look at the lifespan of man before and after the flood:
It is
evident, by comparison, that it was not God's intention to shorten man's
lifespan and introduce flesh eating into our diets. Except for Enoch, who was
translated without seeing death because of his righteousness, it is clearly
shown that the lifespan before flesh eating was significantly longer than that
of the life after flesh eating. In Genesis 6:3, God appointed man 120 years but
statistically, we barely reach 80 years of age. "Flesh was never the
best food; but its use is now doubly objectionable, since disease in animals is
so rapidly increasing. Those who use flesh foods little know what they are
eating. Often if they could see the animals when living and know the quality of
the meat they eat, they would turn from it with loathing. People are continually
eating flesh that is filled with tuberculous and cancerous germs.
Tuberculosis,
cancer, and other fatal diseases are thus communicated. In order to know what
are the best foods, we must study God's original plan for man's diet. He who
created man 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.” 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. 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." - The Ministry of Healing, page
313
You
may be saying, " But, God permitted flesh foods." I thought this too,
until God revealed to me that flesh foods are the result of sin. In Genesis
9:3, after the flood, you see a direct reverse of God's original diet and plan
for the human race, as flesh foods were allowed. You see, "The flesh of
dead animals was not the original food for man. Man was permitted to eat it
after the flood, because all vegetation had been destroyed. . . Since the flood
the human race has been shortening the period of its existence. Physical,
mental, and moral degeneracy is rapidly increasing in these last days." - HL,
page 99
These
were God's exact words in Genesis 9:5 when after the permission of flesh eating
meat was given. "And surely your blood of your lives will I require; at
the hand of every beast will I require it..." This was confirmation that
the life span of man would decrease, as they began to consume meat.
Let'stake
a look at the lifespan of man before and after the flood:
It
is evident, by comparison, that it was not God's intention to shorten man's
lifespan and introduce flesh eating into our diets. Except for Enoch, who was
translated without seeing death because of his righteousness, it is clearly
shown that the lifespan before flesh eating was significantly longer than that
of the life after flesh eating. In Genesis 6:3, God appointed man 120 years but
statistically, we barely reach 80 years of age. "Flesh was never the
best food; but its use is now doubly objectionable, since disease in animals is
so rapidly increasing. Those who use flesh foods little know what they are
eating. Often if they could see the animals when living and know the quality of
the meat they eat, they would turn from it with loathing. People are
continually eating flesh that is filled with tuberculous and cancerous germs.
Tuberculosis,
cancer, and other fatal diseases are thus communicated. In order to know what
are the best foods, we must study God's original plan for man's diet. He who
created man 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.” 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. 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." - The Ministry of Healing, page 313
For people who want a better diet it is better to make
changes gradually so that the body has time to adapt. Other family
members who are not so eager to change their diet need time to adapt, too. A
good strategy would be to start decreasing and eliminating some of the worst
junk food first and add in their place more fruits, vegetables and whole
grains. Switch to low-fat dairy products and omit fatty and processed meats.
Cut out more of the refined, processed foods like instant dinners, pastries,
snack foods, and soft drinks. Buy whole-grain breads and cereals instead of the
refined ones. Use less of the unnecessary toppings, dressings, and gravies that
add so many calories to the meal, and when you do use them look for low-fat or
reduced-calorie varieties. Eat at home more often, pack your own lunches and
simplify your eating. Get some good health-conscious, vegetarian cookbooks
(some are not that healthful, as they overuse cheese, eggs, and nuts) and start
practicing and experimenting with new dishes. But keep it simple.
NUTRITION
IN SUMMARY
Ø Plant based diet is recommended
Ø Plants with fiber are to be consumed
Ø Fruits, grains, tubers, seeds, vegetables and nuts
Ø Foods rich in carbohydrates are to be often eaten
"Beloved,
I wish above all things that thou mayest prosper and be in health, even as thy
soul prospereth." 3 John 1:2.
"Blessed art thou, 0 land, when... thy princes
eat in due season, for strength, and not for drunkenness!" Ecclesiastes 10:17