Have you ever noticed that food is often at the center
of controversies? Whether it’s eating
meat sacrificed to idols in Corinth, figuring out how early Christians from
Jewish and Gentile backgrounds could eat together, or even responding to the
current hubbub about a chicken chain, what we put in our mouths and stomachs can easily
involve us in disputes. Leaving those
celebrated cases aside, our diets and eating habits have profound spiritual and
moral significance, as they shape who we become as people and how we relate to
others and to the Lord.
Unfortunately,
mindless overindulgence in the pleasures of the table is all too common among
Christians. In our land of cheap and
plentiful highly processed foods, we usually give ourselves a pass on gluttony
and don’t really take it seriously as a temptation. Of course, eating too much doesn’t put us at
risk only for spiritual problems. Too many people are fat, really fat, in the
USA. Junk food, fast food, too much
food—they’re all around us. Modern
conveniences and transportation have cut our rates of physical activity
drastically over the last generation.
Despite the existence of so many gyms, hardly anyone gets enough
exercise. Obesity is an epidemic and only getting worse, which is bad for our
bodies and our souls, as well as our families and other relationships.
We’ve
probably blotted it out of our memory, but the Bible tells us that sin came
into the world together with an unholy attitude toward food. Everything changed when Adam and Eve could
not control their appetites. They ate
the fruit in violation of God’s command, and we’re still following their bad
example. Food is good stuff; there’s
nothing evil about it at all. The
problem is that we use it for purposes other than those for which God created
it. We consume food and drink in ways
that do not help us grow in the divine likeness and instead make us addicts to
satisfying our disordered desires. No
wonder all-you-can-eat is so popular.
And portion sizes at restaurants are so huge that often an individual’s
serving could sustain a small family.
That’s sadly ironic in a world where so many in developing nations starve
to death or are malnourished.
The scary truth is that how
we eat and drink reveals a great deal about how we relate to God, our
neighbors, and ourselves. We commit
idolatry when we choose satisfying our self-centered desires instead of living
as partakers of the divine nature. With
the rise of cheap and plentiful fast food, we are more likely to eat alone,
quickly, and without being mindful of what we’re doing. And we do this so routinely that most of us
don’t even notice it. What should be a
blessed sign of our shared life with others before God too often becomes a
lonely exercise in self-gratification that harms our bodies, our souls, and our
families.
Maybe I hang out with the
wrong crowd, but I don’t know anyone who just loves to fast. Nonetheless, we do well to abstain
periodically from the richest and most satisfying foods as a way of
humbling ourselves before God and of learning to resist self-centered desires. We
need some discipline, some restraint, in order to heal our unhealthy
relationship with food and drink, as well as with other sources of pleasure. As
the saying goes, gluttony is the mother of adultery. When we get in the habit
of satisfying our self-centered desires, we find it hard to control any of our
appetites. Is it surprising that in a
culture of fast food, obesity, and few family dinners that we have so much
sexual immorality, love of money and power, and broken homes? Should we be shocked that immediate
gratification, impatience, and lack of consideration for others are
epidemic? The sad truth is that we have
become all too comfortable with deeply rooted habits that distort and disfigure
us as those created in the image and likeness of God.
So
let’s do something countercultural by cooking, eating, and socializing with
others in ways that are good for all concerned.
Our kitchens and dining rooms should become icons of the heavenly
banquet; our table fellowship should become an extension of the Eucharist. We should eat and drink our own salvation—and
that of our families and friends—every day. Let’s make food a blessing in our lives, not
a curse.
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