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The Gospel changes everything--even the way we eat.
Back in 2005, The New York Times reported that for the first time in two centuries, "the current generation of children in America may have shorter life expectancies than their parents." The number one reason? Obesity. And while we spend more on healthcare than any other industrialized nation and yet we have more overweight and obese citizens than any other country. And every year, Americans throw away nearly half of their purchased food.
It doesn't take an expert to tell you we have a food crisis on our hands. However, these statistics also highlight another reality: It was never supposed to be this way.
As Christians, we know this intimately. We know we've fallen so far. And as a result, we should be the most responsible consumers because we know what it means to be image bearers. Whether the issue is abortion, climate control, the orphan crisis or food consumption, we should live in order to be redemptive agents here in this broken but beautiful creation. This is what it means to be God's ambassadors to a humanity damaged by sin. We should live in such a way that points people back to the way things were suppose to be--even in terms of what's on our plate and in our pantry.
Perhaps one tendency feeding our national obesity epidemic is the fact that we're pleasure-seekers. Whether it's sex, relationships, careers or food, Americans are in a relentless pursuit of the next high. We are always looking for the next experience to satisfy. Yet so often when we view this problem, we quickly condemn the pursuit of such sensual pleasures and attempt to point people to pursue more spiritual things.
Yet in our moral overhaul, we've missed one thing: We were designed to seek pleasure. In fact, we were designed to pursue pleasure in something outside ourselves. Yet once sin was added into the mix, this God-given trait turned from seeking delight in the Creator to delight in created things.
This is otherwise known as idolatry--worshipping something other than God. As John Piper has said, "We all make a god out of what we take most pleasure in." As Augustine said, we all have a God-sized hole in our soul. And either consciously or subconsciously, every human being is seeking to fill that hole with something. For some of us, that something is food.
Food was given by God for two things: fuel and enjoyment. Food was not meant to be our source of happiness, our comfort, or our go-to functional Savior. This is the blistering irony of idolatry, whether food, sex, work or relationships: When we make a good thing a god thing, those things collapse under the pressure, and turn on the worshiper.
So when we run to the fridge to eat away our sorrows, or indulge a daily mocha latte addiction, or cultivate a habit of stress eating or drinking to escape reality, food turns into something more than it was ever made to be. This is why it's vital for believers to carefully apply the words of the apostle Paul: "So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God."
But how? How do we eat and drink "to the glory of God"? How does the Gospel tangibly change the way we eat?
Click here to read more.
 
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Prince Malachi is the founder of The Oracle Network and the Streetwear brand Y.A.H. Apparel

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