Eating our Way to Heaven – Reformist Style
SUMMARY
The Reformists of the SDARM generally BELIEVE and
TEACH:
- Vegetarianism should be a
‘salvation issue’ as a test of fellowship.
The Reformists are WRONG because:
- Ellen
White herself explicitly said vegetarianism and other food-related reforms should
not be a test of fellowship.
- Eating
meat clearly is not a sin. As observed
in Luke 24:42-43, Jesus in His Resurrect form ate fish.
- Ellen
White herself ate meat at times when other foods were not available.
- Ellen
White gave no counsel against chocolate or cocoa.
- Ellen
White did counsel against cheese; however, as her son later noted, she and
her family continued to eat soft ‘dutch’ cheeses, like cottage cheese.
- Ellen
White taught that food reform would be progressive, dependent upon time and
geographical location. For example,
her own family distinguished between beef in agrarian nations like Australia
compared with others.
- The idea
that vegetarianism should be a test of Christian fellowship has absolutely no
basis in scripture. Reformists do not
in practice uphold the Protestant doctrine of sola scriptura – the Bible and the Bible alone.
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Militant vegetarianism
The
extremist SDARM views on vegetarianism?
As observed by Helmut
Kramer in SDA Reform Movement at page
45, the SDARM Church(es) make vegetarianism a test of fellowship, which
dramatically impacts the Reformist ability to spread the Gospel worldwide:
‘the Reform
Movement has made it a worldwide test of fellowship that no flesh may be eaten
by its members. This stand, though well meant, bars the proclamation of the
last message from countries where other foods than flesh are not readily
available. How would it be possible for the Reformers to bring the message to
the Eskimos, for example? Despite the fact that I am a confirmed vegetarian, I
see that this unbending stand limits the outreach of the gospel. In addition it
places the teachings of the church above that of the Bible and the Spirit of
Prophecy.’
Reformists
do not merely promote good health.
Rather, they effectively make it a ‘salvation issue’ essential to one’s
faith. As stated by Paul Godfrey in “What Has Diet Got to do with My Salvation” from ‘independent historic’ Reformers Sabbath Sermons:
‘What has health got to do with our salvation? Has health
got anything to do with our salvation? Am I saved by having a certain diet? Am
I lost because I eat bacon? Am I saved because I don’t eat bacon? How does
health and diet impact my spirituality? Many people are divided on the topic.
Many texts are used to support that diet has nothing to do with our salvation.’
Should vegetarianism be a test of
fellowship?
As observed by Helmut
Kramer in SDA Reform Movement at page
28, the Reformists make vegetarianism a test of fellowship, despite counsel
from Spirit of Prophecy against imposing such a test:
‘For example,
the Reform Movement has made the question of vegetarianism a test of
fellowship, despite the clear statement from the Pen of Inspiration that no
such position should be taken: "We are not to make the use of flesh food a
test of fellowship..."’
What
did Mrs White teach about vegetarianism?
As
always, Mrs White was a very practical woman.
She understood and endorsed the importance of good health, which
included a vegetarian diet. However, she
understood that such ideas must not be applied with the sort of inflexibly or
fanaticism common amongst Reformists. Ellen
White explicitly stated on the subject:
‘My brother, you are not to make a test for the
people of God upon the question of diet… I have never felt that it was my duty
to say that no one should taste of meat under any circumstances. To say this .
. . would be carrying matters to extremes. I have never felt that it was
my duty to make sweeping assertions. What I have said I have said under a sense
of duty, but I have been guarded in my statements, because I did not want to
give occasion for anyone to be conscience for another’ (Counsels on Diet
and Foods, pp.205, 462, 463). (emphasis added)
Did Ellen White eat meat herself at
times?
Ellen
White was a pragmatic woman – not a fanatic.
She recognised that one should eat the best food that was
available. However, as admitted by the
Ellen White Estate, meat eating could be warranted due to availability of
vegetarian foods (especially when travelling); due to poverty; or due to
medical emergencies.
As
to eating meat on account of travelling, the Ellen White Estate admits:
‘You will find in Sister White's writings several instances
where she says flesh meats do not appear on our table, and this was true.
During a number of years when on rare occasions a little meat was used, [it]
was considered to be an emergency.’
As
to eat meat on account of poverty, Ellen White herself acknowledged, in an 1895
letter from Australia to Elder A O Tait:
‘I have been passing
through an experience in this country that is similar to the experience I had
in new fields in America [in the earlier decades of the nineteenth century]. I
have seen families whose circumstances would not permit them to furnish their
table with healthful food. Unbelieving neighbors have sent them in portions of
meat from animals recently killed. They have made soup of the meat, and
supplied their large families of children with meals of bread and soup. It was
not my duty, nor did I think it was the duty of anyone else, to lecture them
upon the evils of meat eating. I feel sincere pity for families who have newly
come to the faith, and who are so pressed with poverty that they know not from
whence their next meal is coming.’ (Letter 76 (June 6), 1895).
As
to eating meat on account of medical emergencies, Mrs White stated:
‘In certain cases of illness or
exhaustion it may be thought best to use some meat, but great care should be
taken to secure the flesh of healthy animals.’ (CTBH 117, 118 (1890); cited in CD 394, #699)
Is eating meat a sin?
The Bible makes clear that Jesus ate
meat. If eating meat was a sin, it would
make Jesus a sinner! In fact, one should consider the theological consequences
of Jesus in His glorified (as opposed to pre-Cross) Resurrected body eating
fish as recorded in Luke 24:42-43:
‘They gave him a piece of broiled fish, and he
took it and ate in their presence.’
By
contrast, Paul Godfrey in “What Has Diet Got to do with My Salvation” from
‘independent historic’ Reformers Sabbath
Sermons, tries to argue that the NT Church in Acts 15 prohibited meat
eating in its entirety:
‘When you see in Acts 15 the council of Jerusalem about
the Law of Moses and circumcision the Apostle said, don’t worry about
circumcision. Leave these things alone but make sure that people avoid
fornication. Don’t eat blood and things that are strangled and things offered
to idols. These things are carried forward into the Christian church. That
means red meat is not Christian according to the apostles.’ (emphasis added)
However, Paul Godfrey’s statement
makes little sense. The fact is the Law
of Moses does allow meat eating –
there was an entire sacrificial system built around it no less. Jesus’ last meal was the Passover, which
involved the consumption of meat.
What the OT forbade was not meat per se but eating certain types of
animals, the eating of blood or the eating of fat. It is the eating of blood
that is forbidden in the Noahide Laws found in Gen 9, which even Jews today
think binds Gentiles. Thus, what both
the OT and NT require is kosher slaughter, which involves the draining of all
blood from meat – i.e. no medium rare steaks.
Similarly, the OT Noahide laws possibly require the consumption of
‘clean’ foods because Noah had 7 pairs of clean animals on the Ark – and these
rules still seem to apply in the NT period.
Therefore, both the OT and NT uphold
the Adventist teachings on eating certain kinds of meat, as well as
prohibitions on types of slaughter.
However, there is no basis to support Paul Godfrey’s assertion that this
‘means red meat is not Christian
according to the apostles.’ That is simply wrong.
Ellen White also rightly observes
that Adventists refrain from meat as a principle of good health, not because eating
meat is itself a sin:
‘I advise every Sabbathkeeping canvasser to avoid meat
eating, not because it is regarded as a sin to eat meat, but because it
is not healthful.’ (Manuscript 15, 1889)
As meat-eating is not a sin,
it is difficult to see on what basis it should or could be considered an
‘essential’ salvation issue that warrants becoming a test of fellowship. In any event, Ellen White herself made clear
that eating meat shouldn’t be a test of fellowship.
What about prophecies about future
vegetarianism?
Both the Bible and Spirit of
Prophecy suggest a time will come in the future where God’s people will not eat. Jesus talked about a return to our Edenic
conditions and Daniel and his vegetarian friends may be an eschatological
archetype for God’s End Time People.
However, whilst that is the eventual objective, one should recognise
that is a gradual process, as admitted by Sister White:
‘Among those who are waiting for the coming of the Lord,
meat eating will eventually be done away; flesh will cease to form a part of
their diet. We should ever keep this end in view, and endeavor to work
steadily toward it. I cannot think that in the practice of flesh eating we
are in harmony with the light which God has been pleased to give us.’— Counsels on Diet and
Foods, pp. 380-381 (1890). (emphasis added)
One would not her use of the phrase
‘steadily toward it’, which suggests a gradual process – not a radical or
inflexible imposition. Similarly and
again, reform of diet is a gradual process:
‘The diet reform should be progressive. As disease
in animals increases, the use of milk and eggs will become more and more
unsafe. An effort should be made to supply their place with other things that
are healthful and inexpensive. The people everywhere should be taught how to
cook without milk and eggs, so far as possible, and yet have their food
wholesome and palatable.’— Counsels on Diet and Foods, p. 365 (emphasis added)
However, Mrs White warned:
‘The time has not yet come to prescribe the
strictest diet.’— Testimonies for the Church, vol. 9, p. 163. (emphasis added)
The
important point is that diet reform is progressive and incremental, and driven
by changing conditions in the location environment. In fact, dietary reform is likely to occur at
different rates in different countries. Mrs White’s son recognised this, in
explaining an occasion where Ellen White did eat meat whilst in Australia:
‘When I bought the beefsteak, I reasoned that freshly killed
ox from this cattle country, would probably be a healthy animal and that the
risk of acquiring disease would be very small. This was eight or nine years
before Sister White decided at the time of the Melbourne camp-meeting [1894] to
be a teetotaler as regards the eating of flesh foods.’
A
modern analogy is to observe meat is simply not the same around the world. For example, beef from Argentina and
Australia are still grass fed and thus the cows are relatively healthy – much
the same as cows in biblical times. By
contrast, beef in the US is ‘industrialized’ on a massive scale, where cows are
held in large factory-pens and fed nothing but corn.
Thus,
Ellen White’s prophecies about unsafe meat has immediacy in the US a way it
does not in say Argentina and Australia.
Again, it is not so much the Reformists’ view as their inflexible and
dogmatic application which is the primary problem.
So
after all this, how can the SDARM Church(es) make vegetarianism a test of
fellowship?
As
outlined above, Ellen White made very clear that vegetarianism should not be a
test of fellowship. Moreover, Sister
White made comments that we are not yet at a time where the strictest diet
should be prescribed.
As
explained in their fundamental of belief on Christian Temperance, the simple way the Reformists get around this is to suggest
Sister White’s prophecy is now fulfilled.
They suggest we are now in fact living at a time where the strictest
diet should and indeed must (on pain of disfellowshipment) be
enforced around the whole world:
‘It is evident to
us that the time has come for "the strictest diet [to] be
prescribed."’ (emphasis added)
Of
course such a view is problematic because:
·
it effectively means the diet Reformation has
stopped and is no longer progressive;
·
it fails to acknowledge that the quality of
meat around the world is in fact still different, where not all countries have
adopted the sorts of industrialized farming techniques that Mrs White warned about;
·
it effectively amounts to an attempt to guess
the ‘hour of His coming’, by imposing an institutional mandate of suggesting
the End is Come; and
·
it amounts to an institutional and artificial
law, rather than allow the Holy Spirit to eventually reform each of God’s
People in their own hearts and minds, according to their own localised
situation.
Would
Ellen White be expelled from the SDARM today?
The great irony of course is that by
SDARM standards, Ellen White herself probably would be disciplined. By modern fanatical Reformist standards,
Ellen White’s statements and actions regarding diet would probably render her
liable for expulsion from the Reformist Church(es).
Bizarre aspects of the Reformist
understanding of health
Prohibitions
on cheese and chocolate
As observed by Timothy D. Manning in ‘Seventh-day Adventists: Withdrawing Consent or Forging the Chains of Servitude on the relationship of ‘Church and State’ (North Carolina
Heritage Foundation) at page 10, many Reformists take some pretty
extreme views on matters of diet, such as prohibit the eating of all types of cheese
and chocolate:
‘Other
such critical requirements were that members are not permitted to eat chocolate
or cheese, may not go to the cinema, dance or watch television.’
As
for a prohibition on cocoa and chocolate, as argued by Jethro Klodd in “Back to Eden”, cited in the ‘independent historic’ Reforms Sabbath Sermons, referring to a purported statement by SDA Pioneer
E. J. Waggoner:
‘But you drink cocoa and chocolate?” No; I have no use for
them; for while they contain a little food, they contain more that is
injurious.’ {September 20, 1900 EJW, PTUK 608.9}
However,
at best Klodd can only point to statements by Waggoner and Jones – not Mrs
White. In fact there is no such prohibition from her, as admitted by the Ellen White Estate:
‘Neither cocoa nor chocolate are mention in E. G. White’s
writings, published or unpublished… Cocoa and chocolate, unlike tea and coffee,
do have food value.’
As
for cheese and milk, Sister White does warn against such products.
‘Now if we persist in taking in food and drink that are
filled with germs, such as meat and cheese and unsterilized milk and
butter may we not expect that when a severe strain is brought upon us, or when
some contagious disease is prevalent, the body will be so overtaxed that we
shall not be able to resist an attack? If the antiseptic powers of our bodies
are taxed all the time to their utmost capacity, we are entirely unprepared for
an emergency. The body can offer little or no resistance to disease.’ {February 17, 1895
N/A, GCB 184.1} (emphasis added)
However, one will note
the mention of unsterilized milk. Thus, one must consider the 19th-Century
circumstances of Ellen White’s times, before the wholesale pasteurization of
milk. Moreover, the issue is not about a simplistic prohibition – as many
Reformists would have it.
As to cheese, there are
debates about the types of cheese Mrs White might be referring to – whether it
included all types of cheese, both hard and soft, regardless of the type of
milk used. Again as admitted by Ellen
White’s son:
‘Cottage cheese, sometimes called “Dutch cheese” or
“smear-case” was not included in Mrs White’s condemnation of cheese. This was used by herself and her family.’
As recent scandals
concerning contaminated milk in China, like many food issues, the question of
progressive health reform very much relates to particular individual circumstances
worldwide. Thus, there will no doubt
come a time when Ellen White’s prophecy will be fulfilled:
‘Tell them that the time will soon come when there will be
no safety in using eggs, milk, cream, or butter, because disease in animals is increasing
in proportion to the increase of wickedness among men.’—Testimonies for the
Church, vol. 7, p. 135.
Once
again, the principal concern with the Reformists is not merely their views but
their rigid and inflexible application of those views.
Do
the SDARM uphold other pillars of the health message – like exercise or rest?
As observed by Helmut Kramer in SDA Reform Movement at page 45, for all
their fanaticism on diet, Reformists seem to be fairly non-observant when it
comes to other principles of health reform, such as exercise and rest:
‘The Reform
Movement has stressed the health message, but often without proper direction or
true understanding. In essence, their entire health message centers around
diet. Very little is ever mentioned about exercise and the need for sufficient
rest.’
No doubt the Reformist ideals of
restrictive clothing (in fact more restrictive than biblical standards) has
something to do with the lack of sufficient exercise. See the article on Dress
Reform for further information.
Do the SDARM introduce largely
irrelevant rules about health?
As also observed by Helmut
Kramer in SDA Reform Movement at page
19, the sum total of SDARM health reform in some countries is a bizarre
application of unscriptural rules, such as forbidding the mixing of sweet and
sour foods:
‘In Mexico, for
example, the very essence of the health message was not to mix salty and sweet
foods at meals. The union president taught that this counsel came from the
writings of the Spirit of Prophecy which, of course, was not the case.’
A
similar bizarre observation is made by Timothy D. Manning in ‘Seventh-day Adventists: Withdrawing Consent or Forging the Chains of Servitude on the relationship of ‘Church and State’ (North Carolina
Heritage Foundation) at page 9, concerning a debate about eating
beans and rice at the same meal:
‘There
were numerous eccentricities and inconsistencies in this movement. For example,
at one of their [SDARM] General Conference sessions, it was debated whether to
make it “unlawful” to eat beans and rice at the same meal, and to make this a
testing point of faith and membership. This was strongly supported by the South
American delegations, but was finally rejected.’
Do
the SDARM largely ignore basic rules of good health – like basic sanitation?
In
fact, like the ancient Pharisees in Mark 7 who ritually washed their hands –
but only with a thimble of water which thereby defeated the whole health
purpose of the practice – the Reformist ideas about the health message actively
defeat or ignore some of its more important features. For example, as also observed by Helmut Kramer in SDA Reform Movement at page 45, whilst being extremely fanatical on
diet, Reformists in many countries lack even basic knowledge in the rudimentary
of sanitation:
‘People in those areas of the world who take the most
extreme positions on diet know little or nothing about simple sanitation. For
example, I think of an experience I had while visiting one of the countries of
Central America. The mission operated a bakery on its grounds. Supposedly, the
workers prepared good healthful bread. To my shock, the rising loaves were
covered with flies. A cat ran freely through the bakery, and a parrot sat in an
open window nearby. The director saw no problem with these conditions, even though
he was overly strict in other areas of healthful living.’
Do
Reformists promote things actively bad for one’s health?
It
is one thing to promote good principles of health albeit in an fanatical
way. However, Reformists arguably go
further in actively promoting things dangerous for one’s health. For example, as observed by Timothy D. Manning in ‘Seventh-day Adventists: Withdrawing Consent or Forging the Chains of Servitude on the relationship of ‘Church and State’ (North Carolina Heritage Foundation) at page 10, Reformists
often do not accept vaccinations for their children:
‘Also, they do not accept
vaccinations for their children, and tend to keep away from orthodox medical
practices and cures. There are also some “regular” SDA's who follow some these
practices and made them issues in their local churches.’
Does
the Reformist fanaticism towards health distort their view of scripture?
As
again observed by Helmut Kramer
in SDA Reform Movement at page 46,
the Reformist fanaticism towards health can and does distort Reformist views of
scripture, such as whether Jesus did or did not in fact eat meat whilst on
earth:
‘At a seminar I
taught in Central America some of the students asked me to confirm their
conviction that Christ, while on earth, did not eat fish. Rather than answer
their question with a yes or no, I suggested that we turn to the Scriptures.
The Bible plainly stated that Christ ate fish along with the disciples. Even
after His resurrection He ate fish. “And they gave him a piece of a broiled
fish, and of an honeycomb. And he took it, and did eat before them" (Luke
24:42-43). This so shocked the students that I feared they would lose their
faith in Christ. Health reform had become so distorted in their minds that it
took precedence over the example of Jesus.’
Principal concerns about Reformist
fanaticism on health
What
are the principal concerns about the Reformist views?
The
principal concern is not the promotion of good diet. No doubt all Adventists
would be better off if they adopted a vegan lifestyle without meat, eggs or
milk products. However, by placing such
an emphasis on diet, even to become a test of fellowship, the Reformists
arguably create additional and unscriptural burdens that make it unnecessarily
difficult for people to accept the Gospel.
One is mindful of Jesus challenge to the Pharisees about such burdens in
Matt 23:3:
‘They tie up heavy burdens, hard to bear, and lay
them on the shoulders of others; but they themselves are unwilling to lift a
finger to move them.’
The
principal concern with the SDARM Church(es) is that in their fanaticism about
health, diet becomes more important than spreading the 3-Angel’s messages, as
observed by Helmut Kramer in SDA Reform Movement at page 46:
‘In many areas
of the world the Reformers have perverted the health message by giving it
precedence over the three angels' messages, and even the Ten Commandments. In
those areas the health message has changed from the right arm to being the
entire body. This the Lord never intended.’
Lessons from Scripture about health
fanaticism
A
lesson from Mark 7
No one is denying that food is
important, and that the health of the body does impact the spiritual life of a
person. Paul attests as such in 1 Cor
10:31:
‘Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do
all to the glory of God.’
The problem with Reformists is in
fact that in their fanaticism they defeat the very benefit to which it was
intended. A lesson for this topic can be
taken from Mark 7.
In Mark 7:18-23 Jesus states:
‘He said to them, “Then do you also fail to
understand? Do you not see that whatever goes into a person from outside cannot
defile, since it enters, not the heart but the stomach, and goes out into the
sewer?” (Thus he declared all foods clean.) And he said, “It is what comes out
of a person that defiles. For it is from within, from the human heart, that
evil intentions come: fornication, theft, murder, adultery, avarice,
wickedness, deceit, licentiousness, envy, slander, pride, folly. All these evil
things come from within, and they defile a person.”’
Contrary to what is commonly taught
by non-Adventist Christians, Jesus was not advocating pork eating in vs19. Rather, as made clear in verse 1-5, Jesus was
dealing with the Pharisaic practice of washing hands:
‘Now when the Pharisees and some of the scribes
who had come from Jerusalem gathered around him, they noticed that some of his
disciples were eating with defiled hands, that is, without washing them. (For the Pharisees, and all the Jews, do
not eat unless they thoroughly wash their hands, thus observing the tradition
of the elders; and they do
not eat anything from the market unless they wash it; and there are also many
other traditions that they observe, the washing of cups, pots, and bronze
kettles.) So the Pharisees
and the scribes asked him, “Why do your disciples not live according to the
tradition of the elders, but eat with defiled hands?”’
Now the Law did require cleanliness
– but only for the Temple Priests when eating consecrated food, as attested in
Num 18:13:
‘The first fruits of all that is in their land,
which they bring to the Lord, shall be yours; everyone who is clean in your
house may eat of it.’
The problem with the Pharisees is
that in typical fashion, they had extended a ritual from the Sanctuary and
applied it to laymen and ordinary food in everyday situations. As such, they had effectively devised up a
man-made rule and imposed it on the people – even though it was unscriptural.
Secondly, the Pharisees were not
washing their hands for hygiene because they were only using a thimble of
water. As such, their washing was only a
ritual – it offered none of the practical health benefits which undermine most
of the ancient OT food laws.
Finally, the Pharisees’ obsession
with ritual purity had nothing to do with health and everything to do with
ideas of spiritual elitism and self-righteousness. For these reasons, Jesus
made clear that a person’s moral and ethical purity is not a food issue. After all, Adolf Hitler was a vegetarian - so we should be careful of equating morality with food practices alone.
Jesus condemned the Pharisees on all
of these accounts. The SDARM face similar dangers. First, they effectively develop man-made laws
about health. Second, in their obsession
over diet they in fact dispense with other important principles of health
reform. Third, they elevate issues of
diet to moral and ethical issues. As
such, they arguably undermine the very purposes for which the health reform
message was given.
A lesson from the Eucharist
controversy
As
a final illustration, the Reformist view reminds one of the Eucharist
controversy about the nature of Christ.
In short, during the Chalcedon controversy in the 4th
Century, and then centuries later between Luther and Zwingli, the Roman
Catholic faction of Christendom has argued that the bread wafer of the Lord’s
Supper literally comes the body of Jesus.
Part of the theological rationale for this view, as first argued by
Cyril of Alexandria, was the idea that through eating the Eucharist one attains
apotheosis – i.e. to literally become ‘god like.’
During
the Protestant Reformation, Zwingli argued against Luther than the bread is
only a symbol, not the literal body of Jesus.
Adventists have long upheld this view.
As part of his reasoning, Zwingli said that to suggest one can ‘eat
their way to heaven’ is an anathema to the message of Christ.
As
a lesson from the Eucharist controversy, and important question arises. No one denies the importance of good health,
including a vegetarian diet. However, do
the Reformists take it too far?
Are
the SDARM Church(es), in making a vegetarian diet and other food laws a test of
fellowship, effectively saying one can eat themselves to heaven? With the greatest irony, do Reformists adopt
a Papal attitude to the issue of health?
Inconvenient truth
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