Sunday, November 10, 2019

Jesus Diet

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You don't have to be ... to improvement from the ... After all, Jesus was not a ... In fact, youdon't even dependence to admit in ... note: This article has nothing to realize later than sever

You don't have to be Christian to gain from the Jesus
diet. After all, Jesus was not a Christian. In fact, you
don't even obsession to recognize in God.

Please note: This article has nothing to do subsequently several
"Jesus Diet" hits found upon google.com. Some of those provide
food for thought, while others are just plain foolish.

For numerous reasons, perfect knowledge more or less Joshua ben
Joseph, the person, is rather scarce. The other Testament was
assembled several centuries after his death, and essentially was
not focused upon the historical person's life. In fact, I have
read excerpts from future theological texts which "prove"
that Jesus neither ate meat nor defecated, both of which
seem unlikely.

So, the best guess at what Jesus ate can be obtained from
study of Mediterranean cultures, especially the Jewish.

First Conclusion: Jesus never ate ham, not even for Easter
or Christmas. People ate pork at the risk of death from
trichinosis (a worm infestation).

Second Conclusion: Jesus did eat fish. This is documented in
the supplementary Testament. He did not eat any sea food which lacked
fins or scales, such as clams, oysters, crabs, lobster,
octopus, eel, as these were un-clean by Jewish Kosher laws.
Likewise, he did not eat meat from pigs, horses, donkeys,
camels, vultures. He could have eaten deer meat, chicken,
duck, turkey, eggs, et cetera. Most likely, he did not eat
rabbit, squirrel, rat, or any nature of prey.

Kosher laws were originally based on good empirical
observation on what foods did or did not cause illness. They
are not the latest word upon fine health practices. Some of
the Kosher laws go adjoining liberal medical and common sense.
However, the concepts of "eat on your own what is fine for you",
and "do not slay food animals past avoidable suffering" are
certainly fine ones.

Third Conclusion: Jesus did not eat four legged meat every
day. The average for those time was very nearly taking into account a week to
once a month, even for sheep herders. Hunters in the field
probably ate more meat. This does NOT target that Jesus was a
vegetarian, as some claim.

Fourth Conclusion: Jesus ate bread; lots and lots of bread.
And it was not "low carb", either.

Fifth Conclusion: Jesus probably ate fruits, vegetables,
grains, garbanzo beans, nuts, olives, goat cheese, salted
fish (when spacious was not available). He probably also
needed salt in his diet, ate honey, but most unconditionally did
not eat refined sugars.

Sixth Conclusion: Jesus was in fine physical condition. Any
carpenter without skill tools, any person who walks a lot,
would be in good innate condition.

Seventh Conclusion: Jesus was not a teetotaler, despite what
some branches of Christianity now claim. Miracles attributed
to him on the go loaves, fishes, wine. If you don't belive in
miracles, there are several historical facts to consider.
1. For most people, refrigeration is a enlightened invention.
Fermentation is a natural thing unless on purpose avoided,
such as by cooking, drying, pickling, and/or salting foods.
Canning was not known in biblical days. Fermentation allowed
the making of leavened bread and the preservation of grain
and fruit juices as beer and wine.
2. For most people active in in front communities, drinking
water could not be counted upon to be clean. Not everyone had
access to light spring water, or un-polluted streams.
Therefore, use of beer and diluted wine allowed alcohol to
fight microbes.

To my knowledge, Jesus did not spell out recipes for his
followers. He enormously would not have prohibited or promoted
foods that were not known in his era and area. I don't
think he knew about soy foods, caffeinated beverages, high
fructose sugar, and more.

Modern Christians, and others, reach skillfully to learn from recent
health publications on paper and upon internet, using healthy
skepticism. Things which cause obesity are not healthful.
Myths which masquerade as utter (such as "low carb" fad
diets), should be evaluated and cast aside. Tobacco and
other smoking materials are to be avoided, both through
direct use and second hand smoke. Sedentary life styles
should be offset by at least ascetic exercise, such as
daily walking. And nothing to excess -- except for parties.

Historical archives seem to action cancers and strokes were
formerly less common than today. However, some illnesses
were not recognized, such as "colic" which probably covered
appendicitis, cancer, and food poisoning. Whereas some
people lived long in biblical epoch (ignore Methuselah),
life expectancy was much less than in radical countries so
that most died past some diseases could acquire to them.

Still, the U.S. Centers for weakness control and Prevention
puts a lot of beat upon fine Diet and at least Moderate
Exercise as keys to fine health and longevity. I don't think
Jesus would argue adjoining that.

** Diet behind FACTS, not MYTHS. **

Article Tags: Conclusion Jesus

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