Bible Girl's guest columnist, a Dallas Theological Seminary student, gets all up in big-bottomed Christians' business. Excerpt:
This “little” sin of gluttony is killing people by the hundreds of thousands every year. Obesity has now surpassed smoking as the No. 1 health threat in America. It can be directly linked to high cholesterol, high blood pressure, Type II Diabetes, acid reflux, sleep apnea, heart disease and many forms of cancer.So why aren’t more pastors and churches talking about it? One reason is pretty obvious. We don’t want to risk losing church members by offending anyone.
“It is an issue that potentially could disaffiliate individuals," Ferraro says. "Remember that it is normal to be overweight in the U.S. The majority of the adult U.S. population is overweight. And so if you start speaking about that there is a potential risk that parishioners will not like that message.”
Dr. Don Colbert, author of The Seven Pillars of Health and What Would Jesus Eat?, points out that many Christians don’t view overeating as sin because their pastors look past it or condone it. In fact, many of Colbert’s patients are obese pastors. Colbert says that if parishioners see their minister eating junk food, sporting a bulging waistline and not exercising, they will often feel free to emulate his example. As the head goes, so goes the body.
Christians don’t talk about gluttony because we don’t think we are gluttons. Gluttony has been divorced from obesity in our minds so that it becomes merely a health issue rather than a spiritual and moral one. We don’t gain weight because we eat to excess. We gain weight because of our glands and our genes. Weight problems, we tell ourselves, are a result if living in a fast-food, high-pressure culture. There’s some truth to that, but instead of going against the culture and striving for a healthier lifestyle, we have embraced the culture. There are some people out there with legitimate problems such as thyroid conditions, but for most of us “the rapidly expanding man” disease is a result of our greed and poor choices.
Funny how for many Christians, smoking is a sin -- defiling the temple of the human body and all that -- but overeating? Bring. It. On.

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Some important early spiritual writing -- most notably John Cassian's Institutes and Conferences treat gluttony not just as a deadly sin, but as the deadly sin, the one that seems to open us up to all others, especially sloth, lechery, avarice, envy and even anger (when we can't get our food the way we like it, etc.). So the starting point for spiritual development began with fasting and regulation of the diet. One of Cassian's subjects advised that the path to a more holy life was to conquer the deadly sins one at a time, starting with gluttony, since it can be approached most readily and practically.
Of course this is in the context of an ascetic, monastic theology that sees governing the physical appetites as the foundation of spiritual progress, and the the extremes to which the Desert fathers and other spiritual masters went to achieve that end strike us today as frightening distortions of a healthy faith life.
But still, there's something to it. I can see in my own life how an overattachment to food is implicated in other sinning, which I won't go into since this isn't a confessional.
Attending more carefully to what we eat, and more importantly, our attitudes toward food, might just be a useful step to spiritual growth as well as physical health.
"If you have lived one half a century as have I, you have watched the population double, and almost double in size weight-wise. If people were not this fat in the 60s and 70s and 80s, what happened? A toxic gas swept this nation and infected many of its fair citizens? What happened was; people spent more energy circling the block to get a ‘good’ parking space than simply parking ‘out there’ and walking. They got lazy and ate Ruffle potato chips with Rotel-Velveeta while watching ‘the game’ (ring a bell?), kept drinking Coco-Cola regulars instead of ‘diet’ because you want the ‘real’ thing (even after your Dr. warned you that you were borderline diabetic,,,admit it)."
Well, yes, that's part of it. Another part is that we have squeezed all physical exertion out of most people's paid and unpaid work, so that the only way to get any exercise was to squeeze it into our already radically diminished leisure time, when--surprise!--most of us would rather just sit back and vege out with our families and friends. Also, the latest word from medical science is that sleep deprivation makes people gain weight. And we're sleeping a lot less than we used to. Mostly, that isn't because we're lazy slobs, it's because we're overworked slobs.
PLEASE READ, KNOWLEDGE IS POWER, NOT JUST ABOUT KIDS......Dr. Oz
He says there's a very good biological reason why it's so hard to get kids to eat their vegetables. In fact, they are hardwired to not like them. Dr. Oz says when our prehistoric ancestors searched for food, their children were most susceptible to poisons, which often taste bitter. So instead of liking something bitter—like broccoli—children tend to crave sweet and bland foods like dairy or chicken nuggets.
Children also have a biological reason not to like certain foods. Flavorful fruits and veggies may actually taste differently to kids than they do to adults. "An older adult has 3,000 taste buds," Dr. Oz says. "A kid has 10,000."
Dr. Oz says we run into problems when we don't allow our taste buds to mature. "That's the big challenge we have in America—we've infantilized our taste buds. When a 3-year-old wants hot dogs, a burger, fries, a shake, cola, that's not abnormal. When a 30-year-old wants those foods, we're in trouble."
This natural craving for fatty blandness and sweetness is part of why there are so many "white kids" in America, Dr. Oz says. "You know what a 'white kid' is? It's not the skin color, it's kids that only eat white—white flour, white bread, white rice, white sugar," Dr. Oz says. "They only eat white foods, because white foods are seen as being safe to them visually, emotionally, from a taste perspective."
Each pre-teens eats about 49 pounds of sugar a year
Everyone knows Dr. Oz loves to bring props with him, but this time he didn't bring along a brain, a lung or a heart. Instead, he has a sobering reminder of the obesity crisis in America. Three huge jars hold 49 pounds of sugar—equal to the amount the average American pre-teen eats in a year. Eating this much sugar and other unhealthy things sets in motion a lifetime of health problems, Dr. Oz says.
"As you get older, the fat comes alive," he says. "It becomes a hormone secreting gland. They get acne because they're getting feminized, because those hormones are estrogen. [Boys] grow breasts, which hurts your self-esteem and scars you your whole life. And as you get older, you begin to develop fat around your jowls. Now you can't sleep at night because you've got sleep apnea, which is like having a bunch of rear-end collisions all day long."
That's not where it stops. Dr. Oz says an enlarged omentum squeezes the kidneys, leading to high blood pressure. It poisons the liver and leads to more bad LDL cholesterol. And it blocks insulin, which leads to diabetes. "The next generation will be the first that we know of in our recorded history that will have a shorter life expectancy than its parents," Dr. Oz says. "The major driver of that is the obesity that's causing diabetes. Almost a fifth of the kids in the country today are overweight. Thirty-five percent of the kids that are born in this decade will be diabetics. If you're black—40 percent of the kids. And if you're Latino, half the kids."
What makes a renowned heart surgeon like Dr. Oz so passionate about childhood obesity? It's because he personally witnesses what happens when unhealthy 10-year-olds become unhealthy young adults with heart problems. "When you're operating on 25-year-olds … you feel a big obligation to speak up about it," he says. "It brings tears to us because we know it's preventable."
If you're having trouble jump-starting your family's health, Dr. Oz has five strategies to help.
Step 1—Keep Nothing Off-Limits
"I know that sounds crazy, but it turns out when you make foods off-limits, you create a cult around them and the kids just want to get to them. And they're smart—they'll find it," Dr. Oz says.
The time to make decisions about food isn't when you lock cabinet doors, he says. It's when you're in the supermarket. "Don't even bring the stuff into the house," he says.
Step 2—Fiber for Breakfast
When kids have sugary cereals, doughnuts and soda for breakfast, Dr. Oz says they start the day on a sugar high. "They show up in class, and teachers complain about this all the time, the kids can't be controlled for the first hour. And then they bottom out when their insulin goes up and now they can't pay attention … until lunchtime," he says. "Their whole day is like this."
Instead of allowing this sugar blast in the morning, make sure your kids get about half their fiber intake—about 7 to 10 grams—from their breakfast. Fiber is found in abundance in healthy foods like steel-cut oatmeal and fruit. If your kids refuse to eat those things right away, Dr. Oz recommends sprinkling the fiber—psyllium husks, for example—in their food.
"Find things that your kids resonate to and use those tools," he says.
Step 3—Try Healthy Foods 10 Times
This is especially difficult, Dr. Oz says, because many parents want meals to be easy. But giving up on healthy food is a big mistake. "It will take you, on average, 10 times of exposing a kid to a food before they'll finally say, 'You know what? I sort of like that.'"
One way to break through that barrier is by using good peer pressure. Dr. Oz says he used his oldest daughter, Daphne, to influence the younger ones. "Once I got her to eat right, then the other ones [followed] because they think the oldest child's cool," he says.
Dr. Oz says you don't even need to rely on other sons and daughters—any peer your kid knows can help. "You get one child who's willing to be smart about the way they eat," he says. "It can be in your play group, your school, whatever, just get one kid—one ally—and you'll bust through the defense."
Step 4—Get Moving
Dr. Oz says healthy families are ones who incorporate physical activity into their family life. One way to do this is by getting a dog and walking it together. In the Oz household, the family works up a sweat playing Dance Dance Revolution, an interactive video game that makes players move their feet to the beat. "It's a cool little game," he says.
You can also take family walks. "If you're putting 500 more steps [or about a quarter-mile] into your life every single day, that's a lot of extra calories you'll get rid of," Dr. Oz says. "That's the kind of health-promoting habit you'll take into adulthood."
One thing you should be sure not to do is to hit the couch right after meals. "You'll actually change your metabolism," Dr. Oz says. "Those are the kinds of moves that will change America's health."
Step 5—No Eating in Front of the TV
If you eat while watching television, not only are you more likely to spill food on your shirt, you're also more likely to gain weight. Dr. Oz says people consume approximately 225 more calories a day when they eat absentmindedly in front of the TV.
In just one month, that adds up to two pounds!
"Food is precious," Dr. Oz says. "Food is a drug in your body. Take advantage of your power to decide what you want."
I am convinced by experience that gluttony or overeating is a serious problem that is ruining the spiritual and physical health of many people. Definitely one thing leads to another, and gluttony leads to other kinds of sin. The excessive consumption of animal protein leads to lust and aggressivity even if you are not so fat.
Thanks for great information keep it up
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