Appetite
by Ellen White
The health reform, I was shown, is a part of the third angel's message, and is just as
closely connected with it as are the arm and hand with the human body. I saw that we as a
people must make an advance move in this great work. Ministers and people must act in
concert. God's people are not prepared for the loud cry of the third angel. They have a
work to do for themselves which they should not leave for God to do for them. He has left
this work for them to do. It is an individual work; one cannot do it for another.
"Having therefore these promises, dearly beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all
filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God." Gluttony
is the prevailing sin of this age. Lustful appetite makes slaves of men and women, and
beclouds their intellects and stupefies their moral sensibilities to such a degree that
the sacred, elevated truths of God's word are not appreciated. The lower propensities have
ruled men and women.
In order to be fitted for translation, the people of God must know themselves. They
must understand in regard to their own physical frames, that they may be able with the
psalmist to exclaim, "I will praise Thee, for I am fearfully and wonderfully
made." They should ever have the appetite in subjection to the moral and intellectual
organs. The body should be servant to the mind, and not the mind to the body. 1T 486
Some have sneered at this work of reform and have said it was all unnecessary, that it
was an excitement to divert minds from present truth. They have said that matters were
being carried to extremes. Such do not know what they are talking about. While men and
women professing godliness are diseased from the crown of their head to the soles of their
feet, while their physical, mental, and moral energies are enfeebled through gratification
of depraved appetite and excessive labour, how can they weigh the evidences of truth and
comprehend the requirements of God? If their moral and intellectual faculties are
beclouded, they cannot appreciate the value of the atonement or the exalted character of
the work of God, nor delight in the study of His word. How can a nervous dyspeptic be
ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh him a reason of the hope that is
in him, with meekness and fear? How soon would such a one become confused and agitated,
and by his diseased imagination be led to view matters in altogether a wrong light, and by
a lack of that meekness and calmness which characterised the life of Christ be caused to
dishonour his profession while contending with unreasonable men? Viewing matters from a
high religious standpoint, we must be thorough reformers in order to be Christlike. 1T 487
Some are indulging lustful appetite which wars against the soul and is a constant
hindrance to their spiritual advancement. They constantly bear an accusing conscience, and
if straight truths are talked they are prepared to be offended. They are self-condemned
and feel that subjects have been purposely selected to touch their case. They feel grieved
and injured, and withdraw themselves from the assemblies of the saints. They forsake the
assembling of themselves together, for then their consciences are not so disturbed. They
soon lose their interest in the meetings and their love for the truth, and, unless they
entirely reform, will go back and take their position with the rebel host who stand under
the black banner of Satan. If these will crucify fleshly lusts which war against the soul,
they will get out of the way, where the arrows of truth will pass harmlessly by them. But
while they indulge lustful appetite, and thus cherish their idols, they make themselves a
mark for the arrows of truth to hit, and if truth is spoken at all, they must be wounded.
Some think that they cannot reform, that health would be sacrificed should they attempt to
leave the use of tea, tobacco, and flesh meats. This is the suggestion of Satan. It is
these hurtful stimulants that are surely undermining the constitution and preparing the
system for acute diseases by impairing Nature's fine machinery and battering down her
fortifications erected against disease and premature decay. 1T 548
Some are indulging lustful appetite which wars against the soul and is a constant
hindrance to their spiritual advancement. They constantly bear an accusing conscience, and
if straight truths are talked they are prepared to be offended. They are self-condemned
and feel that subjects have been purposely selected to touch their case. They feel grieved
and injured, and withdraw themselves from the assemblies of the saints. They forsake the
assembling of themselves together, for then their consciences are not so disturbed. They
soon lose their interest in the meetings and their love for the truth, and, unless they
entirely reform, will go back and take their position with the rebel host who stand under
the black banner of Satan. If these will crucify fleshly lusts which war against the soul,
they will get out of the way, where the arrows of truth will pass harmlessly by them. But
while they indulge lustful appetite, and thus cherish their idols, they make themselves a
mark for the arrows of truth to hit, and if truth is spoken at all, they must be wounded.
Some think that they cannot reform, that health would be sacrificed should they attempt to
leave the use of tea, tobacco, and flesh meats. This is the suggestion of Satan. It is
these hurtful stimulants that are surely undermining the constitution and preparing the
system for acute diseases by impairing Nature's fine machinery and battering down her
fortifications erected against disease and premature decay. 1T 548
The abuses of the stomach by the gratification of appetite are the fruitful source of
most church trials. Those who eat and work intemperately and irrationally, talk and act
irrationally. An intemperate man cannot be a patient man. It is not necessary to drink
alcoholic liquors in order to be intemperate. The sin of intemperate eating, eating too
frequently, too much, and of rich, unwholesome food, destroys the healthy action of the
digestive organs, affects the brain, and perverts the judgement, preventing rational,
calm, healthy thinking and acting. And this is a fruitful source of church trials.
Therefore in order for the people of God to be in an acceptable state with Him, where they
can glorify Him in their bodies and spirits which are His, they must with interest and
zeal deny the gratification of their appetites, and exercise temperance in all things.
Then may they comprehend the truth in its beauty and clearness, and carry it out in their
lives, and by a judicious, wise, straightforward course give the enemies of our faith no
occasion to reproach the cause of truth. God requires all who believe the truth to make
special, persevering efforts to place themselves in the best possible condition of bodily
health, for a solemn and important work is before us. Health of body and mind is required
for this work; it is as essential to a healthy religious experience, to advancement in the
Christian life and progress in holiness, as is the hand or foot to the human body. God
requires His people to cleanse themselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit,
perfecting holiness in the fear of the Lord. All those who are indifferent and excuse
themselves from this work, waiting for the Lord to do for them that which He requires them
to do for themselves, will be found wanting when the meek of the earth, who have wrought
His judgements, are hid in the day of the Lord's anger. 1T 618
Some cannot be impressed with the necessity of eating and drinking to the glory of God.
The indulgence of appetite affects them in all the relations of life. It is seen in their
family, in their church, in the prayer meeting, and in the conduct of their children. It
has been the curse of their lives. You cannot make them understand the truths for these
last days. God has bountifully provided for the sustenance and happiness of all His
creatures; and if His laws were never violated, and all acted in harmony with the divine
will, health, peace, and happiness, instead of misery and continual evil, would be
experienced. 2T 368
The Lord has let His light shine upon us in these last days, that the gloom and
darkness which have been gathering in past generations because of sinful indulgence, might
in some degree be dispelled, and that the train of evils which have resulted because of
intemperate eating and drinking, might be lessened.
The Lord in wisdom designed to bring His people into a position where they would be
separate from the world in spirit and practice, that their children might not so readily
be led into idolatry, and become tainted with the prevailing corruptions of this age. It
is God's design that believing parents and their children should stand forth as living
representatives of Christ, candidates for everlasting life. All who are partakers of the
divine nature will escape the corruption that is in the world through lust. It is
impossible for those who indulge the appetite to attain to Christian perfection. 2T 399
The Lord in wisdom designed to bring His people into a position where they would be
separate from the world in spirit and practice, that their children might not so readily
be led into idolatry and become tainted with the prevailing corruptions of this age. It is
God's design that believing parents and their children should stand forth as living
representatives of Christ, candidates for everlasting life. All who are partakers of the
divine nature will escape the corruption that is in the world through lust. It is
impossible for those who indulge the appetite to attain to Christian perfection. You
cannot arouse the moral sensibilities of your children while you are not careful in the
selection of their food. The tables that parents usually prepare for their children are a
snare to them. Their diet is not simple, and is not prepared in a healthful manner. The
food is frequently rich and fever-producing, having a tendency to irritate and excite the
tender coats of the stomach. The animal propensities are strengthened and bear sway, while
the moral and intellectual powers are weakened and become servants to the baser passions.
You should study to prepare a simple yet nutritious diet. Flesh meats, and rich cakes and
pies prepared with spices of any kind, are not the most healthful and nourishing diet.
Eggs should not be placed upon your table. They are an injury to your children. Fruits and
grains, prepared in the most simple form, are the most healthful, and will impart the
greatest amount of nourishment to the body, and, at the same time, not impair the
intellect. 2T 399
You need clear, energetic minds, in order to appreciate the exalted character of the
truth, to value the atonement, and to place the right estimate upon eternal things. If you
pursue a wrong course, and indulge in wrong habits of eating, and thereby weaken the
intellectual powers, you will not place that high estimate upon salvation and eternal life
which will inspire you to conform your life to the life of Christ; you will not make those
earnest, self-sacrificing efforts for entire conformity to the will of God, which His word
requires, and which are necessary to give you a moral fitness for the finishing touch of
immortality. 2T 66
Appetite and passion are overcoming thousands of Christ's professed followers. Their
senses become so blunted on account of familiarity with sin that they do not abhor it, but
view it as attractive. The end of all things is at hand. God will not much longer bear
with the crimes and debasing iniquity of the children of men. Their crimes have indeed
reached unto the heavens and will soon be answered by the fearful plagues of God upon the
earth. They will drink the cup of God's wrath unmixed with mercy. 3T 473
I have seen that there is danger that even the professed children of God will be
corrupted. Licentiousness is binding men and women as captives. They seem to be infatuated
and powerless to resist and overcome upon the point of appetite and passion. In God there
is power; in Him there is strength. If they will take hold upon it, the life-giving power
of Jesus will stimulate everyone who has named the name of Christ. Dangers and perils
surround us; and we are only safe when we feel our weakness and cling with the grasp of
faith to our mighty Deliverer. It is a fearful time in which we live. We cannot cease
watchfulness and prayer for a moment. Our helpless souls must rely on Jesus, our
compassionate Redeemer. 3T 473
My brethren, God calls upon you as His followers to walk in the light. You need to be
alarmed. Sin is among us, and it is not seen to be exceedingly sinful. The senses of many
are benumbed by the indulgence of appetite and by familiarity with sin. We need to advance
nearer heaven. We may grow in grace and in the knowledge of the truth. Walking in the
light, running in the way of God's commandments, does not give the idea that we can stand
still and do nothing. We must be advancing. 3T 476
The Redeemer of the world knew that the indulgence of appetite would bring physical
debility, and so deaden the perceptive organs that sacred and eternal things would not be
discerned. Christ knew that the world was given up to gluttony and that this indulgence
would pervert the moral powers. If the indulgence of appetite was so strong upon the race
that, in order to break its power, the divine Son of God, in behalf of man, was required
to fast nearly six weeks, what a work is before the Christian in order that he may
overcome even as Christ overcame! The strength of the temptation to indulge perverted
appetite can be measured only by the inexpressible anguish of Christ in that long fast in
the wilderness. 3T 486
Christ knew that in order to successfully carry forward the plan of salvation He must
commence the work of redeeming man just where the ruin began. Adam fell by the indulgence
of appetite. In order to impress upon man his obligations to obey the law of God, Christ
began His work of redemption by reforming the physical habits of man. The declension in
virtue and the degeneracy of the race are chiefly attributable to the indulgence of
perverted appetite. 3T 486
There is a solemn responsibility upon all, especially upon ministers who teach the
truth, to overcome upon the point of appetite. Their usefulness would be much greater if
they had control of their appetites and passions, and their mental and moral powers would
be stronger if they combined physical labour with mental exertion. With strictly temperate
habits, and with mental and physical labour combined, they could accomplish a far greater
amount of labour and preserve clearness of mind. If they would pursue such a course, their
thoughts and words would flow more freely, their religious exercises would be more
energised, and the impressions made upon their hearers would be more marked. 3T 486
There is a solemn responsibility upon all, especially upon ministers who teach the
truth, to overcome upon the point of appetite. Their usefulness would be much greater if
they had control of their appetites and passions, and their mental and moral powers would
be stronger if they combined physical labour with mental exertion. With strictly temperate
habits, and with mental and physical labour combined, they could accomplish a far greater
amount of labour and preserve clearness of mind. If they would pursue such a course, their
thoughts and words would flow more freely, their religious exercises would be more
energised, and the impressions made upon their hearers would be more marked. 3T 486
Intemperance in eating, even of food of the right quality, will have a prostrating
influence upon the system and will blunt the keener and holier emotions. Strict temperance
in eating and drinking is highly essential for the healthy preservation and vigorous
exercise of all the functions of the body. Strictly temperate habits, combined with
exercise of the muscles as well as of the mind, will preserve both mental and physical
vigour, and give power of endurance to those engaged in the ministry, to editors, and to
all others whose habits are sedentary. As a people, with all our profession of health
reform, we eat too much. Indulgence of appetite is the greatest cause of physical and
mental debility, and lies at the foundation of the feebleness which is apparent
everywhere. 3T 487
Intemperance commences at our tables in the use of unhealthful food. After a time,
through continued indulgence, the digestive organs become weakened, and the food taken
does not satisfy the appetite. Unhealthy conditions are established, and there is a
craving for more stimulating food. Tea, coffee, and flesh meats produce an immediate
effect. Under the influence of these poisons the nervous system is excited, and, in some
cases, for the time being, the intellect seems to be invigorated and the imagination to be
more vivid. Because these stimulants produce for the time being such agreeable results,
many conclude that they really need them and continue their use. But there is always a
reaction. The nervous system, having been unduly excited, borrowed power for present use
from its future resources of strength. All this temporary invigoration of the system is
followed by depression. In proportion as these stimulants temporarily invigorate the
system will be the letting down of the power of the excited organs after the stimulus has
lost its force. The appetite is educated to crave something stronger which will have a
tendency to keep up and increase the agreeable excitement, until indulgence becomes habit,
and there is a continual craving for stronger stimulus, as tobacco, wines, and liquors.
The more the appetite is indulged, the more frequent will be its demands and the more
difficult of control. The more debilitated the system becomes and the less able to do
without unnatural stimulus, the more the passion for these things increases, until the
will is overborne, and there seems to be no power to deny the unnatural craving for these
indulgences. 3T 487
Tobacco is a slow, insidious poison, and its effects are more difficult to cleanse from
the system than those of liquor. What power can the tobacco devotee have to stay the
progress of intemperance? There must be a revolution in our world upon the subject of
tobacco before the axe is laid at the root of the tree. We press the subject still closer.
Tea and coffee are fostering the appetite which is developing for stronger stimulants, as
tobacco and liquor. And we come still closer home, to the daily meals, the tables spread
in Christian households. Is temperance practised in all things? Are the reforms which are
essential to health and happiness carried out there? Every true Christian will have
control of his appetite and passions. Unless he is free from the bondage and slavery of
appetite he cannot be a true, obedient servant of Christ. It is the indulgence of appetite
and passion which makes the truth of none effect upon the heart. It is impossible for the
spirit and power of the truth to sanctify a man, soul, body, and spirit, when he is
controlled by appetite and passion. - 3T 569
The body, which God calls his temple, should be preserved in as healthy a condition as
possible. Many act as though they had a right to treat their own bodies as they please.
They do not realise that God has claims upon them. They are required to glorify him in
their bodies and spirits, which are his. While they give themselves up to the
gratification of unhealthy appetites, and thus bring disease upon themselves, they cannot
render to God acceptable service. None should remain in ignorance of God's claims. All his
promises are on conditions of obedience. All should work for themselves. They should do
that which God requires them to do, and not leave God to do for them that which he has
left for them to do. It is a sacred duty which God has enjoined upon reasonable beings,
formed in his image, to keep that image in as perfect a state as possible. Those who bring
disease upon themselves, by self-gratification, have not healthy bodies and minds. They
cannot weigh the evidences of truth, and comprehend the requirements of God. Our Saviour
will not reach his arm low enough to raise such from their degraded state, while they
persist in pursuing a course to sink themselves still lower. 4ASG 148
All are required to do what they can to preserve healthy bodies, and sound minds. If
they will gratify a gross appetite, and by so doing blunt their sensibilities, and becloud
their perceptive faculties so that they cannot appreciate the exalted character of God, or
delight in the study of his Word, they may be assured that God will not accept their
unworthy offering any sooner than that of Cain. God requires them to cleanse themselves
from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of the Lord.
After man has done all in his power to insure health, by the denying of appetite and gross
passions, that he may possess a healthy mind, and a sanctified imagination, that he may
render to God an offering in righteousness, then he is saved alone by a miracle of God's
mercy, as was the ark upon the stormy billows. Noah had done all that God required of him
in making the ark secure, then God performed that which man could not do, and preserved
the ark by his miraculous power. 4ASG 148
Many have expected that God would keep them from sickness merely because they have
asked Him to do so. But God did not regard their prayers, because their faith was not made
perfect by works. God will not work a miracle to keep those from sickness who have no care
for themselves, but are continually violating the laws of health, and make no efforts to
prevent disease. When we do all we can on our part to have health, then may we expect that
the blessed results will follow, and we can ask God in faith to bless our efforts for the
preservation of health. He will then answer our prayer, if His name can be glorified
thereby. But let all understand that they have a work to do. God will not work in a
miraculous manner to preserve the health of persons who are taking a sure course to make
themselves sick, by their careless inattention to the laws of health.
Those who will gratify their appetite, and then suffer because of their intemperance,
and take drugs to relieve them, may be assured that God will not interpose to save health
and life which is so recklessly periled. The cause has produced the effect. Many, as their
last resort, follow the directions in the word of God, and request the prayers of the
elders of the church for their restoration to health. God does not see fit to answer
prayers offered in behalf of such, for He knows that if they should be restored to health,
they would again sacrifice it upon the altar of unhealthy appetite. 4SG 144
A continual transgression of nature's laws is a continual transgression of the law of
God. The present weight of suffering and anguish which we see everywhere, the present
deformity, decrepitude, disease, and imbecility now flooding the world, make it, in
comparison to what it might be and what God designed it should be, a lazar house; and the
present generation are feeble in mental, moral, and physical power. All this misery has
accumulated from generation to generation because fallen man will break the law of God.
Sins of the greatest magnitude are committed through the indulgence of perverted appetite.
4T 30
All this weight of woe and accumulated suffering can be traced to the indulgence of
appetite and passion. Luxurious living and the use of wine corrupt the blood, inflame the
passions, and produce diseases of every kind. But the evil does not end here. Parents
leave maladies as a legacy to their children. As a rule, every intemperate man who rears
children transmits his inclinations and evil tendencies to his offspring; he gives them
disease from his own inflamed and corrupted blood. Licentiousness, disease, and imbecility
are transmitted as an inheritance of woe from father to son and from generation to
generation, and this brings anguish and suffering into the world, and is no less than a
repetition of the fall of man. 4T 30
Excessive indulgence in eating, drinking, sleeping, or seeing, is sin. The harmonious
healthy action of all the powers of body and mind results in happiness; and the more
elevated and refined the powers, the more pure and unalloyed the happiness. An aimless
life is a living death. The powers of the mind should be exercised upon themes relating to
our eternal interests. This will be conducive to health of body and mind. There are many,
even among our preachers, who want to rise in the world without effort. They are ambitious
to do some great work of usefulness, while they disregard the little everyday duties which
would render them helpful and make them ministers after Christ's order. They wish to do
the work others are doing, but have no relish for the discipline necessary to fit them for
it. This yearning desire by both men and women to do something far in advance of their
present capabilities is simply causing them to make decided failures in the outset. They
indignantly refuse to climb the ladder, wishing to be elevated by a less laborious
process. 4T 417
Because of imprudence in eating, the senses of some seem to be half paralysed, and they
are sluggish and sleepy. These pale-faced ministers who are suffering in consequence of
selfish indulgence of the appetite are no recommendation of health reform. When suffering
from overwork, it would be much better to drop out a meal occasionally and thus give
nature a chance to rally. Our labourers could do more by their example to advance health
reform than by preaching it. When elaborate preparations are made for them by well-meaning
friends, they are strongly tempted to disregard principle; but by refusing the dainty
dishes, the rich condiments, the tea and coffee, they may prove themselves to be practical
health reformers. Some are now suffering in consequence of transgressing the laws of life,
thus causing a stigma to rest on the cause of health reform. 4T 417
In the wilderness of temptation Christ met the great leading temptations that would
assail man. There He encountered, single-handed, the wily, subtle foe, and overcame him.
The first great temptation was upon appetite; the second, presumption; the third, love of
the world. Satan has overcome his millions by tempting them to the indulgence of appetite.
Through the gratification of the taste, the nervous system becomes excited and the brain
power enfeebled, making it impossible to think calmly or rationally. The mind is
unbalanced. Its higher, nobler faculties are perverted to serve animal lust, and the
sacred, eternal interests are not regarded. When this object is gained, Satan can come
with his two other leading temptations and find ready access. His manifold temptations
grow out of these three great leading points. 4T 44
God requires of His people continual advancement. We need to learn that indulged
appetite is the greatest hindrance to mental improvement and soul sanctification. With all
our profession of health reform, many of us eat improperly. Indulgence of appetite is the
greatest cause of physical and mental debility, and lies largely at the foundation of
feebleness and premature death. Let the individual who is seeking to possess purity of
spirit bear in mind that in Christ there is power to control the appetite. 9T 156
If we could be benefited by indulging the desire for flesh foods, I would not make this
appeal to you; but I know we cannot. Flesh foods are injurious to the physical well-being,
and we should learn to do without them. Those who are in a position where it is possible
to secure a vegetarian diet, but who choose to follow their own preferences in this
matter, eating and drinking as they please, will gradually grow careless of the
instruction the Lord has given regarding other phases of the present truth and will lose
their perception of what is truth; they will surely reap as they have sown. 9T 156
Our physical health is maintained by that which we eat; if our appetites are not under
the control of a sanctified mind, if we are not temperate in all our eating and drinking,
we shall not be in a state of mental and physical soundness to study the word with a
purpose to learn what saith the Scripture --what shall I do to inherit eternal life? Any
unhealthful habit will produce an unhealthful condition in the system, and the delicate,
living machinery of the stomach will be injured, and will not be able to do its work
properly. The diet has much to do with the disposition to enter into temptation and commit
sin. CD 52
What a pity it is that often, when the greatest self-denial should be exercised, the
stomach is crowded with a mass of unhealthful food, which lies there to decompose. The
affliction of the stomach affects the brain. The imprudent eater does not realise that he
is disqualifying himself for giving wise counsel, disqualifying himself for laying plans
for the best advancement of the work of God. But this is so. He cannot discern spiritual
things, and in council meetings, when he should say Yea and Amen, he says Nay. He makes
propositions that are wide of the mark. The food he has eaten has benumbed his brain
power. CD 53
Self-indulgence debars the human agent from witnessing for the truth. The gratitude we
offer to God for His blessings is greatly affected by the food placed in the stomach.
Indulgence of appetite is the cause of dissension, strife, discord, and many other evils.
Impatient words are spoken and unkind deeds are done, dishonest practices are followed and
passion is manifested, and all because the nerves of the brain are diseased by the abuse
heaped upon the stomach. CD 53
The misuse of our physical powers shortens the period of time in which our lives can be
used for the glory of God. And it unfits us to accomplish the work God has given us to do.
By allowing ourselves to form wrong habits, by keeping late hours, by gratifying appetite
at the expense of health, we lay the foundation for feebleness. By neglecting physical
exercise, by overworking mind or body, we unbalance the nervous system. Those who thus
shorten their lives and unfit themselves for service by disregarding nature's laws, are
guilty of robbery toward God. And they are robbing their fellow men also. The opportunity
of blessing others, the very work for which God sent them into the world, has by their own
course of action been cut short. And they have unfitted themselves to do even that which
in a briefer period of time they might have accomplished. The Lord holds us guilty when by
our injurious habits we thus deprive the world of good. COL 346
It is as truly a sin to violate the laws of our being as it is to break the ten
commandments. To do either is to break God's laws. Those who transgress the law of God in
their physical organism, will be inclined to violate the law of God spoken from Sinai.
Our Saviour warned His disciples that just prior to His second coming a state of things
would exist very similar to that which preceded the flood. Eating and drinking would be
carried to excess, and the world would be given up to pleasure. This state of things does
exist at the present time. The world is largely given up to the indulgence of appetite;
and the disposition to follow worldly customs will bring us into bondage to perverted
habits,--habits that will make us more and more like the doomed inhabitants of Sodom. I
have wondered that the inhabitants of the earth were not destroyed, like the people of
Sodom and Gomorrah. I see reason enough for the present state of degeneracy and mortality
in the world. Blind passion controls reason, and every high consideration is, with many,
sacrificed to lust.
To keep the body in a healthy condition, in order that all parts of the living
machinery may act harmoniously, should be a study of our life. The children of God cannot
glorify Him with sickly bodies or dwarfed minds. Those who indulge in any species of
intemperance, either in eating or drinking, waste their physical energies and weaken moral
power. CTBH 53
God has permitted the light of health reform to shine upon us in these last days, that
by walking in the light we may escape many of the dangers to which we shall be exposed.
Satan is working with great power to lead men to indulge appetite, gratify inclination,
and spend their days in heedless folly. He presents attractions in a life of selfish
enjoyment and of sensual indulgence. Intemperance saps the energies of both mind and body.
He who is thus overcome, has placed himself upon Satan's ground, where he will be tempted
and annoyed, and finally controlled at pleasure by the enemy of all righteousness. CTBH 75
With our first parents, intemperate desire resulted in the loss of Eden. Temperance in
all things has more to do with our restoration to Eden than men realise. MH 129
The surplus food burdens the system and produces morbid, feverish conditions. It calls
an undue amount of blood to the stomach, causing the limbs and extremities to chill
quickly. It lays a heavy tax on the digestive organs, and when these organs have
accomplished their task, there is a feeling of faintness or languor. Some who are
continually overeating call this all-gone feeling hunger; but it is caused by the
over-worked condition of the digestive organs. At times there is numbness of the brain,
with disinclination to mental or physical effort.
These unpleasant symptoms are felt because nature has accomplished her work at an
unnecessary outlay of vital force and is thoroughly exhausted. The stomach is saying,
"Give me rest." But with many the faintness is interpreted as a demand for more
food; so instead of giving the stomach rest, another burden is placed upon it. As a
consequence the digestive organs are often worn out when they should be capable of doing
good work. MH 307
We should not provide for the Sabbath a more liberal supply or a greater variety of
food than for other days. Instead of this the food should be more simple, and less should
be eaten in order that the mind may be clear and vigorous to comprehend spiritual things.
A clogged stomach means a clogged brain. The most precious words may be heard and not
appreciated because the mind is confused by an improper diet. By overeating on the
Sabbath, many do more than they think to unfit themselves for receiving the benefit of its
sacred opportunities.
Cooking on the Sabbath should be avoided; but it is not therefore necessary to eat cold
food. In cold weather the food prepared the day before should be heated. And let the
meals, however simple, be palatable and attractive. Especially in families where there are
children, it is well, on the Sabbath, to provide something that will be regarded as a
treat, something the family do not have every day. MH 307
Bible teaching will make but a feeble impression upon those whose faculties are
benumbed by indulgence of appetite. Thousands will sacrifice not only health and life, but
their hope of Heaven, before they will wage war against their own perverted appetites. RH
JAN.25,1881
With what care should Christians regulate their habits, that they may preserve the full
vigour of every faculty to give to the service of Christ. If we would be sanctified, in
soul, body, and spirit, we must live in conformity to the divine law. The heart cannot
preserve consecration to God while the appetites and passions are indulged at the expense
of health and life. RH JAN.25,1881
Let none who profess godliness regard with indifference the health of the body, and
flatter themselves that intemperance is no sin, and will not affect their spirituality. A
close sympathy exists between the physical and the moral nature. The standard of virtue is
elevated or degraded by the physical habits. Excessive eating of the best of food will
produce a morbid condition of the moral feelings. And if the food is not the most
healthful, the effects will be still more injurious. Any habit which does not promote
healthful action in the human system degrades the higher and nobler faculties. Wrong
habits of eating and drinking lead to errors in thought and action. Indulgence of appetite
strengthens the animal propensities, giving them the ascendancy over the mental and
spiritual powers. RH JAN.25,1881
Those who would work in God's service must not be seeking worldly gratification and
selfish indulgence. The physicians in our institutions must be imbued with the living
principles of health reform. Men will never be truly temperate until the grace of Christ
is an abiding principle in the heart. All the pledges in the world will not make you or
your wife health reformers. No mere restriction of your diet will cure your diseased
appetite. Brother and Sister ----- will not practice temperance in all things until their
hearts are transformed by the grace of God.
Circumstances cannot work reforms. Christianity proposes a reformation in the heart.
What Christ works within, will be worked out under the dictation of a converted intellect.
The plan of beginning outside and trying to work inward has always failed, and always will
fail. God's plan with you is to begin at the very seat of all difficulties, the heart, and
then from out of the heart will issue the principles of righteousness; the reformation
will be outward as well as inward. SPTA NO.9 54
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