Eggs
by Ellen White
We shall not discourage your father attempting to work to pay his way if he stays with
us. We shall provide their food and clothing, and do for them all that anyone could do,
except giving personal care. If this becomes necessary, I shall hire a nurse to take care
of them. At present Sister Belden is able to care for her husband. They have been supplied
from our stock with eggs, milk, fruit, and anything that we raise. I give you these
particulars that you may know how they are situated. 10MR 136
Friday night we camped near Johnson's ranch. Here are found plenty of grass for horses,
and at the farmhouse, good milk, butter, and eggs. We were having our first experience of
overland journeying in transporting our sick and those too poor to pay car expenses, but
the Lord cared for us.--Ms. 4, 1879, p. 2. (Diary entry.) 11MR 059
I am getting rested. No fire in car. We feel inconvenienced from cold for some hours in
the morning. Then we are comfortable all day. Not much danger of catching heat in this
car. It is altogether better for us all. It is so good to be supplied with warm clothing
to make us comfortable. He has his warm can of water, warm blankets and his warm egg every
morning--just as he had it at home. We all strive our best to gratify every wish. 11MR 139
I have some things I wish to send you, if I can get them off in this mail. Several
cases have been presented to me, which I will speak of in time; meanwhile, do not put
yourself through [such an extreme regimen] as you have done, and do not go to extremes in
regard to the health reform. Some of our people are very careless in regard to health
reform. But because some are far behind, you must not, in order to be an example to them,
be an extremist. You must not deprive yourself of that class of food which makes good
blood. Your devotion to true principles is leading you to submit yourself to a diet which
is giving you an experience that will not recommend health reform. This is your danger.
When you see that you are becoming weak physically, it is essential for you to makes
changes, and at once. Put into your diet something you have left out. It is your duty to
do this. Get eggs of healthy fowls. Use these eggs cooked or raw. Drop them uncooked into
the best unfermented wine you can find.[* DR. KRESS ACCEPTED THIS COUNSEL. HE FOLLOWED THE
RAW-EGG AND GRAPE-JUICE REGIMEN REGULARLY UNTIL HIS DEATH IN 1956 AT THE AGE OF 94.] This
will supply that which is necessary to your system. Do not for a moment suppose that it
will not be right to do this. There is one thing that has saved life--an infusion of blood
from one person to another; but this would be difficult and perhaps impossible for you to
do. I merely suggest it. 12MR 168
I do hope that you will heed the words I have spoken to you. It has been presented to
me that you will not be able to exert the most successful influence in health reform
unless in some things you become more liberal to yourself and to others. The time will
come when milk cannot be used as freely as it is now used; but the present is not the time
to discard it. And eggs contain properties which are remedial agencies in counteracting
poisons. And while warnings have been given against the use of these articles of diet in
families where the children were addicted to, yes, steeped in, habits of self abuse, yet
we should not consider it a denial of principle to use eggs of hens which are well cared
for and suitably fed.
12MR 169
The prayer of faith shall save the sick, and I beseech you to call for the elders of
the church without delay. May the Lord help you, is my most sincere prayer. We appreciate
your experience as a physician, and yet I say that milk and eggs should be included in
your diet. These things cannot at present be dispensed with, and the doctrine of
dispensing with them should not be taught. 12MR 169
After this Dr. Lay came to me and said, "I have gone as far as I can go, but
Brother Wilson is sinking. I cannot arouse him." I said, "Last night I dreamed
that my sick child was sinking. I asked the skilful Physician, who has never lost a case,
what I should do. The answer came, "Break an egg into a glass of unfermented wine,
and give him such a drink two or three times a day, until the exhaustion is gone and there
is a revival of the life forces." Snatching up his hat, Dr. Lay said, "This is
of the Lord. We shall save Brother Wilson yet." And off he went. For three days he
gave him egg and wine, and he was soon fully recovered. 12MR 171
I have something to say in reference to extreme views of health reform. Health reform
becomes health deform, a health destroyer, when it is carried to extremes. You will not be
successful in sanitariums where the sick are treated if you prescribe for the patients the
same diet you have prescribed for yourself and your wife. I assure you that your ideas in
regard to diet for the sick are not advisable. The change is too great. While I would
discard flesh meat as injurious, something less objectionable may be used, and this is
found in eggs. Do not remove milk from the table or forbid its being used in the cooking
of food. The milk used should be procured from healthy cows, and should be sterilised.
12MR 172
This is all I can write today, for the mail must go soon. But I wish to say that when
the time comes that it is no longer safe to use milk, cream, butter, and eggs, God will
reveal this. No extremes in health reform are to be advocated. The question of using milk
and butter and eggs will work out its own problem. At present we have no burden on this
line. Let your moderation be known unto all men.--Letter 37, 1901, pp. 1-13. (To Dr. and
Mrs. Kress, May 29, 1901.) 12MR 178
Our institutions are to discard meat. This is a big step to worldly people. Our patrons
and guests are to be given plain, appetising, wholesome food, which will keep the system
in health and remove all excuse for meat eating. If sensible arguments are properly used,
reforms will be many. But if milk and eggs are discarded, what kind of diet will be
represented? 1MR 291
I have not knowingly drunk a cup of genuine coffee for twenty years, only, as I stated,
during my sickness--for a medicine--I drank a cup of coffee, very strong, with a raw egg
broken into it.--Letter 20, 1882 (To friends). 2SM 302
[ Grape Juice and Eggs. ] --I have received light that you are injuring your body by a
poverty-stricken diet. . . . It is the lack of suitable food that has caused you to suffer
so keenly. You have not taken the food essential to nourish your frail physical strength.
You must not deny yourself of good, wholesome food.... Get eggs of healthy fowls. Use
these eggs cooked or raw. Drop them uncooked into the best unfermented wine you can find.
This will supply that which is necessary to your system. . . . Eggs contain properties
which are remedial agencies in counteracting poisons.-- pp. 203, 204 (To Dr. D. H. Kress,
1901). 2SM 303
The minds of some of these children are so weakened that they have but one half or one
third of the brilliancy of intellect that they might have had had they been virtuous and
pure. They have thrown it away in self-abuse. Right here in this church, corruption is
teeming on every hand. Now and then there is a sing, or some gathering for pleasure. Every
time I hear of these, I feel like clothing myself in sackcloth. "Oh that my head were
waters, and mine eyes a fountain of tears!" "Spare Thy people, O Lord." I
feel distressed. I have an agony of soul that is beyond anything that I can describe to
you. You are asleep. Would the lightning and thunder of Sinai arouse this church? Would
they arouse you, fathers and mothers, to commence the work of reformation in your own
houses? You should be teaching your children. You should be instructing them how to shun
the vices and corruptions of this age. Instead of this, many are studying how to get
something good to eat. You place upon your tables butter, eggs, and meat, and your
children partake of them. They are fed with the very things that will excite their animal
passions, and then you come to meeting and ask God to bless and save your children. How
high do your prayers go? You have a work to do first. When you have done all for your
children which God has left for you to do then you can with confidence claim the special
help that God has promised to give you. 2T 361
You should be teaching your children. You should be instructing them how to shun the
vices and corruptions of this age. Instead of this, many are studying how to get something
good to eat. You place upon your tables butter, eggs and meat, and your children partake
of them. They are fed with the very things that will excite their animal passions and then
you come to meeting and ask God to bless and save your children. How high do your prayers
go? You have a work to do first. When you have done all for your children which God has
left for you to do, then you can with confidence claim the special help that God has
promised to give you. 2T 362
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
"IT IS TRUE THAT PERSONS IN FULL FLESH AND IN WHOM THE ANIMAL PASSIONS ARE STRONG
NEED TO AVOID THE USE OF STIMULATING FOODS. ESPECIALLY IN FAMILIES OF CHILDREN WHO ARE
GIVEN TO SENSUAL HABITS, EGGS SHOULD NOT BE USED."-- PAGE 320. 2T 712
My birthday is past without commemoration. Father and I went to Green Valley from
Healdsburg California, fourteen miles and back. The road part of the way was bad. We
wandered out of the way some. We arrived at Brother Ross's. They had nothing in the home
to eat. I tended a babe, held it in one arm and prepared my dinner myself. Made a little
mush, cooked some eggs and put on a few cold gems. This composed my dinner, birthday
dinner, half a century old! Not much display in this. Then our birth does not amount to
much. It is not of much consequence in regard to our birth--not half as much as in regard
to our lives. How do we live? Our daily life will either honour or dishonour the day of
our birth.--Letter 39, 1877, p. 1. (To "Dear Children, Willie and Mary,"
November 27, 1877.) 4MR 039
Concerning flesh meat, we should educate the people to let it alone. Its use is
contrary to the best development of the physical, mental, and moral powers. And we should
bear a clear testimony against the use of tea and coffee. It is also well to discard rich
desserts. Milk, eggs, and butter should not be classed with flesh meat. In some cases the
use of eggs is beneficial. The time has not come to say that the use of milk and eggs
should be wholly discarded. There are poor families whose diet consists largely of bread
and milk. They have little fruit and cannot afford to purchase the nut foods. In teaching
health reform, as in all other gospel work, we are to meet the people where they are.
Until we can teach them how to prepare health reform foods that are palatable, nourishing,
and yet inexpensive, we are not at liberty to present the most advanced propositions
regarding health reform diet. 7T 134
Let the diet reform be progressive. Let the people be taught how to prepare food
without the use of milk or butter. 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. The time is near when,
because of the iniquity of the fallen race, the whole animal creation will groan under the
diseases that curse our earth. 7T 135
Milk, eggs, and butter should not be classed with flesh-meat. In some cases the use of
eggs is beneficial. The time has not come to say that the use of milk and eggs should be
wholly discarded. There are poor families whose diet consists largely of bread and milk.
They have little fruit, and can not afford to purchase the nut foods. In teaching health
reform, as in all other gospel work, we are to meet the people where they are. Until we
can teach them how to prepare health-reform foods that are palatable, nourishing, and yet
inexpensive, we are not at liberty to present the most advanced propositions regarding
health-reform diet. 7T 135
Soon butter will never be recommended, and after a time milk will be entirely
discarded; for disease in animals is increasing in proportion to the increase of
wickedness among men. The time will come when there will be no safety in using eggs, milk,
cream, or butter.--Letter 14, 1901, p. 3. (To Dr. S. Rand, January 22, 1901.) 8MR 384
Some, in abstaining from milk, eggs, and butter, have failed to supply the system with
proper nourishment, and as a consequence have become weak and unable to work. Thus health
reform is brought into disrepute. The work that we have tried to build up solidly is
confused with strange things that God has not required, and the energies of the church are
crippled. But God will interfere to prevent the results of these too strenuous ideas. The
gospel is to harmonise the sinful race. It is to bring the rich and poor together at the
feet of Jesus. 9T 162
While warnings have been given regarding the dangers of disease through butter, and the
evil of the free use of eggs by small children, yet we should not consider it a violation
of principle to use eggs from hens that are well cared for and suitably fed. Eggs contain
properties that are remedial agencies in counteracting certain poisons. 9T 162
While working against gluttony and intemperance, we must recognise the condition to
which the human family is subjected. God has made provision for those who live in the
different countries of the world. Those who desire to be co-workers with God must consider
carefully before they specify just what foods should and should not be eaten. We are to be
brought into connection with the masses. Should health reform in its most extreme form be
taught to those whose circumstances forbid its adoption, more harm than good would be
done. As I preach the gospel to the poor, I am instructed to tell them to eat that food
which is most nourishing. I cannot say to them: "You must not eat eggs, or milk, or
cream. You must use no butter in the preparation of food." The gospel must be
preached to the poor, but the time has not yet come to prescribe the strictest diet. 9T
163
The food placed before the patients should be such as to make a favourable impression
on them. Eggs can be prepared in a variety of ways. Lemon pie should not be forbidden. CD
288
There is danger that in presenting the principles of health reform some will be in
favour of bringing in changes that would be for the worse instead of for the better.
Health reform must not be urged in a radical manner. As the situation now is, we cannot
say that milk and eggs and butter should be entirely discarded. We must be careful to make
no innovations, because under the influence of extreme teaching there are conscientious
souls who will surely go to extremes. Their physical appearance will injure the cause of
health reform; for few know how to properly supply the place of that which they discard. [
Caution Against Extremes Letter 98, 1901 ] CD 352
We are to be brought into connection with the masses. Should health reform be taught
them in its most extreme form, harm would be done. We ask them to leave off eating meat
and drinking tea and coffee. That is well. But some say that milk also should be given up.
This is a subject that needs to be carefully handled. There are poor families whose diet
consists of bread and milk, and, if they can get it, a little fruit. All flesh food should
be discarded, but vegetables should be made palatable with a little milk or cream or
something equivalent. The poor say, when health reform is presented to them, "What
shall we eat? We cannot afford to buy the nut foods." As I preach the gospel to the
poor, I am instructed to tell them to eat that food which is most nourishing. I cannot say
to them, "You must not eat eggs or milk or cream. You must use no butter in the
preparation of food." The gospel must be preached to the poor, and the time has not
yet come to prescribe the strictest diet. [ Letter 37, 1901 ] CD 358
But I wish to say that when the time comes that it is no longer safe to use milk,
cream, butter, and eggs, God will reveal this. No extremes in health reform are to be
advocated. The question of using milk and butter and eggs will work out its own problem.
At present we have no burden on this line. Let your moderation be known unto all men. CD
359
In all parts of the world provision will be made to supply the place of milk and eggs.
And the Lord will let us know when the time comes to give up these articles. He desires
all to feel that they have a gracious heavenly Father who will instruct them in all
things. The Lord will give dietetic art and skill to His people in all parts of the world,
teaching them how to use for the sustenance of life the products of the earth. CD 359
We see that cattle are becoming greatly diseased, the earth itself is corrupted, and we
know that the time will come when it will not be best to use milk and eggs. But that time
has not yet come. We know that when it does come, the Lord will provide. The question is
asked, meaning much to all concerned, Will God set a table in the wilderness? I think the
answer may be made, Yea, God will provide food for His people. [Letter 151, 1901] CD 359
When a letter came to me from Cooranbong, saying that Doctor ----- was dying, I was
that night instructed that he must have a change of diet. A raw egg, taken two or three
times a day, would give the nourishment that he greatly needed. [ Letter 127, 1904 ] CD
367
Those who come to the sanitarium must be provided with wholesome food prepared in the
most palatable way consistent with right principles. We cannot expect them to live just as
we live.... The food placed before the patients should be such as to make a favourable
impression on them. Eggs can be prepared in a variety of ways. CD 367
In this neighbourhood there is a large tract of unoccupied land. Some of our people who
are living in the poisoned atmosphere of the cities might profitably secure a few acres of
this land. They could support themselves by raising fruit and vegetables and poultry. The
Sanitarium would gladly buy eggs and vegetables from them. I wish that some such
enterprise as this might be started. A great blessing would come to parents and to
children, if they would leave the wicked, polluted cities, and go into the country.-- 63,
1904. CLIV 018
I advise the people to give up sweet puddings or custards made with eggs and milk and
sugar, and to eat the best home-made bread, both graham and white, with dried or green
fruits, and let that be the only course for one meal; then let the next meal be of nicely
prepared vegetables.-- HL 082
You place upon your tables butter, eggs, and meat, and your children partake of them.
They are fed with the very things that will excite their animal passions, and then you
come to meeting and ask God to bless and save your children. HL 217
Far too much sugar is ordinarily used in food. Cakes, sweet puddings, pastries,
jellies, jams, are active causes of indigestion. Especially harmful are the custards and
puddings in which milk, eggs, and sugar are the chief ingredients. The free use of milk
and sugar taken together should be avoided. MH 301
Those who live in new countries or in poverty-stricken districts, where fruits and nuts
are scarce, should not be urged to exclude milk and eggs from their dietary. It is true
that persons in full flesh and in whom the animal passions are strong need to avoid the
use of stimulating foods. Especially in families of children who are given to sensual
habits, eggs should not be used. But in the case of persons whose blood-making organs are
feeble,--especially if other foods to supply the needed elements cannot be obtained,--milk
and eggs should not be wholly discarded. Great care should be taken, however, to obtain
milk from healthy cows, and eggs from healthy fowls, that are well fed and well cared for;
and the eggs should be so cooked as to be most easily digested. MH 320
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. MH 320
Those who live in new countries or in poverty-stricken districts where fruits and nuts
are scarce, should not be urged to exclude milk and eggs from their dietary. MH 320
Concerning flesh-meat we can all say, Let it alone. And all should bear a clear
testimony against tea and coffee, never using them. They are narcotics, injurious alike to
the brain and to the other organs of the body. The time has not yet come when I can say
that the use of milk and of eggs should be wholly discontinued. Milk and eggs should not
be classed with flesh-meats. In some ailments the use of eggs is very beneficial. MM 274
[ The Use of milk and eggs ] We appreciate your experience as a physician, and yet I
say that milk and eggs should be included in your diet. These things cannot at present be
dispensed with, and the doctrine of dispensing with them should not be taught. MM 287
All flesh food should be discarded, but vegetables should be made palatable with a
little milk or cream or something equivalent. The poor say, when health reform is
presented to them, "What shall we eat? We cannot afford to buy the nut foods."
As I preach the gospel to the poor, I am instructed to tell them to eat that food which is
most nourishing. I cannot say to them, "You must not eat eggs or milk or cream. You
must use no butter in the preparation of food." The gospel must be preached to the
poor, and the time has not yet come to prescribe the strictest diet. MM 288
I have not tested the wine that you claim is not intoxicating. I have perhaps used half
a pint in all, taking a spoonful with a raw egg, much as I hate the taste of wine. I would
not care, even if I had not solemnly pledged myself not to use wine as a beverage, to make
a daily practice of taking even one teaspoonful with a raw egg, for Satan is at work to
encourage the use of tea, coffee, wine, and beer, that he may make us dependent upon these
things, and encourage our resorting to them frequently, so that our appetite and taste
will crave these stimulants. I tell you frankly that you would be much better in nerve and
muscle if you made a decided change in your practice, not only in drinking stimulating
drinks, but in eating so largely of meat. The animal powers are strengthened by indulgence
in these things, and the moral and spiritual powers are overborne. I am not guilty of
drinking any tea except red clover top tea, and if I loved wine, tea, and coffee, I would
not use these health-destroying narcotics, for I prize health, and I prize a healthful
example in all these things. I want to be a pattern of temperance and of good works to
others. Will my brother practice as well as preach temperance in all things? If you do
this, I do not believe you will be so changeable in your character. Your words will be
more select and well chosen. You will not be careless in regard to your conversation. You
will not be so depressed at one time and so hilarious at another, acting like a boy in
place of an ambassador of Jesus Christ. I am seriously troubled for your soul. I know
people are unwise in praising you and extolling you; should they read you as God sees you,
they could not do this. I know that when you have apparent success you are elated, and you
crave praise; and you get it from many, who, if their hearts were right with God, would
not speak one word to flatter you. They would understand that it is not safe to pet and
praise you, or any other poor, sinful mortal. The Lord is to be exalted by all his
creatures. Finite man is not to attract admiration or praise, but do his work in humility.
Ellen White. PH096 055
The parents who know the truth in regard to the indulgence of appetite should not
permit their children to eat to excess, or to eat flesh-meat or other foods that excite
the passions. Man is built up from what he eats. The use of flesh-meat strengthens the
lower propensities, and excites them to increased activity. Parents should discard
everything that endangers the moral and physical health of their children. They should not
place flesh-meat on the table. And if they allow their children to eat meat freely, use
butter and eggs, disease in some form will surely result, impairing the health of mind and
body. Thus spirituality is weakened and often destroyed. PUR OCT.09,1902
Tea, coffee, tobacco, and alcohol we must present as sinful indulgences. We cannot
place on the same ground, meat, eggs, butter, cheese and such articles placed upon the
table. These are not to be borne in front, as the burden of our work. The former--tea,
coffee, tobacco, beer, wine, and all spirituous liquors--are not to be taken moderately,
but discarded. The poisonous narcotics are not to be treated in the same way as the
subject of eggs, butter, and cheese. In the beginning animal food was not designed to be
the diet of man. We have every evidence that the flesh of dead animals is dangerous
because of disease that is fast becoming universal, because of the curse resting more
heavily in consequence of the habits and crimes of man. We are to present the truth. We
are to be guarded how to use reason and select those articles of food that will make the
very best blood and keep the blood in an unfevered condition.--Manuscript 5, 1881. RH
JUN.25,1859
I have been shown the danger of families that are of an excitable temperament, the
animal predominating. Their children should not be allowed to make eggs their diet, for
this kind of food--eggs and animal flesh--feeds and inflames the animal passions. This
makes it very difficult for them to overcome the temptation to indulge in the sinful
practice of self-abuse which in this age is almost universally practised. This practice
weakens the physical, mental, and moral powers and bars the way to everlasting life. RH
JUN.25,1859
The time will come when we may have to discard some of the articles of diet we now use,
such as milk and cream and eggs; but it is not necessary to bring upon ourselves
perplexity by premature and extreme restrictions. Wait until the circumstances demand it,
and the Lord prepares the way for it. RH MAR.03,1910
Hot biscuit raised with soda or baking powder should never appear upon our tables. Such
compounds are unfit to enter the stomach. Hot raised bread of any kind is difficult of
digestion. Graham gems which are both wholesome and palatable may be made from the
unbolted flour, mixed with pure cold water and milk. But it is difficult to teach our
people simplicity. When we recommend graham gems, our friends say, "Oh, yes, we know
how to make them." We are much disappointed when they appear, raised with baking
powder or with sour milk and soda. These give no evidence of reform. The unbolted flour,
mixed with pure soft water and milk, makes the best gems we ever tasted. If the water is
hard, use more sweet milk, or add an egg to the batter. Gems should be thoroughly baked in
a well-heated oven, with a steady fire. RH MAY 08,1883