Practices that Benumb the Mind
by Ellen White
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
Many who have adopted the health reform have left off everything hurtful, but does it
follow that because they have left off these things they can eat just as much as they
please? They sit down to the table, and instead of considering how much they should eat,
they give themselves up to appetite and eat to great excess. And the stomach has all it
can do, or all it should do, the rest of that day, to worry away with the burden imposed
upon it. All the food that is put into the stomach, from which the system cannot derive
benefit, is a burden to nature in her work. It hinders the living machine. The system is
clogged and cannot successfully carry on its work. The vital organs are unnecessarily
taxed, and the brain nerve power is called to the stomach to help the digestive organs
carry on their work of disposing of an amount of food which does the system no good.
Thus the power of the brain is lessened by drawing so heavily upon it to help the
stomach get along with its heavy burden. And after it has accomplished the task, what are
the sensations experienced as the result of this unnecessary expenditure of vital force? A
feeling of goneness, a faintness, as though you must eat more. Perhaps this feeling comes
just before mealtime. What is the cause of this? Nature has worried along with her work
and is so thoroughly exhausted in consequence that you have this sensation of goneness.
And you think that the stomach says, "More food," when, in its faintness, it is
distinctly saying, "Give me rest."
The stomach needs rest to gather up its exhausted energies for another work. But,
instead of allowing it any period of rest, you think it needs more food, and so heap
another load upon nature, and refuse it the needed rest. It is like a man labouring in the
field all through the early part of the day until he is weary. He comes in at noon and
says that he is weary and exhausted, but you tell him to go to work again and he will
obtain relief. This is the way you treat the stomach. It is thoroughly exhausted. But
instead of letting it rest, you give it more food, and then call the vitality from other
parts of the system to the stomach to assist in the work of digestion. 2T 362
Many of you have at times felt a numbness around the brain. You have felt disinclined
to take hold of any labour which required either mental or physical exertion, until you
have rested from the sense of this burden imposed upon your system. Then, again, there is
this sense of goneness. But you say it is more food that is wanted, and place a double
load upon the stomach for it to care for. Even if you are strict in the quality of your
food, do you glorify God in your bodies and spirits, which are His, by partaking of such a
quantity of food? Those who place so much food upon the stomach, and thus load down
nature, could not appreciate the truth should they hear it dwelt upon. They could not
arouse the benumbed sensibilities of the brain to realise the value of the atonement and
the great sacrifice that has been made for fallen man. It is impossible for such to
appreciate the great, the precious, and the exceedingly rich reward that is in reserve for
the faithful overcomers. The animal part of our nature should never be left to govern the
moral and intellectual. 2T 363
The brother referred to felt a lack in his system; he was not nourished, and he thought
that meat would give him the needed strength. Had he been suitably cared for, his table
spread at the right time with food of a nourishing quality, all the demands of nature
would have been abundantly supplied. The butter and meat stimulate. These have injured the
stomach and perverted the taste. The sensitive nerves of the brain have been benumbed, and
the animal appetite strengthened at the expense of the moral and intellectual faculties.
These higher powers, which should control, have been growing weaker, so that eternal
things have not been discerned. Paralysis has benumbed the spiritual and devotional. Satan
has triumphed to see how easily he can come in through the appetite and control men and
women of intelligence, calculated by the Creator to do a good and great work. 2T 485
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
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
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
Tobacco and liquor stupefy and defile the user. But the evil does not stop here. He
transmits irritable tempers, polluted blood, enfeebled intellects, and weak morals to his
children, and renders himself accountable for all the evil results that his wrong and
dissipated course of life brings upon his family and the community. The race is groaning
under a weight of accumulated woe, because of the sins of former generations. And yet with
scarcely a thought or care, men and women of the present generation indulge intemperance
by surfeiting and drunkenness, and thereby leave, as a legacy for the next generation,
disease, enfeebled intellects, and polluted morals. 4T 30
The taste created for the disgusting, filthy poison, tobacco, leads to the desire for
stronger stimulants; as liquor, which is taken on one plea or another for some imaginary
infirmity or to prevent some possible disease. Thus an unnatural appetite is created for
these hurtful and exciting stimulants; and this appetite has strengthened until the
increase of intemperance in this generation is alarming. Beverage-loving, liquor-drinking
men may be seen everywhere. Their intellect is enfeebled, their moral powers are weakened,
their sensibilities are benumbed, and the claims of God and heaven are not realised,
eternal things are not appreciated. The Bible declares that no drunkard shall inherit the
kingdom of God. 4T 30
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
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
Anything that lessens physical strength enfeebles the mind and makes it less capable of
discriminating between right and wrong. We become less capable of choosing the good and
have less strength of will to do that which we know to be right. COL 346
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
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