Does the Bible Say We Should Eat Grains?

Katie Wells Avatar

Reading Time: 10 minutes

This post contains affiliate links.

Read my affiliate policy.

does the bible say we should eat grains
Wellness Mama » Blog » Health » Does the Bible Say We Should Eat Grains?

I often (ok, basically always) encourage readers to ditch the grains for the sake of their health, and many do see tremendous health improvements by doing so. One question/objection I often get is “If grains are unhealthy, why are they consumed in the Bible and why did Jesus use so many references to bread” or “Grains are the staff of life, and Jesus even called himself the “Bread of Life” so eating them can’t be bad!”

It is certainly a valid point to consider and as a Christian, it was one I researched while going grain-free. Fortunately, for those of us striving to eat as healthy as possible and to live good Christian lives, the answers aren’t conflicting.

To fully understand the factors involved though, it is important to note several things:

1. The Grains of Biblical Times are Much Different Than The Grains of Today!

There certainly are many references to grains in the Bible, and with good reason. The Bible was compiled during a predominately agricultural time, and this would have been a reference that was easily understood by the people during that time period.

Though the Bible references grains, the grains consumed a couple thousand years ago bear little to no resemblance to the grains we consume (or don’t consume!) today.

In Jesus’ time, there were only three major types of wheat in existence: Einkorn, Emmer, and later Triticum aestivum along with simple, non-hybrid varieties of other grains like barley, millet, and rye. These grains had (and still have) a higher protein content and lower anti-nutrient content than grains of today.

This is a stark contrast to the 25,000+ species that exist today, most of which we created in a lab to be disease resistant or produce high yields. In order to achieve these traits like disease and pest resistance, scientists had to enhance the part of the grains that naturally resists disease and predators: mainly, the glutens, lectins, and phytates- the most harmful parts of the grains to humans.

In addition, these hybridized strains are often allergen producing and usually sprayed with pesticides and chemicals. It is interesting to note that some people who are allergic to modern strains of wheat show little to no reaction to (properly prepared) Einkorn wheat in small amounts.

So, the grains of Jesus’ time weren’t genetically similar to the grains of today, and had lower concentrations of the harmful components. In addition, they were prepared much differently:

2. The Grains of Biblical Times Were Prepared Differently Than The Grains of Today!

Besides the differences in the basic genetic structure of the grains, grains in Biblical times were processed much differently, and consuming them in modern form wouldn’t have even been an option.

Since grains do contain anti-nutrients like gluten, lectin and phytates, these components have to be neutralized somehow. Traditional cultures throughout the world have found ways to lower the effect of these harmful properties.

In Biblical times, grains were often prepared by soaking, fermenting, or sprouting before being consumed. Often, this wasn’t intentional, but a result of methods of storage which left the grains exposed to warm, moist conditions that encouraged sprouting and fermentation.

When a grain sprouts, the chemical structure changes and the anti-nutrient content is greatly reduced. Fermentation mitigates this further. Grains are harmful to humans when consumed straight off the plant in an uncooked or un-prepared state.

In addition, any grains consumed in Biblical times could truly have been called “whole grains” unlike the processed granola versions of modern times. Equipment didn’t even exist to grind grain to the micro-fine particles that we call flour today. Grains were often ground, by hand, using stones or similar objects.

Think of the difference in particle size between a hand-ground, sprouted piece of wheat and the dried, hybridized, dust-like flour we use today. The flour we consume today is ground to such a small size that the surface area of the grain is literally increased 10,000% and the starchy area is expanded. As a result, the body quickly converts it to sugar, which is why flour and processed foods can have as much of an impact on the blood sugar as pure sugar can.

Another obvious point to realize is that any reference to grain in Jesus’ time was a reference to an actual grain, in whole form or made into bread (that also wouldn’t resemble the stuff you get at the store!). Certainly, grains in Jesus’ time would not have been made into donuts, pretzels, chips, snack foods, cookies, etc.

Grains in Biblical times also wouldn’t have been mixed with vegetable oils, high fructose corn syrup, chemical additives, commercial yeasts, artificial flavorings, or other ingredients used today. Jesus wouldn’t have been snacking on Chex Mix or chowing down on bagels or soda while he was fishing.

If one truly desires to eat grains because they are referenced in the Bible, than these grains should be one of the three varieties that actually existed in the Bible, and should be prepared in a similar way and eaten in a similar way (though I’m not sure this is what many people are envisioning when referencing the Bible for their reason for consuming grains).

3. Grain Consumption Didn’t Begin Until After the Fall

If you read the text carefully, Adam and Eve are given the plants and fruits to eat in the Garden of Eden when there is peace and optimal health (considering death didn’t enter the picture until after the fall).

It is only after they sin that reference is made to tilling the soil and growing grains, and this reference is mingled with a reference to death when God tells Adam: “From the sweat of your brow shall you get bread to eat, until you return to the ground from which you were taken.”

In this sense, one can wonder if grain consumption was part of God’s plan in the beginning at all. Of course, God created grains, as he created everything, and saw that it all was good. An important distinction to make is that not everything that is “good” is necessarily “beneficial” to the human body.

God created poison ivy, which has its place in the eco-system, but which is not beneficial to the human body. God created many poisonous species of plants and animals, and they are good, though not beneficial to the human person.

God created grains, and while they have been consumed at times throughout history, nowhere is it specifically declared that they are beneficial and healthy for the human body, or that their consumption is part of the optimal diet for humans.

The context of the Bible was an agricultural time period when grains were sometimes necessary for survival or population growth. Especially considering the differences in grains today, it must be evaluated if grains are still a necessary part of the human diet.

In my opinion, references in the Bible give us insight into this as well:

4. Grains Were Often Eaten in Times of Hardship

While grains are referenced often in the Bible, these references are not always positive. From the animal offering of Abel that was preferred to the grain offering of Cain, to the admonition to Adam to till the soil until death, the Bible has its share of negative grain references as well.

The Book of Ezekiel is one of the most detailed and well-known references to grains, as God commands Ezekiel to use “wheat and barley, and beans and lentils, and millet and spelt” to make a bread for the people to eat.

This “recipe” has gained popularity and a version of bread fashioned after this method can be found in many grocery stores these days. Often, this is assumed to be healthy as it was a recipe given in the Bible. Unfortunately, a few important details were left out:

  • Taken in context, the book of Ezekiel is not a pleasant time. During Chapter 4, there is an impending siege, and these grains are all that is available. In fact, these foods are seen as food for animals, and Ezekiel protests having to eat them.
  • Because of the pending siege and famine, Ezekiel is also told to eat carefully portioned amounts to make sure there is enough food.
  • In verse 12, Ezekiel is commanded to cook this “bread” over human excrement, “For your food you must bake barley loaves over human excrement in their sight, said the Lord.” When Ezekiel protests, God allows him to use cow dung instead…. hardly appetizing, huh?

Other references link grain consumption with hardship as well:

  • When God’s people must leave Egypt in haste , they eat unleavened bread because it is all they can prepare in time
  • In the exile in the desert, God’s people eat Manna from Heaven though they eventually cry out for meat and are given quail
  • During the seven years of famine in Egypt, the Egyptians must eat grains because it is all that is available

(On a side note, both Biblical references and research on mummies from Ancient Egypt show that the Ancient Egyptians consumed grains in relatively large amounts in the form of breads and beer. The ancient Egyptians ate more “whole grains,” leaner meat, less saturated fat and more fruits and veggies than the average American today. According to conventional wisdom, they should have been healthier, but researchers are stumped to find that they had high rates of heart disease and plaque in arterial walls as well.)

5. Meat is Often Linked With Times of Celebration or Redemption

Just as grains are often linked with hardship, many references to meat and fat in the Bible seem to promote their use (which is interesting, because many diets that encourage a Biblical way of eating often minimize meat consumption).

While meat was not specifically named as a food for man in the beginning, after the flood, God told Noah that “Every creature that is alive shall be yours to eat. I give them to you as I did the green plants.”

When the prodigal son returns, the father kills the fatted calf in celebration instead of making a cake or baking some bread.

In the Old Testament, meat sacrifices were often required. In fact, at Passover, the blood of a lamb (foreshadowing Christ) was necessary to save the firstborn sons. The passage makes it very clear that unless the Israelites actually consumed the flesh of the lamb, they would not be protected.

It times of fasting or sacrifice, people in Biblical times (and still today) abstain from meat. From a scientific standpoint, there are health benefits to fasting, especially from occasionally removing proteins and fats for a short time.

Abstaining from meat as a form of fasting (as Catholics still do during Lent and many other religions do at  times as well) shows that meat is something to be enjoyed and consumed!

Jesus As the Bread of Life

Throughout the New Testament, references to bread take on a parallel to Christ himself. Jesus is born in Bethlehem, (translated “House of Bread”). Jesus is laid in a manger, a feeding trough for animals.

Jesus even refers to himself as the “Bread of Life” in the Gospel of John, and He tells us that unless we “eat His flesh and drink His blood, we shall not have life within us.”

So when Jesus refers to himself in this way, and when we pray for “Our Daily Bread” in the Our Father, are these references an encouragement to consume grains?

I’d say that these references are not meant to be a nutritional directive, but rather to reveal important theological truths. As I mentioned above, there are many references of grain consumption during times of trial and famine.

Bread was consumed during fasting and times of trouble or sacrifice. These references are sprinkled throughout the Old Testament and would have been understood by the Jews during Jesus’ time.

Since Jesus became man to become a sacrifice for our sins, these parallels remind us of the sacrificial role Christ will take on.

Jesus also refers to himself as the “Lamb of God” in the Gospel of John, and these two titles taken together have a lot of meaning. As was foreshadowed in Old Testament Passover, the lamb was slain so that the angel of death would pass over God’s people.

Christ’s sacrifice, the last one needed, offers redemption as He dies for our sins.

Jesus celebrates the Last Supper with his disciples at the time  Passover would have traditionally have been celebrated by the Jewish people. The Last Supper takes place on the feast of unleavened bread, when the sacrificial lamb was typically consumed. Though, the lamb is noticeably absent from the Last Supper.

At the Last Supper, Jesus holds up the bread, saying, “This is my Body, which is given up for you.” At this central moment, Jesus links the two titles he has called himself, the “Bread of Life” and the “Lamb of God.” The “bread” becomes the “Lamb”, which is to become the sacrifice for all mankind.

The next day, Jesus is crucified and dies at the hour that the sacrificial lamb is usually killed during Passover. All these connections would have had deep meaning to the Jewish people who would have recognized their references in Scripture.

Jesus, as God incarnate, was both the “Bread of Life” sustaining His people in times of trouble and trial, and the “Lamb of God” that takes away the sins of the world.

The references connecting Jesus with “Bread” are very important to the message of His Sacrifice for us. They are not ever presented as a dietary guideline or a mandatory command to consume grains.

Just as vegetarians can avoid meat without worrying about not following the references to meat-eating in the Bible, a Christian can certainly avoid grains without worrying about not following a Biblical directive. Jesus drank wine and his first miracle was turning water into wine, though I’ve never seen anyone argue that it is wrong to avoid drinking because Jesus drank wine.

More importantly, as Christians, we believe that our bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit and should be nourished and treated as such. (“Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God? You are not your own;  you were bought at a price. Therefore honor God with your body,” (1 Cor. 6:19-20)).

For this reason, it is worth considering for a Christian, if grains in their modern form should even be consumed for those trying to live as healthy as possible out of respect for a body made in the image and likeness of God.

In my opinion, grains certainly can be avoided, and often should be!

The Bottom Line

While there was perhaps a time in history when smaller amounts of grains, properly prepared, could be consumed without damaging the body, this is not the case today.

As mentioned above, grains today are much different than those of Biblical times. Many studies are now linking consumption of modern grains to inflammation, arterial plaque, joint problems, arthritis, infertility, PCOS, and many other conditions.

Celiac disease, gluten intolerance, Type II Diabetes, Heart Disease and Cancer are all on the rise. Even small children are showing signs of insulin resistance and obesity. As a whole, our society suffers from damaged metabolisms and impaired insulin function.

The modern diet, especially in the last half a century has created a society of largely overweight people with health problems. Almost half of all people will die of heart disease, and consumption of grains, especially in processed form, has been linked to heart disease. (For a funny and factual explanation of why, watch the movie Fat Head if you haven’t already!)

For those who still want to consume grains in Biblical fashion, I suggest finding one of the three original strains, taking special care to prepare them by sprouting, fermentation, or both, and eating them in moderate amounts along with a lot of veggies and meat.

For me, I don’t feel as well with any grain consumption, even correctly prepared, and the time needed for proper preparation just isn’t worth it. There are many other sources of nutrition that can be eaten in the whole form God gave us, without the need to process or even cook before eating.

Calorie for calorie, meats, fats and vegetables are much better (and more bio-available!) sources of nutrients, without the harmful anti-nutrient content.

For the small percentage of people who can tolerate grains without ill health effect, moderate grain consumption might be ok. The rest of us should consider the potential negative effects.

Many people will continue to eat grains, even in light of the emerging evidence, and this is certainly their right and prerogative. Heck, if a person wants to eat only Cheetos and Pepsi for the rest of his life (however short it may be!), that is his decision. My hope is just that Biblical references to grains won’t be used to justify eating processed flours and foods that are nothing like the actual grains of Biblical times.

What’s your opinion? How do you think Biblical teaching fits in to grain-free eating (or doesn’t fit)? Weigh in below!

[Note: I’ve seen several other bloggers bring up this issue as well and noticed hateful and belittling comments towards the bloggers and commenters who are also Christian. If you don’t believe in God or the Bible, this post is obviously not written to try to influence you, so please avoid any demeaning comments!]

Sources

Become a VIP member!

Get access to my VIP newsletter with health tips, special deals, my free ebook on Seven Small Easy Habits and so much more!

Easy Habits ebook on ipad

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

307 responses to “Does the Bible Say We Should Eat Grains?”

  1. David Shedlock Avatar
    David Shedlock

    Nothing is the same as it was in the days Scripture was written, so I guess we can’t eat anything they ate back then.

    1. Verlin Senior Avatar
      Verlin Senior

      The article was quite informative but too much of personal bias was coming through. Bread and wine were staples of the day. Of course there were no mention of corn, potatoes, tomatoes, bananas, etc. in the scriptures. No Easter eggs, no bunny rabbits. Staples of the day were covered or the scriptures would have difficulty conveying the message. We have much greater choice of foods and drink today and a distribution system that is global. Too much comparing apples to oranges which gives a message, in many ways, quite distorted. Jesus drank wine. Could he have possibly preferred Jack Daniel. Do not pretend to know.

  2. Anni Avatar

    I recently found your website and stumbled upon this post. What wonderful insight into the Biblical meaning of ‘Bread of Life’. Thank you for combining two of my favorite topics, Paleo and Christianity, so eloquently. I am really looking forward to exploring you blog.

  3. Dawn Avatar

    Thank you for sharing. Your dad shared your blog with me & has been a great inspiration. This is a great article and I am going to share with others.

  4. Alicia Avatar

    Great insight and coverage of such a debated question. You go way above and beyond explaining the difference of bread in biblical times. Kudos to you and thanks!!

  5. Arlo Avatar

    Thank you for this. I do think grains are conveniently vilified though, mostly because of their power and importance in our diet, and how their supply is twisted by huge corporations. God didn’t say “and though shalt eat poison ivy the stretch of your days” for a reason and said grain instead. I don’t take this literally to mean only the grains of then, any more than I take “reading the scriptures” to mean only those ancient Jewish scrolls. I think it just means grains were the basis of a healthy diet back then, and because there are so many choices, many of them polluted by corporations to the genome, it still doesn’t support a mandate to be grain free or turn around the bible verses on it completely to mean the exact opposite, because grain has changed to avoid it completely. That would be like saying don’t read the bible at all because a new testament was added or there are so many choices on which books to consider true scripture. The different perversions or interpretation of what’s called the bible does not advocate avoiding scripture entirely…

  6. Annette Reeder Avatar
    Annette Reeder

    Can you please tell me where you researched this topic? I have not found anyone to have written about this topic from your point of view and attached the research they studied. I would love to see how you came to your conclusions. Thank you very much I would really like to know the background on the science.

  7. Dalena Avatar
    Dalena

    1 Corinthians 10:31, for the Lord is gracious and compassionate.

  8. Beth Farwell Avatar
    Beth Farwell

    I’m a new convert to the Paleo diet and a Christian, and when I told my parents I was going Paleo, the first thing my dad (a Catholic Deacon) said was, “But God made grains for us to eat.” I thought, how can I arge with God? But your article makes perfect sense and makes me feel a little more at ease after my dad’s well-meaning comment. Thank you!

  9. Stephen C.Taylor Avatar
    Stephen C.Taylor

    Noah take the animals 2 by 2 and 7 by 7 of the clean ones to eat

    1. Dusty Avatar

      ark is made of wood and surrounded by water …… besides, the end of genesis 6 shows what is food for noah and his family and the animals ….the end of genesis 6 is no different than genesis 1:29-30——cheers

  10. Irene Tiger Avatar
    Irene Tiger

    I’m Jewish, but I no less found this article really interesting! I’m also grain free, and considering that modern grains are so yucky and toxic in comparison to the grains that were consumed in Biblical times. And, when you think about it, there’s nothing created by God about the created-in-a-lab varieties of grains eaten today.

  11. Jamie Avatar

    Seems to me you can satisfy both arguments and eat from the best of both worlds by eating the grains, fermented. One side says, “we’re supposed to eat them”, and we are. There is scripture that is specific, so specific it actually says “wheat”. D&C 89. The other side says, “well if we were going to eat it, it should only be primitive wheat, organically grown, in small amounts, prepared properly”. And that would also be true. So…….what’s the problem? Eat the primitive grains that are grown organically, prepared properly, in small amounts, and……wow! Everybody wins. It’s not too hard. It’s actually not time consuming. I would say that the “time needed for proper preparation” is minimal and IS worth it. I’ll go as far as wondering what it is you will be eating when the only thing around to eat is wheat and your system can’t tolerate it. It will happen, it has repeatedly happened through history (you said it yourself, and it saved their lives). If you are going to counsel others on diet, you take the risk of leading them astray. I plead with you to give fermented grains an honest try, and not the “I don’t feel as well with them even when prepared properly” try. Try “The Art of Baking with Natural Yeast” for a start. I have no connection to the book, except that I went on the same journey and read the same books you did – all the camps, all the studies, and asked myself and God all the questions…. and got some answers. When I went looking for help on how to get started, I found this book and it’s helped me get going with some natural yeast starts. Once you neutralize the anti-nutrients and blood sugar spikes, in fact the way your body even responds to the sugars….. I guess all you have is nutrients and the fact that you followed some good advice. Nothing wrong with that. Take a look, you owe it to yourself and anyone listening to you.

  12. Heather Avatar
    Heather

    Excellent post! I’ve been wanting to research and compare the information on biblical grains and modern grains. This has helped a lot! And it makes total sense.

  13. Michael Sullivan Avatar
    Michael Sullivan

    I totally disagree with the article and being a Scientist myself, I feel that you based much of your arguments on bogus health science facts, rather than actual scientific reports. Sure, you have an argument when you are talking about the use of pesticides and chemical agents, but your argument on hybrid plants is totally misguided. Hybrid plants are created simply by cross-breeding two plants to achieve the desired mix of the two. There is no cell or atom splitting or some advanced science involved. Scientific hybridization of plants has been done for ages in both plants and animals. In fact, most of the fruits and vegetables you eat today and probably a hybrid breed. This cross-breeding occurs in nature, but at a much slower pace. Naturally, disease, molds, pests, etc… will strike a certain plant and will eventually leave only the cross-breed plants, allowing it to flourish. Scientific hybridization of plants only speeds that process, so that humans dont lose their food supply. Secondly, there has never been any scientific coorelation between grains and the development of diabetes.Actually, it has been shown in scientific studies that consuming whole grains may actually reduce the risk of diabetes. The fact that grains produce an insulin response by the body (a natural response to eating I remind you) does not mean that it causes diabetes. Should a diabetic limit their grains? Yes! But that is because their body is insulin resistant and no longer capable of metabolizing the sugar in the blood, not because it is the root cause of their disease.

    1. Antonia Avatar

      Whole grains indeed may “reduce” the chance of diabetes, but that is in comparison with the typical American diet of refined grains. Whole grains see a slower spike in blood sugar than refined grains – BUT, there is nonetheless still a spike in blood sugar, and over time, a diet heavy in whole grains can still give rise to diabetes.

      When a scientific study says something “reduces” certain effects, one must return to examine the design of the study to see “in comparison to what?” Without this contextualization, the conclusions of a study, such as the conclusion you stated, don’t make any sense at all. Surely, as a scientist, you understand this rule about the interpretation of studies.

      So, I encourage you to return to the findings that you quoted here, and to look at “reduced compared to what?” and let us know what you discover. Thank you so much.

  14. Cathy Avatar

    Very interesting article! Are all grains gm? Including oats and brown rice? What about what the bible says regarding unclean meats such as pork, and all scavinger fish? I enjoy your blog and I am glad you are a Christian!

  15. steve dogan Avatar
    steve dogan

    To me, the problem isn’t the grains in and of themselves, it’s the way man has to stick his fingers in everything declaring our technology to be better than nature! The grain is not the problem as much as the darn genetic altering, corn syrup, and all the other shhhhhhhugar (AHEM!) you can’t pronounce in food today without a pharmacy degree!

  16. Devores Avatar
    Devores

    Thank you for your article. I have thought about the same issues, and come to some of the same conclusions you have.

    Let’s start with the truth: Jesus made all foods clean for Jews, and the Holy Spirit repeated that. But the Law of Moses, with all of its food restrictions, only EVER applied to Hebrews (and the only Hebrews left after the Babylonian Exile were the Jews). For all of us Gentiles, the only food law that applied after the Flood was the law given to Noah, and that was the diet of Eden: green seed-bearing plants and their fruit, plus milk (never specifically authorized, but Eve had breasts and Abel offered milk (not meat; the word translated “fat” in Genesls is actually the milk of ewes, which makes sense given that God didn’t give meat to eat until AFTER the Flood; also, Abel’s offering is that: a gift, a very different word from the word “sacrifice” that was offered later), plus all of the animals except for animal blood.

    What was noticeably lacking from the diet of Eden, besides meat and eggs, is any vegetables that are not fruit bearing. God said GREEN, SEED-BEARING plants. That would exclude mushrooms, sporangia (ferns that don’t bear fruit), and all seaweeds (they may be green, but produce neither fruit nor seeds and generally reproduce asexually).

    After the Flood, God added animals to what he had already given, so meat and eggs became licit. God never specifically made milk licit, but it can be assumed to have always been licit.

    Mushrooms, seaweeds and ferns are considered kosher by Jewish law, but perhaps they should not be, as they do not fit the terms that God set out for food. On the other hand, Jesus made ALL foods clean. (Of course, “clean” was a Jewish distinction, so in effect Jesus ended kosher. That doesn’t mean that things that were not given as food BECAME food. Truth is, the rule isn’t clear, but truth also is that Jesus said that whatever a man eats passes through him and out into the latrine, and he generally didn’t care about these things.)

    Note too that blood was prohibited to people after Noah, but Jesus commanded men to drink his blood, and said that the wine was his blood. Blood was saved as a food until Jesus, to make the point. Did Jesus make blood, such as blood sausage or blood puddings eaten in the far North, licit food? Probably. The Council of Jerusalem later said “No”, but they did so based on Jewish custom and abhorrence at the thought of eating blood.

    So, with Jesus, truth is we CAN eat anything, but we MUST eat, at least once, the “Body and Blood” of Christ in the form of the bread and wine of the eucharist. Jesus made eating THAT just as imperative as baptism. He said that the bread and wine were his body and blood, and that the man who does not eat it has no life in him.

    So, at least once in our life, we must be baptized and we must take the eucharist. These are non-optional commandments of God. Refuse to do either, and Jesus has said explicitly (and repetitively) that there is no life in you.

    Beyond that, though, thanks to Jesus and the revelation of the Holy Spirit to Peter, food for Christians is completely unlimited from a scriptural perspective. God doesn’t CARE what we eat.

    As far as bread goes, what God actually said to Adam after the Fall was that from now on he would get his bread by the sweat of his brow. That implies that Adam already knew what bread was (God didn’t explain it), which would mean that Adam and Eve not only ate bread, but had fire and cooked food in Eden. So much for the notion that a Raw Paleo diet is the diet of Eden. That’s clearly not true. Adam already knew what bread was; God didn’t explain it, he just said that from then on it would be harder to get, it would require work.

    Likewise, the consequences of the Fall are not necessarily that the world became full of poisonous plants. Remember, Adam was made somewhere, but then placed in Eden, God’s garden. In the GARDEN everything was good and wholesome to eat. After the Fall, Adam and Eve were expelled from the Garden. God never said that OUTSIDE of the Garden all of the plants could just be eaten. We should not assume that God didn’t create poison ivy and hemlock before the fall, only that noxious plants weren’t in the Garden for Adam and Eve to worry about. After the Fall, they were expelled from the Garden, and out in a world that probably already had poisonous plants in it. In other words, Genesis does NOT tell us that because of Adam, poisonous plants proliferated in the world. It only tells us that after the Fall, Adam and Eve were expelled from the Garden, and that because of the Fall, the ground was cursed for Adam and he’d have to work to get bread.

    You’re right about grains and other foods today being very different from what people ate back then.

    So, the Biblically mandated diet for Christians is: anything you want to eat or drink – everything is licit, including blood pudding, but it’s not all good for us. The only thing you MUST eat, at least once, is the body and blood of Christ, the bread and wine of the eucharist.

    The Bible still does tell us something, though. Between the Fall and the Flood, there were generations of men eating the Diet of Abel: green seed bearing plants and fruits, and sheep milk (at least), and bread of some sort. No eggs. No meat. And if read literally, no mushrooms, no seaweed and no sporangia.

    On that diet (which is actually very close to the diet of the Jains of India), some men lived for over 900 years. Of course, eating that diet doesn’t mean that a man will live 900 years, but all of the men who lived over 900 years ate that diet.

    And that’s an interesting thought.

    What is also interesting is the vegetable diet of Daniel and his companions in Babylon. They only ate vegetables. The Bible doesn’t mention milk (but then, it doesn’t mention it before, but it clearly was licit). If they didn’t at least drink milk, where did they get their Vitamin B-12? The answer would have to be either through insects inadvertently eating with the vegetable. or from the dirty water of that age, or through divine intervention.

    I wonder if it is possible to trust in God to provide Vitamin B-12 through the body and blood of Christ in the eucharist, and not have to otherwise supplement it or eat any animal products. If one takes the Bible absolutely literally and trusts God completely, the answer would have to be yes.

    Peter walked on water. With faith in the real God, all is possible.

    1. Sandra Avatar

      Yes, filling it to the full by adding the spiritual aspects to the physical.

  17. Kim Armstrong Avatar
    Kim Armstrong

    We recently ditched grains, sugar and dairy from our diets based on some food allergies and advice from nutritionists. We also juice veggies and fruit daily, eat grass fed beef and free range eggs…it’s been a process over the past several years. It’s amazing how much better we feel. When you eat something unhealthy (or restaurant food) – you instantly know…..probably shouldn’t have eaten that! :((
    Just found your website….and made blueberry coconut flour pancakes this morning.
    So excited to try more recipes.
    Really like this article.
    Thanks for sharing!!!

  18. Pat Avatar

    I am a new fan of your blog. It’s refreshing to find a perspective on food and wellness that doesn’t focus on body image simply to fit in with the rest of the “skinny” world. I like finally learning about what the Bible says about food from the context of the writer at the biblical time period which makes so much sense. Looking forward to reading more of your work.

  19. Chelsea Leigh Marvitz Avatar
    Chelsea Leigh Marvitz

    Loved this article! I’ve been digging into paleo for a couple months now and I’m in love. Something that would always be a little uncomfortable for me is that I don’t fully believe in the evolution of man as some hard core primal teachers suggest although I truly believe that paleo is the best way for us to live as shown by the countless studies I’ve researched and the common sense – eat real food, not rocket science. 🙂 I’ve been able to justify the Biblical points the same that you’ve presented here (not same grains, prepared differently, etc) but I was just really encouraged to see a fellow Christian be able to do the same. I’ve even had conversations about faith started because they can’t believe that a Christian can be so science based, especially on the heels of a mostly evolutionary movement.

    I just wanted you to know that I really appreciate your site and what you are doing and as a young christian paleo it is very inspiring to me.

    Thanks!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *