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1. Pure Air
The kind of air we breathe is obviously important. Be careful that you're not subjecting yourself to fumes, gases or air-borne bacteria from some hidden source. Taking deep breaths during an early morning walk is a great way to oxygenate your body-as long as you can walk where the air is clean. Smoking is one of today's big killers. Scientific research has established a causal relationship between tobacco and lung cancer, emphysema, heart disease, and other ills. The body's addiction to the nicotine in cigarettes makes smoking one of the hardest habits to break. If present trends continue, smoking will kill nearly 3 million people this year and 12 million people a year by the year 2020.
2. Sunlight"The benefits of sunlight are many:
"(A word of caution: Sunlight can also be harmful. Prolonged exposure can burn skin, increase the risk of skin cancer, speed up the aging process, damage the eyes, and cause cataracts)."-Look Up and Live: A Guide to Health Quarterly (Nampa, Idaho: Pacific Press Publishing Association, January to March, 1993), p. 36.
3. RestWe've grown quite impatient about health. We want a pill that will block the pain or relieve the symptoms so that we can keep on with our accustomed pace. But the body must have rest in order to repair itself. And the medications we take can only assist in the body's work of restoration. Often, the symptoms we're trying so hard to get rid of are really the body's efforts to fight disease. Fever, congestion, and tiredness are all evidence that the body is working hard to cure you. So let it do its work. Rest. Rest is nature's best remedy for the abuse our mind and body often take during the day. We must have time for recreation and rest to relieve the tensions of work and family responsibilities. Without their required dosage of rest, people often experience anxiety, depression, and irritability. This can lead to illness, which will force us to take the rest our bodies were asking for all along. There's simply no substitute for a good night's sleep. No kind of medication or stimulation can make up for a lack of sleep. Recharging our spiritual batteries on a daily basis is also important to physical health. A Christian's daily time of meditation, Bible study, and prayer will heal the body as well as the soul. We also need a regular break from the work cycle, a weekly day of rest, and annual or semi-annual vacations that provide a good change of pace.
4. ExerciseLook Up and Live: A Guide to Health, page 38, has this to say about exercise: "God appointed Adam and Eve to do work that involved exercising the body. Unfortunately, many of us today have work that involves a minimal amount of movement. Yet the fact that exercise is vital to our health has not changed. Here are only some of the things it can do for us:
"This partial list should convince us that it is time to stop making excuses and start exercising. Start slowly and gradually increase as you gain endurance. It may be wise to consult your physician before starting. High blood pressure and cholesterol often do not manifest symptoms, but can prove harmful when starting an exercise program. Your goal should be to engage in any type of aerobic exercise or recreation that is comparable to walking one mile in 15 minutes four or more times a week. (Aerobic exercises repeatedly use the large muscles of the legs and arms until the heart rate increases 20 to 25 percent)."
5. WaterSince water is essential to every cell in the body, we should drink plenty of it. It is nature's solvent, the one perfect medium for cleansing both inside and out. "Water has existed since the beginning of Creation and is an important factor in keeping our bodies running smoothly:
6. Proper DietAt creation God instructed Adam and Eve to eat a diet of nuts, grains, and fruits (Genesis 1:29). After Adam and Eve sinned, vegetables were added to their diet (Genesis 3:18). After the flood, the Creator added "clean" flesh foods to the diet (Genesis 7:2, 3; 9:1-6). Because people on a vegetarian diet are healthier and live longer, many experts in nutrition and health urge us to consider returning to humanity's original diet of nuts, grains, and fruits with vegetables added. The flesh of animals contains both saturated fat and cholesterol, which increase the risk of high blood pressure, stroke, heart disease, cancer, obesity, diabetes, and other diseases. Today many physicians and nutritionists advise those who do eat meat to consume only lean, well-cooked meat and to do so sparingly. If you'd like to start a vegetarian menu, make sure you first understand how to provide a balanced diet without meat. Here are some helpful suggestions for preparing a vegetarian diet or a diet with limited meat (taken from Look Up and Live, page 44):
The above diet is adequate without meat if you use dairy products. If your diet does include meat, eat only lean meats and fish. A healthful diet includes eating simple, attractive, well prepared foods at regular intervals. Eating between meals and overeating-especially fats, sweets, and rich foods-can lead to being overweight and to several degenerative diseases as well. Drinking a lot of liquids with meals slows digestion, so when you drink with your meals, do it sparingly. Some spices and rich greasy foods irritate the stomach. Beverages containing caffeine can cause ulcers, an acid stomach, heartburn, anxiety, and depression. Those who choose to eat meat as a part of their diet, should eat only the meats that the Bible indicates are "clean," or fit for humans to eat. When God gave people permission to eat meat after the flood (Genesis 7:2, 3; 9:1-6), He defined which of the flesh foods were clean and which were unclean, and commanded His people to eat only clean meats. Read in Leviticus 11 and Deuteronomy 14 the list of birds, beasts, and fish God pronounced unfit for food. According to these chapters, clean animals must divide, or split, the hoof and also chew the cud. Clean fish must have both scales and fins. Scavenger birds are forbidden.
"The pig is also unclean; although it has a split hoof, it does not chew the cud. You are not to eat their meat or touch their carcasses."-Deuteronomy 14:8. Scientific research substantiates that God is indeed right in His warning against eating swine's flesh and other unclean meats. A high percentage of human bodies autopsied are infected with trichinae. These tiny worms are transmitted to people who eat infected pork. Current scientific research increasingly reveals why God declared some flesh unclean. One reason may be the greater danger of disease, such as from the trichina worm in pork and bacon. Another reason may be the devastating effects of saturated fat on the human digestive system. The distinction between clean and unclean flesh still exists today and will continue until Jesus comes: "'See, the LORD is coming with fire, . . . those who eat the flesh of pigs and rats and other abominable things-they will meet their end together,' declares the LORD."-Isaiah 66:15, 17.
7. Avoid Things HarmfulWhat warnings does the Bible give about alcoholic beverages? "Wine is a mocker and beer a brawler; whoever is led astray by them is not wise."-Proverbs 20:1. "Who has woe? Who has sorrow? Who has strife? Who has complaints? Who has needless bruises? Who has bloodshot eyes? Those who linger over wine."-Proverbs 23:29-30. "Nor thieves nor the greedy nor DRUNKARDS nor slanderers nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom of God."-1 Corinthians 6:10. Look Up and Live: A Guide to Health, page 66, has these observations about alcohol:
Alcohol is responsible for 30 percent of all suicides; 55 percent of all auto deaths; 60 percent of all child abuse; and 85 percent of all home violence (Kathleen Whalen Fizgerald, Alcoholism (New York: Doubleday, 1988, p. xii). In a letter to Christianity Today, Richard Cizik reminds us, "Alcohol is the nation's number-one drug problem, accounting for $100 billion in economic costs and 105,000 deaths each year. It kills more than three times as many Americans as crack, heroin, and all other drugs combined."
8. Trust In Divine PowerThese seven principles outline the elements of a healthful lifestyle, but they are incomplete without an eighth vital principle-trust in divine power. A person haunted by fear or guilt will find it hard to benefit fully from the health practices we've just described. But a person enjoying a positive faith in God will find that everything works together for abundant living. Remember the ultimate source of well-being: "Praise the LORD, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits-who forgives all your sins and HEALS ALL YOUR DISEASES, who REDEEMS YOUR LIFE from the pit and crowns you with love and compassion."-Psalm 103:2-4. David Larson, a consultant to the National Institute of Mental Health, did extensive research on the relationship between religion and health. His study demonstrated a direct connection between a Christian commitment and health. He was rather surprised to learn that those who attend church live longer than those who don't. Church-goers have a reduced incidence of heart attack, hardening of the arteries, high blood pressure, and other diseases. Larson also found that those who have faith in God live more productive lives because they are less likely to be depressed, to become alcoholics, to be jailed as repeat offenders, or to be trapped in an unhappy marriage. Health is more than just an absence of disease. It results from the harmonious development of the physical, mental, social, and spiritual parts of our nature. Trust in divine power is the keystone to genuine well-being and a healthy and happy life. Those who follow the eight health principles described in this guide experience not only a longer life, but also a much better quality of life. An ongoing research project by the Department of Preventive Medicine at Loma Linda University has documented what happens when a segment of the population follows these principles: "Approximately 50,000 Seventh-day Adventists were studied, primarily in California, over 30 years. Results showed that Adventist men live 8.9 years longer and women 7.5 years longer than the general population."-John Sharffenberg, M.D., M.P.H., Vibrant Life (May/June 1992), p. 18. This physician also points out that studies of Adventists in Holland, Norway, and Poland show similar results. Researchers attribute the longer life-span of Adventists to their following some or all of the eight health principles outlined in this guide. Studies have shown that Mormons also have one of the lowest rates of heart disease. They don't smoke, drink, or use beverages containing caffeine. Applying the Bible's perspective to our lives does make a difference-in all kinds of practical ways; offering convincing evidence that Christianity is the most practical, reasonable religion in all the world. It changes people-their thinking and their actions-and creates a new lifestyle. Because of the close relationship between the mind, the body, and our spiritual life, Christians who live by the Word of God will want to follow the principles of a healthful lifestyle as they prepare for Jesus' second coming (1 John 3:1-3). Christ not only wants us to be ready to meet Him when He returns, He also wants to improve the quality of our present lives. We can cooperate with Him in doing that by following God's basic health principles. Jesus promises to deliver us from every destructive habit through His "power at work within us" (Ephesians 3:20). If you need help in overcoming some body-destroying habit such as ingesting tobacco or alcohol, here is a prayer for you: Dear Father in heaven: I want so much to live as Jesus lived, in holiness and purity. Give me Your grace to surrender every harmful thing in my life. I just can't pull it off through my own willpower. You know how often my best resolutions have turned into ropes of sand. But you have promised Your power will `work within us.' I love You and want to be like You and to be ready when Jesus comes again. Please give me strength to overcome my bad habits and to live for You. In Jesus name, Amen.
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