On Alexander Solzhenitsyn's first day in a Soviet prison camp, he spied two prisoners rummaging through a coal pile. The men unearthed some grimy lumps, then sat down and ate them. "It's sea clay," they explained. "The doctor doesn't forbid it. It doesn't do any good, but it really doesn't do any harm either. And if you add a kilo of it a day to your rations, it is as if you had really eaten."
Knowing that I have to lose a lot of weight, I recently read an article on fat-free dieting that offers basically the same advice. The body burns carbohydrates much faster than fat, causing that empty feeling often associated with Chinese food. The author of the article recommends pectin, a non-fattening fiber used to thicken jams and jellies. It has no real nutritional value, but it does slow down digestion, making you feel fuller for a longer period of time.
Sea clay for starving prisoners and pectin for paunchy Americans: the best you can say is that they don't do any harm and they stave off craving for true food.
I wonder if we could not identify or diagnose something called the "Sea Clay Christian Syndrome"? All week long we stuff ourselves with non-nutrient amusements: magazines, books, television talk shows like Dr. Phil and Oprah, advice from television sitcoms, radio advice from people we have never met (let alone knowing the kind of life they live day by day), etc. The Great Physician (Jesus Christ) does not forbid such pastimes and, taken in small discerning doses, they do have their place. But come sundown, we often find that we have no appetite for the true food of fellowship with Jesus Christ! By Sunday, we have so pumped ourselves with "worldly pectin" that we can barely choke down another hour of worship and Bible study or we don't partake at all. We truly are spiritually malnourished, but we don't feel hungry, so we just shrug it off as our spiritual emaciation grows exponentially (Amos 8:11).
One of my prayers for Clover Hill Baptist Church is that God will grant all of us a hunger, a burning desire for the real meat of God's Word (Job 23:12; Psalm 119: 97, 113, 140; John 4:4; 2 Timothy 2:15 ). " I am the bread of life," Jesus says, and He promises to fill all who come to Him empty (John 6:35, 48). "So, dear Lord, please purify all of us from our pectin and make us seasick of sea clay; may we come to you famished for your Word, and go away satisfied and truly full of hot loaves from Heaven!"
"Chow Down",
Pastor David Blevins
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