Showing posts with label Biblically clean eating. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biblically clean eating. Show all posts

Biblically Clean Chinese Food Recipes

Biblically Clean Chinese Food Recipe Round Up - healthy and easy dinner ideas | Land of Honey


This post is to give you more ideas for Biblically clean meals. No matter your cultural background or personal preferences, there are lots of foods that you can enjoy that still fit within the parameters of what Scripture tells us about what we eat. These recipes are not necessarily particularly authentic, but they fit within the realm of what we think of as Chinese food here in the West. Most of these recipes come together quickly, and you can easily swap in different or extra vegetables that you have on hand. These recipes are very doable for making at home.

This post will also give you an idea of what you can order at a Chinese restaurant as well.

Biblically Clean Chicken Fried Rice Recipe | Land of Honey


Biblically Clean Recipe for Chinese Egg Drop Soup | Land of Honey



Sesame Beef and Broccoli Recipe - Biblically Clean Chinese Dinner Ideas | Land of Honey



Biblically Clean Recipes for Asian Dinners | Land of Honey




Biblically Clean Recipe for Lo Mein Noodles + other Asian meal ideas | Land of Honey




Teriyaki Chicken with Sesame Broccoli and other Biblically clean Chinese meal ideas | Land of Honey




Quick and easy recipe for Chinese Smashed Cucumbers - Biblically Clean Recipes | Land of Honey



Easy Recipe for Extra Veggie Fried Rice + other Biblically clean Chinese food recipes | Land of Honey




Quick and easy Biblically clean Chinese food recipes | Land of Honey




Biblically Clean Broccoli Stir Fry Recipe - quick and easy Biblically clean dinner idea | Land of Honey



Biblically Clean Beef Ramen Noodles Recipe - quick and easy Biblically clean dinner idea | Land of Honey




Easy Recipe for Biblically Clean Sesame Teriyaki Chicken with Ginger Rice - and other Biblically clean Chinese meal ideas | Land of Honey



Biblically Clean Chinese Food Meal Ideas - Spicy Eggplant Stir Fry Recipe | Land of Honey




Quick and easy Sesame Ginger Chicken Fried Rice Recipe that's Biblically clean | Land of Honey



Biblically Clean Potstickers Recipe | Land of Honey





Crispy Sesame Egg Rolls and other Biblically clean Chinese food recipes you can make at home for quick and healthy dinners | Land of Honey








Kung Pao Cauliflower Recipe - Biblically Clean Chinese Dinner Idea Round Up | Land of Honey




Chili Garlic Beef Stir Fry and other Biblically clean Chinese food dinner ideas | Land of Honey




Quick and Easy Recipe Round Up of Biblically Clean Chinese Dinner Recipes | Land of Honey



What Scripture Says Not To Eat (Leviticus 11)

Do you know the animals that Scripture says we are not to eat? | Land of Honey


This post is to enumerate the things that are forbidden for us to consume. Let's note that the Bible does not consider these things foods. While there are a few things on this list that are commonly eaten in our culture, this is not what the Living God intended. See Leviticus 11 for more on unclean animals.

What Scripture tells us not to eat:

Cats - housecats, cheetahs, leopards, panthers, tigers, lions.

Dogs - wolfs, coyote, fox, hyenas, etc.

Rabbits.

Equine animals - horses, donkeys, mules, zebra.

Flying animals such as eagles, crows, flamingos, ostriches, penguins, parrots, pelicans, bats, hawks, buzzards, and owls.

Insects - except for locusts, crickets, and grasshoppers.

Snails.

Pigs - including boar. This includes all pig products such as pork, ham, bacon, pork sausage, pepperoni, lard, and porcine gelatin.

Sea mammals - whales, dolphins, seals, otters, porpoises, walrus, etc.

Shellfish - shrimp, scallops, clams, mussels, sea urchin, crab, crayfish, crawfish, lobster, calamari, and so forth.

Fish without fins and scales - swordfish, catfish, marlin, sturgeon, eel, shark, squid, jellyfish, octopus, cuttlefish, etc.

Miscellaneous animals - gorillas, monkeys, elephants, camels, llamas, badgers, rodents, raccoons, possums, kangaroos, wolverines, squirrels, earth worms, hippos, groundhogs, alligators, crocodiles, snakes, and so on.

Any kind of blood.

What Scripture Says Not To Eat - the Bible says that these animals are not food | Land of Honey



Reading through that list is extremely unappetizing. Who wants to eat worms or racoons or a housecat? And wouldn't it be sad to eat beautiful animals we see in the wild or at zoos like zebras, penguins, and dolphins? That is how the Creator feels about everything on the list...even what is commonly consumed in our culture.

More on what Scripture says about what we eat:
Ten Times the Bible Talks About Clean Eating
Understanding Mark 7 and the Messiah Declaring All Foods Clean
How to Eat Biblically Clean
Understanding Peter's Vision

Understanding 1 Corinthians 10:27

Understanding 1 Corinthians 10:27 from a Hebraic perspective - should we eat whatever is set before us? | Land of Honey


When I was first getting an understanding of Biblically clean eating and keeping other commandments in Scripture, 1 Corinthians 10:27 kept throwing a wrench in my understanding of the Bible.

This verse often gets translated like this:

"If any unbeliever invites you to a meal, and you want to go, eat whatever is put before you without raising questions of conscience." -1 Corinthians 10:27 NIV

Isn't this giving permission for us to eat anything, including unclean animals? At least when someone serves it to us? And if I shouldn't raise questions of conscience, I guess that means I should disregard any concerns I have over the ethics and decisions of multi-national corporations that are largely in control of the food supply, and not worry about things like supporting local farmers, good growing practices, or fair trade.

While it's hard to understand the above passage as anything but a free pass to do whatever we want, that is incredibly confusing in light of so many other passages from Scripture about clean eating! Why does the Bible share the story of Daniel refusing to eat unclean meat? Why does Peter mention after his vision that he has never eaten anything unclean? Why were Adam and Eve kicked out of the garden because of eating something the Creator told them not to? Why does Leviticus succinctly enumerate which animals should not be eaten? What is the point of all this if we are ultimately allowed to eat anything?

We need to know that the ancient Greek did not have punctuation. It just had words. How you string them together will greatly impact the meaning of the words! Do you remember those illustrations from middle school English on the importance of commas? Words like, "I want to eat, Mother" can mean someone is telling their mom they want to have dinner. But if you remove the comma and are left with, "I want to eat Mother," then the same words take on a cannibalistic meaning! That's a silly example but it demonstrates how punctuation can dramatically change the meaning of a sentence.

When Scripture is translated into English, it's up to the translators to add the grammar and punctuation that make it a lot more readable for us. How could their personal beliefs and the religious tradition they are surrounded with not impact where they choose to put those punctuation marks? While I believe the word of YHWH is perfect, human translations of it are not.

The word for word Greek translation goes like this:

all - the - those being offered - to you - you eat - not any - thoroughly judging - through - the - knowledge

The first time I read this I stopped after, "All being offered to you you eat." But if you keep going you have, "All being offered to you you eat not any." What a difference! This gives us an entirely opposite meaning! In the Greek, there is no punctuation to indicate if the word for 'not any' should be paired with eating or with thoroughly judging. It's up to the reader to understand how these words fit with Scripture. We do that by looking at the context this statement is made in - what's going on in the rest of the chapter? what was being discussed before that? who is the audience? - and what the rest of the Bible says about this subject.

Which translation of 1 Corinthians 10:27 fits better with the context of the whole Bible and what it says about food and eating? | Land of Honey


Which translation fits better with the context of this statement?

A few verses prior in 1 Corinthians 10:21, "You cannot drink from the cup of YHWH and the cup of demons." And just a few verses later, 1 Corinthians 10:31 says, "Whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of YHWH," which illustrates that our decisions around food can glorify YHWH or not. From those verses it wouldn't make sense to say to not raise questions of conscience or use judgment when it comes to food matters.

Which translation fits better with the rest of the Bible?

We have instructions like, "you shall not eat what is unclean," lists explaining what can and cannot be eaten, examples of people like Daniel and Peter, and no indication whatsoever from the Messiah that they food instructions are no longer applicable. He even went out of his way to say, "I did not come to abolish the commandments." Translating the verse as, "Eat whatever is set before you without using your judgment," would be starkly opposed to other things the Bible says about eating.

There isn't anything in the context of this chapter or the rest of the Bible to support the common translation of, "Eat whatever is put before you without raising questions of conscience." That translation is jarring and doesn't fit with the rest of Scripture. A few chapters prior Paul literally tells us not to eat something that would cause someone else to stumble, so it wouldn't make sense for him to say to eat anything now.

Are you a follower of church tradition or YHWH's word? If we call ourselves Bible believers, would it be more fitting to translate this verse in a way that lines up with the rest of Scripture or with church doctrine? For me, that's an easy choice.

I believe a better translation of this part of Scripture would be:

"Whatever is set before you eat nothing, ask questions for conscience's sake."

A Hebraic understanding on "eat whatever you want" - a better translation of 1 Corinthians 10:27  - Land of Honey


When we understand the verse this way it fits with the rest of Scripture, and the verse makes more sense itself. Otherwise, why would it throw the bit in there about the conscience or "thoroughly judging through knowledge"? Does that really sound like the Bible, "Go ahead and do whatever - don't worry about your conscience"? This book is filled with commandments on how to live and stories of examples we are to follow - including people literally dying to keep YHWH's instructions - and then suddenly, "Whatever situation you're in, don't worry about turning to Scripture to see what you're supposed to do." (Because 'the knowledge' would be knowledge of what the Bible says.) Not judging if something is acceptable according to Scripture or not would also be a direct contradiction from the Messiah's instruction in John 7:24 to judge righteously!

It's also interesting to look at why this might have been said. We know that many early believers who had been part of Judaism followed an unbiblical rule of not eating with unbelievers. This began to change following Peter's vision, so many former Jews were eating with people who were new to the faith, or unbelievers, for the very first time. Paul is giving practical advice on how you act when you are in that situation, since many people he knew hadn't experienced that before. Also happening at the time was a huge evangelism push, where believers travelled far and wide to share the good news of the Messiah. These people were intentionally going to the homes of unbelievers and needed to know how to conduct themselves in a godly way. Paul is reminding his audience that unbelievers or even new believers are typically not familiar with the Biblical instructions about food, so that they don't accidentally eat something the Bible says not to while dining in someone's home.

This verse is an admonishment to actively work to keep the Bible's instructions about what we eat. It is literally telling us to ask questions before diving into a meal that someone else has prepared. When we have dinner at a family reunion, brunch at a friend's, or go out for a meal it is appropriate to ask questions about the ingredients so that we can maintain a Biblically clean diet. Questions like, "What's in this salad?" or "Is the quiche vegetarian?" or "Is this sausage beef or pork?" are okay to ask so that you can be informed about the decisions you make! Since we are to glorify YHWH with what we eat, that effort is well worth it.

Better understanding 1 Corinthians 10:27 - we need to make sure how we translate the Bible fits with the rest of what it says | Land of Honey


More on Biblically clean eating:
Understanding Peter's Vision
Understanding the Messiah Declaring All Foods Clean
Five Reasons Believers Should Keep the Bible's Dietary Commandments

What the Bible Means When It Talks About Clean Eating

What does it mean when the Bible talks about clean eating? | Land of Honey
What does it mean when the Bible talks about clean eating?

Scripture forbids us from eating unclean animals - easy explanation of Biblically clean | Land of Honey


Scripture forbids us from eating certain animals. In order to eat Biblically clean we need to avoid those animals.

Daniel didn't eat meat in Babylon, the Messiah fed people clean foods, and Peter never ate anything unclean because they wanted to honor the Creator by sticking with a Biblically clean diet | Land of Honey



This is why Daniel refused to eat meat in Babylon, why the Messiah fed people clean foods like fish and bread, and why Peter never ate anything unclean.

Biblically clean eating is not to earn salvation but to honor the Creator with our dietary choices! | Land of Honey


We are to eat this way, not because we have to earn salvation, but out of a desire to honor the Creator with the choices that we make.

If you eat or drink you are called to do so in a way that glorifies the Living God | Land of Honey











If you eat or drink you are called to do so in a way that glorifies the Living God.

More on clean eating:
Understanding Mark 7:19 and the Messiah Declaring All Foods Clean
A Hebraic Perspective on Peter's Vision
How to Eat Biblically Clean

5 Reasons Believers Should Keep the Bible's Dietary Commandments

5 Reasons Believers Should Keep the Bible's Dietary Instructions Today | Land of Honey

Are the Biblical instructions about food and eating for today?

Five reasons believers should keep the Bible's dietary commandments:

1. Scripture tells us to. The Bible devotes a fair amount of time to the food instructions, and I don't think that's for nothing. The Living God's word is not wasted. Like any loving parent he expects his children to listen to him when he is talking and to do what he says. The fact that Scripture mentions this and mentions it repeatedly tells us that we need to take note of it.

2. The Messiah expressly told us he did not come to change the commandments. While many believers would make a case that the Messiah did away with the dietary commandments or "made all foods clean," Yahusha went out of his way to say that he was not changing or doing away with Scripture's instructions (Matthew 5:17). That is a significant statement and something we need to seriously contemplate before we set aside any of the commandments, including those about what we eat.

3. New Testament believers kept them. Even in the New Testament, and even after the Messiah ascended into heaven we see that believers stuck to the Bible's parameters for clean eating. The Messiah served only clean foods such as bread, fish, and wine; Peter mentioned that he had never eaten anything unclean; the disciples were reprimanded by the Pharisees not for what they were eating, but for eating without washing their hands; Paul said that our eating should be done in a way that glorifies the Creator. There is simply no Biblical precedent for disregarding the dietary instructions of Scripture.

Why the Bible's food laws should be kept today: 1. The Bible instructs us to keep them. 2. The Messiah said he didn't come to do away with Biblical law. 3. New Testament believers adhered to these laws. | Land of Honey

4. It is a tangible step of faith for others to see. Personally my faith changed a lot when I finally got tired of telling people that I was a believer and then explaining away why my life didn't reflect the teachings of the Bible. Maybe it doesn't seem like what we eat should be a big deal, but let me tell you for those outside of the faith it is confusing why most believers follow so little of Scripture. Live out of Scripture so that people can see you're not just cherry-picking the Bible to suit your own purposes. Showing that you are convicted enough to inconvenience yourself is powerful, and a testimony about the work of YHWH in your life.

5. We are blessed by doing so. Who couldn't use a little more of the Living God's blessings on their life? Scripture says that choosing to be obedient to the word brings good things to us and is a source of life. I know many people who would share with you that Biblically clean eating has caused their faith and their relationship with YHWH to grow. Many would also tell you that it has improved their health. What a gift from our Creator that he bestows so many good things on us when we follow his instructions.

The Messiah didn't come to do away with Scripture's food commandments | Land of Honey

More about the Bible's instructions for what we eat:
What is Biblically Clean Eating?
How to Eat Biblically Clean
Understanding Peter's Vision
Understanding Mark 7:19 and the Messiah Declaring All Foods Clean

Understanding Mark 7:19 and the Messiah Declaring All Foods Clean

Understanding Mark 7:19 - What did it mean when the Messiah declared all food was clean? | Land of Honey

But the Messiah made all foods clean! 

When I first started learning about Biblically clean eating, Mark 7:19  (and it's counterpart versions in Matthew 15) is a verse that I kept going back to. Sure, many verses in Scripture articulate what we can eat and otherwise talk about eating according to the instructions we are given, but it says right here that the Messiah declared that all foods are clean!

"Don't you understand that the food you put into your body does not defile you? It passes through and doesn't go to your heart." (Thus he declared all foods clean.)
-Mark 7:18-19

These words used to make me think that God wasn't concerned about my dietary choices, because he was only concerned about my heart. And when I first started to feel like I might be called to keep Scripture's dietary commandments, this verse and it's seeming declaration of no rules confused me.

Scripture always lines up with Scripture. If it seems to contradict itself, that is caused by our misunderstanding. By stepping back and looking at the entirety of this chapter we will have a better picture of what this is about.

"Seeing some of his disciples eat bread with unwashed hands they found fault." -Mark 7:2

The setting here is that Pharisees and scribes came to the Messiah, and saw that his followers were eating without a ritual hand washing that was a tradition of the elders (verse 3). That is what they found fault with. Not in what the disciples were eating, since bread is considered Biblically clean, but that they were skipping a manmade tradition!

Mark 7 isn't talking about what is being eaten. If it was, the question would have been, "Why are your followers eating unclean animals?" or, "How come your followers are eating pigs?" But that was not what was going on! Followers of Messiah were skipping the manmade tradition of handwashing before eating and that's what offended these scribes that came to see Yahusha.

The Messiah says that the accusers were, "Forsaking the commands of YHWH, to hold fast to the traditions of men." (Verse 8) He was saying that the accusers were putting their own traditions ahead of the actual commandments of Scripture, which is an instance of the heart issue he brings up. If we give more honor and importance to human rituals than we do to the word of God, then our hearts have a serious problem. Today we often see this when people hold to their family or church's tradition of ignoring the dietary instructions and eating unclean animals. That is putting man's traditions above YHWH's commandment, and something the Messiah warns against in this chapter.

Explaining Mark 7 and the Messiah making all foods clean | Land of Honey

So why does the Messiah say that all foods are clean? Well, he really doesn't. The, "Thus he declared..." statement is in parentheses because it was added to later Bible manuscripts and not a quote from the Messiah. While it's wrong to add to Scripture, this foot-note would make more sense if we understood the context of it.

We hear, "All foods are clean," and assume this means we can eat whatever we want...even what the Bible says not to eat. But to understand this notation correctly we need to be aware that Scripture expressly tells us that unclean animals are not food (Leviticus 11:41, unclean animals are not to be eaten). Scripture never calls any unclean animal "food," it only calls Biblically clean things food. This is similar to our expectations of food today...there are just certain things that we don't eat. If I told you to help yourself to the food on the counter, you wouldn't eat the pile of mail or the houseplant or the pet goldfish there, because those things are not food. My saying, "Eat what you'd like," is not me suggesting or permitting you to eat what I don't consider food.

So why does he say that all foods are clean? He's not being redundant, he's explaining that everything the Bible says we can eat is considered clean...regardless of if you have washed your hands or done any other rituals that someone made up. He's saying that we are not defiled when we set aside manmade traditions, and we don't need to follow the Talmud or church tradition to considered holy in his eyes. The Messiah is declaring that if the item in question fits within the Bible's parameters for food then it is already considered clean without going through any manmade rituals. He is saying that if Scripture says you can eat it, you won't be defiled by skipping any un-Biblical extra steps.

A hand is holding up an open Bible in front of a white background. Text overlay reads: In Mark 7 Jesus is not asked why his followers aren't following Biblical law, but why they aren't following Jewish law. Learn the difference. | Land of Honey

The food you put into your body does not defile you. If we choose to consume something that Scripture calls an abomination, then we are defiled (Leviticus 11:43). The Messiah never said anything negative about Scripture's dietary commandments and he never did away with or changed any of them. This passage upholds the Biblical commandments while giving permission to not adhere to Jewish law (which are not the same as the laws and commandments in Scripture). By declaring all foods clean he encouraged us to stick with Scripture's instructions in place of manmade traditions.

More about Biblically clean eating:
10 Times the Bible Talks About Clean Eating
Understanding Peter's Vision
How To Eat Biblically Clean

Biblically Clean Cookout Recipes

Biblically Clean Recipes for Summer Cookouts | Land of Honey



If you're attending or hosting a summer picnic, potluck, barbecue, or cookout these recipes are for you! There are lots of great dishes that will hit the spot for those of us who eat Biblically clean. I'm calling these summer recipes because many of them utilize fresh garden produce or call for grilling - but many of these would work well at other times of year too. Even if you aren't looking for a recipe to make, this post will give you an idea of what Biblically clean foods you might expect at potlucks and get togethers.

Grilled Cilantro Lime Chicken from How Sweet Eats

Antipasto Pasta Salad and other Biblically clean summer cookout recipes | Land of Honey

Antipasto Salad
 from A Couple Cooks

Biblically Clean Cookout Recipes | Land of Honey

Easy Deviled Eggs from A Couple Cooks

Easy Bean Salad Recipe for Biblically Clean Summer Cookouts | Land of Honey


Three Bean Salad from A Couple Cooks

Easy 3 Ingredient Marinade for Grilled Chicken - Biblically clean cookout recipes | Land of Honey


Three Ingredient Grilled Chicken from Pinch of Yum

Greek Salad Recipe - Biblically clean cookout recipes | Land of Honey


Greek Salad from Love and Lemons

Grilled Corn - recipe round up for summer potlucks | Land of Honey


Grilled Corn from Love and Lemons

Creamy Cucumber Salad - Biblically clean potluck recipes for Summer | Land of Honey


Creamy Cucumber Salad from A Couple Cooks

Jalapeno Cheddar Turkey Burgers and Biblically Clean Cookout Meal Ideas | Land of Honey


Jalapeno Cheddar Turkey Burgers from Half Baked Harvest

Biblically Clean Potato Salad and other summer potluck cookout recipes | Land of Honey


Potato Salad from Love and Lemons

Creamy Coleslaw and other easy Biblically clean recipes for Summer | Land of Honey


Creamy Coleslaw from A Couple Cooks

Favorite Veggie Burgers - easy Biblically clean cookout recipe round up | Land of Honey


Favorite Veggie Burgers from Cookie and Kate

Summer Fruit Salad - healthy potluck recipes that are Biblically clean | Land of Honey


Summer Fruit Salad from Love and Lemons

Easy and healthy Summer potluck recipes for Biblically clean cookouts | Land of Honey


Southwestern Black Bean Salad from Cookie and Kate

Biblically Clean Orzo Salad and other potluck recipes | Land of Honey


Orzo Salad from Love and Lemons

Homemade Buffalo Chicken Hotdogs - Biblically clean meal ideas for potlucks | Land of Honey


Buffalo Chicken Dogs from Half Baked Harvest

Green Bean Salad - summertime favorites for a Biblically clean cookout - easy and healthy potluck recipes | Land of Honey


Green Bean Salad from Love and Lemons

Grilled Cod - easy grilling recipes that are Biblically clean | Land of Honey


Grilled Cod from A Couple Cooks

Grilled Vegetable Skewers - easy grilling recipes that are Biblically clean | Land of Honey


Grilled Vegetable Skewers from Love and Lemons

Here are foods to eat at summer cookouts if you eat Biblically clean | Land of Honey


Related posts:
Tips for Eating Biblically Clean at Summer Cookouts
Biblically Clean Marshmallows
How to Eat Biblically Clean