Butter is Christian.
At the breakfast table this
morning, one of my kids commented while putting real butter on her fresh, homemade waffles, “I’m so glad that we believe in butter!” It was interesting that she said "believe in" and not "use". This led to an excited conversation about
butter vs. margarine. I understand that
there are at least two opposing camps on the use of butter in one’s diet. One camp believes, stated simply, that butter
is full of fat which clogs the arteries and leads to heart failure. Butter is therefore bad. These folks often choose to eat butter
substitutes, like margarine. The other
camp believes that butter comes from the cream of cow's milk and is therefore more natural than
margarine. This camp embraces the idea that natural fats are good for the body, make arteries supple, and are part of a healthy diet. Butter is good and a far superior choice to any brand of chemically-altered vegetable fat colored with petroleum-based dye. As I said something to this effect to my family, it dawned on me that not only does our family prefer foods that are closer to the way that God made them because they are healthier, but also our presuppositions come into play in our view of food, processing, the role of science, and man's role in the universe.
I passionately articulated something to the effect that "one's assumptions about butter reflect one's presuppositions and ultimately one's view of man's abilities and responsibilities. If you believe that we can produce better food in a laboratory and that modern science has all the answers, you're probably a humanist or at least have modernist tendencies in your worldview. Therefore, you may believe that margarine is good and healthier than butter. Or if you believe that milk comes from cows, is a natural substance intended to be consumed, and that when we make butter we are simply "taking dominion", not reinventing food, then one would hold to a worldview closer to Christianity." For emphasis, I exclaimed, "Butter is Christian!" My family stared at me in surprise and perhaps disbelief. "Well, at least butter is evidence of common grace."
"I need a blog," I determined. So here we are.
While I do believe the title of
this article is a true statement, this article, and more importantly this blog, is not so much about butter or food as
it is about worldviews, the Christian worldview in particular. Worldview is the set of presuppositions
through which a person interprets reality and thereby affects his choices and
actions. What one believes about the
world and reality must affect what one believes about everything, including butter.
I hope that this first blog post will get your attention and will entice you to join in conversation. I have told my wife repeatedly that on my tombstone I want the words: "His life was all about the conversation." This is true in my home, in my work, in my ministry. I hope that this will be true of this opportunity to talk with others online. Let's hope that this will be true and my tombstone won't read: "He died of clogged arteries."
This was a great article! I'm so glad you started a blog.
ReplyDeleteSo, is that anything like "Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy?"
ReplyDelete