Writers do not declare with Shedd We
Whereas Shedd presumed that excess weight was the result of gluttony, pure and simple, recent writers have given distinctly therapeutic spin to the varied reasons why people more than their bodies require
Christian diet books, brochures for Biblebased weightloss programs, and evangelical womens stories about their bodies do not articulate uniform message. Despite all the determined efforts to maintain triumphal optimism about the liberating possibilities of weight loss, the oppressiveness of fleshly disciplines well prevail, as the command to love oneself, including the body, is contradicted and undermined by the directive to amend its defects and unceasingly refine its contours. 448454.
Muellers wry commentary on these weighty matters, mixed with tenderness for his wellintentioned mother, doubtless prompted many readers to chuckle sympathetically, though suspect more than few churchpeople, conservative and liberal, continue to scorn those who relish the earnest, homespun approach of Charlie Shedd, Neva Coyle and Gwen Shamblinthose who pray feelingly about issues that not seem to the rest of us to be on Gods top list of concerns.
Patricia Kreml, author of Slim for Him, warns her readers against vanity even while assuring them that they will become more beautiful via her regimen. Readers of theologian Mary Louise Bringle and church historian Roberta Bondi, both of whom have written moving accounts of their struggles with food, recognize that eating compulsions of every variety bedevil liberal Christians no less than their evangelical sisters and brothers.
Authors increasingly stress not the carnal sign fat but the concrete or practice of excessive overeating. By the however, authors seemed to catch on to the idea that readers accustomed to secular diet books distributed by physicians would be more likely to buy devotional fitness manual if it laid claim to medical science. This article prepared for Religion Online by Ted & Winnie Brock. suspect many Christians are, as am, puzzled if not troubled by recent developments in this industry.
Men with few exceptions focus less on the emotional dimensions of being overweight than on its detriments to physical health, stamina and vigor. live for Him. The narratives, often supplemented with corroborating photos, are too wrenching and the tales of childhood ridicule, adolescent exclusion and adult shame too authentic. Those who did obtain the book could reflect on what it really meant to pray their weight away by pondering such apparently irrefutable points as, When God first dreamed you into creation, there werent one hundred pounds of excess avoirdupois hanging around your belt.