Seite 612 - Counsels on Health (1923)

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The Price of Health
Health may be earned by proper habits of life and may be made to
yield interest and compound interest. But this capital, more precious
than any bank deposit, may be sacrificed by intemperance in eating
and drinking, or by leaving the organs to rust from inaction. Pet
indulgences must be given up; laziness must be overcome.
The reason why many of our ministers complain of sickness is,
they fail to take sufficient exercise and indulge in overeating. They
do not realize that such a course endangers the strongest constitution.
Those who ... are sluggish in temperament should eat very sparingly
and not shun physical taxation. Many of our ministers are digging
their graves with their teeth. The system, in taking care of the burden
placed upon the digestive organs, suffers, and a severe draft is made
upon the brain. For every offense committed against the laws of health,
the transgressor must pay the penalty in his own body.
When not actively engaged in preaching, the apostle Paul labored
at his trade as a tentmaker. This he was obliged to do on account of
having accepted unpopular truth. Before he embraced Christianity,
he had occupied an elevated position, and was not dependent upon
his labor for support. Among the Jews it was customary to teach the
children some trade, however high the position they were expected to
fill, that a reverse of circumstances might not leave them incapable
of sustaining themselves. In accordance with this custom, Paul was
a tentmaker; and when his means had been expended to advance the
cause of Christ and for his own support, he resorted to his trade in order
to gain a livelihood.—
Testimonies for the Church 4:408, 409
(1880).
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