A silly story and a serious question
A silly story and a serious question
These days I tend to notice the quirky things more - the things that are just done as a matter of course but make no sense at all.
I was at an activity and a girl said the closing prayer but forgot to bless the supper. They actually made her say another quick prayer to bless the food, you know, so we couldn't get food poisoning from the crackers and cake. She was embarrassed and the whole thing felt rather awkward and unnecessary.
So my question is - what about all the people who bring their unblessed listeria-ridden food late to the ward pot luck???
Just kidding. What I was actually wondering is whether the blessing of food was historically to make it safe or whether it is really supposed to just be about showing gratitude? I should do some research because now I am intrigued.
I was at an activity and a girl said the closing prayer but forgot to bless the supper. They actually made her say another quick prayer to bless the food, you know, so we couldn't get food poisoning from the crackers and cake. She was embarrassed and the whole thing felt rather awkward and unnecessary.
So my question is - what about all the people who bring their unblessed listeria-ridden food late to the ward pot luck???
Just kidding. What I was actually wondering is whether the blessing of food was historically to make it safe or whether it is really supposed to just be about showing gratitude? I should do some research because now I am intrigued.
Re: A silly story and a serious question
Returning and reporting
Apparently the hebrews did NOT bless their food but gave thanks afterwards. Sounds far more sensible to me.
We have the greeks to thank for the practice of needing to make our food holy first.
http://acts242study.com/why-do-we-bless-our-food/
Wonder what DH would think about returning to the hebrew method??
Apparently the hebrews did NOT bless their food but gave thanks afterwards. Sounds far more sensible to me.
We have the greeks to thank for the practice of needing to make our food holy first.
http://acts242study.com/why-do-we-bless-our-food/
Wonder what DH would think about returning to the hebrew method??
Re: A silly story and a serious question
Just be glad we do not have to give a recitation of Icelandic vowels and Zulu clicks with each prayer and then require that each prayer be repeated if the slightest mispronunciation occurred.
Good faith does not require evidence, but it also does not turn a blind eye to that evidence. Otherwise, it becomes misplaced faith.
-- Moksha
-- Moksha
Re: A silly story and a serious question
I'm not much help on the historical aspect, but I do know that many LDS believe that the prayer is indeed to "cleanse" the food in some fashion, even if it's just a spiritual cleansing. I've heard families that literally use the phrase "remove any impurities from it" when blessing the food. I think this is to be expected given early and modern practices of giving blessings of healing. When medical science was frankly not very scientific, and illness and death were prevalent, blessings were about all you could do.
fh451
fh451
Re: A silly story and a serious question
A lady I once worked with claims that blessing food before you eat it, specifically the "strengthen and nourish our bodies" line is a hangover from when the pioneers were crossing the plains and had craptastic food. I seriously wish that the removing impurities thing worked though; I always get sick after ward potlucks.
I don't believe we were born to be sheep in a flock
To pantomime prayers with the hands of a clock
- Paul Simon
To pantomime prayers with the hands of a clock
- Paul Simon
Re: A silly story and a serious question
No amount of blessing can keep you safe from a ward potluck! Yuck. The worst is when you are not sure who actually brought what dish. That is when I go for the food that looks purchased or go hungry until I get home.
I don't mind being grateful for the food, but blessing it seems to be a formality/tradition. I was once asked to bless some donuts, juice, bagels, and muffins. I gave thanks and prayed that we would not get diabetes!
I don't mind being grateful for the food, but blessing it seems to be a formality/tradition. I was once asked to bless some donuts, juice, bagels, and muffins. I gave thanks and prayed that we would not get diabetes!
Re: A silly story and a serious question
My chemistry professor reports that there was pubic hair in one dish at a ward potluck once. No number of magic words directed to a plenipotent space alien will evaporate pubic hair or remove the result of little-factory tampering (how else did pubic hair get there?).
Last edited by LSOF on Wed Nov 23, 2016 8:16 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"I appreciate your flesh needs to martyr me." Parture
"There is no contradiction between faith and science --- true science." Dr Zaius
Pastor, Lunar Society of Friends; CEO, Faithful Origins and Ontology League
"There is no contradiction between faith and science --- true science." Dr Zaius
Pastor, Lunar Society of Friends; CEO, Faithful Origins and Ontology League
- MalcolmVillager
- Posts: 703
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Re: A silly story and a serious question
Seriously?!!!
Poor priests had to bless the sacrament 4 times on Sunday and still screwed up. BP finally felt bad and gave up. So dumb!
We are the modern pharisees!
Poor priests had to bless the sacrament 4 times on Sunday and still screwed up. BP finally felt bad and gave up. So dumb!
We are the modern pharisees!
Re: A silly story and a serious question
I don't know if any other church that blesses the food. People are taught to give thanks for the food not cast a magic blessing upon it. I seriously doubt the first members blessed the food. They would not have that tradition. Think of the blessing in the food given by Jimmy Stewart on the show Shenandoah.
~2bizE
Re: A silly story and a serious question
I celebrated Thanksgiving with my Catholic extended family today and 2bizE is right; we gave thanks for the gifts we were about to receive without asking a blessing upon food. We did, however, ask that the lord bless us. I can't tell you how many times I've recited that prayer and not noticed the difference-thanks for pointing it out!
*edited for clarity
*edited for clarity
I don't believe we were born to be sheep in a flock
To pantomime prayers with the hands of a clock
- Paul Simon
To pantomime prayers with the hands of a clock
- Paul Simon
- TheRunningmom
- Posts: 38
- Joined: Mon Nov 07, 2016 10:12 pm
Re: A silly story and a serious question
Check out this True Story from the September 1998 Friend:
Blessing the Food
Let's just say there is poison involved.
Blessing the Food
Let's just say there is poison involved.
Re: A silly story and a serious question
The timing is downright comedic:TheRunningmom wrote:Check out this True Story from the September 1998 Friend:
Blessing the Food
Let's just say there is poison involved.
I bet the background music was rising to a suspenseful crescendo and there was a close-up of a finger slowly approaching a tongue just as Mother yelled "stop!"Leta had just said, “amen,” and each child was raising a freshly licked finger in the air over the “food” to pick up the powder and eat it, when Mother’s shadow appeared in the doorway.
“The easy confidence with which I know another man's religion is folly teaches me to suspect that my own is also.” -Mark Twain
Jesus: "The Kingdom of God is within you." The Buddha: "Be your own light."
Jesus: "The Kingdom of God is within you." The Buddha: "Be your own light."
Re: A silly story and a serious question
That story is both awesome and insane!! Great find.