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Does the New Testament Abolish Meat Distinctions?
Some people believe that certain New Testament scriptures remove all distinctions between clean and unclean meats.
But what do these passages really say?
by David Treybig
Most
theologians
assume that God's laws regarding
clean and unclean meats ended at Christ's crucifixion. They suppose that
the New Covenant
removes any need for Christians to
keep such laws. But is that what the Bible really says?
The
administrative
change from the Levitical priesthood
to the ministry of Jesus Christ did not void God's expectations that
His people obey
His law of clean and unclean meats
(or any other law) as part of their sanctification or separation as
people of God (see
Leviticus 11:44-47; 19:2; 20:7,
22-26; 21:8). Peter and Paul both spoke of the continuing need for God's
people to be holy
(Ephesians 1:4; 1 Peter 1:14-16).
Scholars
acknowledge
that members of the early Church
continued to observe the distinctions between clean and unclean meats.
Because of the common
misconception that the New Covenant
abolishes much of God's law, many assume these food requirements were
simply Jewish cultural
practices that continued until the
Church became more gentile in composition and outlook. Preconceived
ideas have also influenced
interpretations of many New
Testament passages. This is known as the process of exegesis, or reading one's own ideas
into Scripture.
Let's
examine
the New Testament passages dealing
with food. As we do so, let's practice exegesis: drawing meaning out of
Scripture by thoroughly
understanding the background of a
passage as we seek to apply it.
Peter's vision: Have all meats been cleaned?
One
often-misunderstood
section of the Bible concerns
Peter's vision in which he "saw heaven opened and an object like a great
sheet bound at the
four corners, descending to him and
let down to the earth." In this sheet "were all kinds of four-footed
animals of the earth,
wild beasts, creeping things, and
birds of the air." Peter heard a voice tell him, "Rise, Peter; kill and
eat" (Acts 10:11-14).
Assuming
the vision
meant that he should eat unclean
animals, Peter's spontaneous response was, "Not so, Lord! For I have
never eaten anything
common or unclean" (verse 14,
emphasis added throughout). This same vision came to him three times
(verse 16).
At
this point
many readers, without finishing the
account, assume they know the meaning of the vision: that all kinds of
flesh can now be
eaten. These scriptures, however,
show that that is not at all what Peter understood. On the contrary, he
"wondered within
himself what this vision which he
had seen meant" (verse 17).
Later Peter realized
the significance of the revelation, that "God has shown me that I should not call any man
common or unclean" (verse
28). Recognizing the true intent of
the vision, Peter baptized the first gentiles (non-Israelites) called
into the Church
(verses 45-48).
This
divine disclosure,
we see from reading further in the
account, did not concern food at all. Rather, it concerned people.
Because the Jewish religious
leaders at the time of Christ had
considered gentiles to be unclean, this dramatic vision righted this
common misperception
that had come to affect Peter and
other members of the Church. It demonstrated that God was opening
salvation up to members
of any race; gentiles whom God
called were now welcomed into the Church.
Far
from abolishing
God's instructions against eating
unclean meats, these verses clearly show that Peter, almost two decades
after Christ's death,
had "never eaten anything common or
unclean." Nor is there evidence that he ate unclean meats after this
experience. He obviously
continued to obey God's laws about
meats that could and could not be eaten and saw no reason to change. He
realized that the
vision could not be annulling God's
instructions, thus he "thought about the vision" until he understood its
true meaning
(verses 17-19, 28).
Food controversy in the Church
When
reading through
the New Testament, one does find
references to a controversy in the early Church involving food. A
careful examination of
the scriptures, however, reveals the
issue to be different from what many assume.
In
1 Corinthians
8 the apostle Paul discussed "the
eating of things offered to idols" (verse 4). Why was this an issue?
"Meat
was often
sacrificed on pagan altars and
dedicated to pagan gods in Paul's day. Later this meat was offered for
sale in the public meat
markets. Some Christians wondered if
it were morally right for Christians to eat such meat that had
previously been sacrificed
to pagan gods" (Nelson's Illustrated Bible Dictionary, Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1986, "Meat").
It
is interesting,
though not conclusive, to note that
in Acts 14:13, the only passage in which the type of animal sacrificed
to idols is mentioned,
it was oxen-clean animals-that were
about to be offered.
This
controversy
was not over the kinds of meat that
should be eaten. Obedient Jews of the day, in accordance with God's
instruction, did not
consider unclean meat even to be a
possible source of food. Instead, the controversy dealt with the
conscience of each believer.
Paul
explained
that "an idol is nothing" (1
Corinthians 8:4) in clarifying that it was permissible to eat meats that
had been sacrificed
to an idol. That an animal had been
sacrificed to a pagan god had no bearing on whether the meat was
suitable to be eaten.
Paul
continued:
"However, there is not in everyone
that knowledge; for some, with consciousness of the idol, until now eat
it as a thing offered
to an idol; and their conscience,
being weak, is defiled. But food does not commend us to God; for neither
if we eat are we
the better, nor if we do not eat are
we the worse" (verses 7-8).
When
a believer
bought meat in the market or was
invited to a dinner at which meat was served, it was not necessary to
determine whether it
had been offered to an idol, said
Paul (1 Corinthians 10:25-27). His concern was that the brethren be
considerate of others
who believed differently. He taught
that in such cases it was better not to eat meat than to risk causing
offense (1 Corinthians
8:13; 10:28).
This
question
of meat sacrificed to idols was a
major controversy in New Testament times. It is the foundation for many
of Paul's discussions
of Christian liberty. Unlike God's
law of clean and unclean animals, which was clearly recorded in the Old
Testament, the
Hebrew Scriptures do not discuss the
matter of food offered to idols. But in the first-century world of the
New Testament
this issue varied in significance
and importance to members according to their conscience and
understanding.
The timing of Paul's letters
The
chronological
relationship between Paul's letters
to the Corinthians and Romans is another important piece of background
information often
overlooked. Many believe that Romans
14 supports the idea that Christians are free from all former
restrictions regarding
meats. Verse 14, in which Paul
wrote, "I know and am convinced by the Lord Jesus that there is nothing
unclean of itself;
but to him who considers anything to
be unclean, to him it is unclean," is often cited as a proof text (see
"Understanding
'Unclean' in Romans 14," p. E11).
This
approach,
however, fails to consider the
author's perspective and the context of his letter to the Roman church.
Many Bible resources
agree that the book of 1 Corinthians
was written about 55, although Romans was probably written from Corinth
in 56 or 57.
As demonstrated above, the food
controversy in Corinth was over meat sacrificed to idols. Since Paul was
writing to the Romans
from Corinth, where this had been a
significant issue, this subject was fresh on Paul's mind and is the
logical, biblically
supported basis for Romans 14.
Understanding Paul's intent
Those
who assume
the subject of Romans 14 is a
retraction of God's law regarding clean and unclean animals must force
this interpretation into
the text because it has no biblical
foundation.
The
historical
basis for the discussion appears,
from evidence in the chapter itself, to have been meat sacrificed to
idols.
Verse
2 contrasts
the one who "eats only vegetables"
with the one who believes "he may eat all things": meat as well as
vegetables. Verse 6
discusses eating or not eating and
is variously interpreted as referring to fasting (no eating or
drinking), vegetarianism
(eating only vegetables) or eating
or not eating meat sacrificed to idols.
Verse
21 shows
that meat offered to idols was the
dominant issue of this chapter: "It is good neither to eat meat nor
drink wine nor do anything
by which your brother stumbles or is
offended or is made weak." Both meat and wine were commonly offered to
idols in the Roman
world, with portions of those
offerings then sold in the marketplace.
The
Life Application
Bible comments on verse 2: "The
ancient system of sacrifice was at the center of the religious, social,
and domestic life
of the Roman world. After a
sacrifice was presented to a god in a pagan temple, only part of it was
burned. The remainder
was often sent to the market to be
sold. Thus a Christian might easily-even unknowingly-buy such meat in
the marketplace or
eat it at the home of a friend.
Should a Christian question the source of his meat? Some thought there
was nothing wrong with
eating meat that had been offered to
idols because idols were worthless and phony. Others carefully checked
the source of
their meat or gave up meat
altogether, in order to avoid a guilty conscience. The problem was
especially acute for Christians
who had once been idol worshipers.
For them, such a strong reminder of their pagan days might weaken their
newfound faith.
Paul also deals with this problem in
1 Corinthians 8."
What
is the point
of Paul's instruction in Romans 14?
Depending upon their consciences, early believers had several choices
they could make
while traveling or living in their
communities. If they did not want to eat meat that had been sacrificed
to idols, they could
choose to fast or eat only
vegetables to make sure they did not consume any meat of suspicious
background that might offend
their conscience. If their
consciences were not bothered by eating meat sacrificed to idols, they
could choose any of the
options. Within this context, Paul
said, "Let each be fully convinced in his own mind" (verse 5) because
"whatever is not
from faith is sin" (verse 23).
Romans
14 is,
in part, a chapter on Christian
liberty-acting according to one's conscience within the framework of
God's laws as they pertained
to meat sacrificed to idols.
Understood in its context, Romans 14 is not a permit to eat pork
or any other unclean
meat. When one understands that the
historical food controversy of the New Testament dealt with meat
sacrificed to idols and
not which meats were clean, other
scriptures become clear.
Debate over ceremonial cleansing
Another
often
misunderstood passage is Mark
7:18-19. Here Jesus said, "Do you not perceive that whatever enters a
man from outside cannot
defile him, because it does not
enter his heart but his stomach, and is eliminated, thus purifying all
foods?" The subject
here was unwashed hands (verse 2),
not which meats could be eaten. The purification of food referred to the
way the body's
digestive process eliminates minor
impurities such as those that might be present from eating with unwashed
hands.
The
Pharisees,
like Jesus and His disciples, ate
only meat specified as clean in the Pentateuch. They objected, however,
to the fact that
Jesus and His disciples did not go
through the Pharisees' customary ritual of meticulously washing up to
the elbows before
eating.
Jesus,
whose hands
were sufficiently clean for eating
even if not sufficiently clean to meet the Pharisees' humanly devised
standards, explained
that the human body was designed to
handle any minute particles of dust or dirt that happened to enter it
because of ritually
unclean hands. He further suggested
that, if the Pharisees were serious about wanting to obey God, they
needed to revise their
priorities. Cleansing one's thoughts
is eminently more spiritually important than washing one's hands
(verses 20-23).
Questionable interpretations
The
New International
Version of the Bible renders the
latter part of verse 19: "(In saying this, Jesus declared all foods
'clean')." The New American
Standard Bible similarly offers:
"([Thus He] declared all foods clean.)" These translations stand in
stark contrast to the
King James and New King James
versions, which indicate that the bodily digestive process purifies food
as opposed to Jesus
making a pronouncement reversing
God's laws on which meats to eat. Which view is correct?
The
King James
and New King James renditions best
fit the New Testament culture wherein only clean meats were eaten. They
also fit the context,
which concerns eating with
ceremonially unwashed hands rather than deciding which kind of flesh is
suitable to be eaten.
Notice
that in
both the NIV and NASB the latter
part of verse 19 is placed in parentheses, as though Mark were
explaining Jesus Christ's
words. This is clearly an interpretation
of the original wording of Mark's Gospel. In the original Greek the
words
"In saying this, Jesus declared"
(NIV) and "Thus He declared" (NASB) are not present; translators have
added them to try to
explain what they think Mark
intended and as a result have placed their own mistaken interpretations
on Jesus' words.
Putting
together
all the scriptures on the subject
helps us understand the correct biblical perspective (See "How Should We
Interpret Scripture?,"
page E7 ). When we see from passages
such as Acts 10, discussed earlier, that Peter had not eaten unclean
meat years after
Christ's death, it becomes obvious
that Jesus' disciples did not believe that He had abolished the commands
against eating
unclean meats. Such a view simply
cannot be sustained in the light of clear scriptures to the contrary.
No
New Testament
passages describe Christians eating
meats that had been considered unclean; such a view is glaringly absent
in the Bible.
On the contrary, we do find many
clear scriptures in which the apostle Paul vigorously and repeatedly
upholds adherence to
God's laws (Acts 24:14; 25:8; Romans
3:31; 7:12, 22), as did James, the half-brother of Christ (James
2:8-12; 4:11) and John
(1 John 3:4). Violating God's
dietary laws would have been unthinkable to them.
Colossian controversy clarified
When
Paul wrote
that Christians should "let no one
judge you in food or in drink, or regarding a festival or a new moon or
sabbaths" (Colossians
2:16), some assume the believers he
was addressing were eating pork and other meats previously considered
unclean. Again,
the Bible nowhere supports this
assumption.
In
reality, the
issue of clean and unclean meats is
not addressed in this section. Paul doesn't discuss which foods the
Colossians were consuming;
the Greek word brosis, translated "food," refers to "the act of eating" (Vine's Complete Expository Dictionary of
Old and New Testament Words, Thomas Nelson Publishers, Nashville, 1985, p. 245).
Some
other translations
make this clear. The Twentieth
Century New Testament, for example, translates this as "Do not, then,
allow any one to take
you to task on questions of eating and drinking . . ."
Although
many
assume that Paul's criticism is
directed at teachers who advocated Old Testament practices (such as
following the law and
practicing circumcision), there is
no proof to support this. However, we should recognize that perversions
of proper biblical
practice abounded at the time, both
in Judaism and the emerging early Church. As the International Standard Bible Encyclopaedia
explains: "There is more than
Judaism in this false teaching. Its teachers look to intermediary
spirits, angels whom they
worship; and insist on a very strict
asceticism" (1915 edition, "Epistle to the Colossians").
The
false teaching
Paul condemned contained many
elements of asceticism-avoidance of anything enjoyable-which was
intended to make its followers
more spiritual. This deluded attempt
to attain greater spirituality included "neglect of the body"
(Colossians 2:23). Paul
characterized the ascetics'
misguided rules as "Do not touch, do not taste, do not handle" (verse
21). These efforts only
created a "false humility" (verse
23) and were destined to fail because they were based on "the
commandments and doctrines
of men" (verse 22) rather than God's
instruction.
Paul
admonished
the church at Colosse not to listen
to the ascetics. Rather than abrogating God's laws concerning unclean
meats-which some
people read into this passage-Paul
is instructing the Colossian members not to be concerned with ascetic
teachers who criticized
the manner in which the Colossians
enjoyed God's festivals and Sabbaths. Such enjoyment, although condemned
by these false
teachers, is perfectly acceptable to
God.
This
section of
Colossians 2 is encouragement for
the Church to hold fast to its teachings and proper understanding; it is
not a treatise
on which foods to eat or on which
days to worship God. We must be careful not to read preconceived notions
into these or any
other scriptures.
Misunderstood instructions to Timothy
Still
another
part of Paul's writings that is
often misunderstood is 1 Timothy 4:3-5, where he speaks of false
teachers "forbidding to marry,
and commanding to abstain from foods
which God created to be received with thanksgiving by those who believe
and know the
truth. For every creature of God is
good, and nothing is to be refused if it is received with thanksgiving;
for it is sanctified
by the word of God and prayer."
What
was the motivation
of these false teachers? Did Paul
warn Timothy against teachers who would advocate keeping the biblical
dietary laws, or was
something else at work? We know that
Paul told Timothy that the Old Testament scriptures were inspired by
God and "profitable
for doctrine, for reproof, for
correction, for instruction in righteousness" (2 Timothy 3:16), so it
isn't credible that Paul
would caution Timothy against
adhering to instructions found in these same scriptures.
On
the other hand,
Paul's words show us what the real
problem was: These teachers were demanding that people follow commands
not found in the
Bible. They were "forbidding to
marry"-which is encouraged, not discouraged, in the Scriptures-"and
commanding to abstain
from foods which God created to be
received with thanksgiving by those who believe and know the truth."
The
Life Application
Bible helps us understand the
background of the problem Paul addressed here: "The danger that Timothy
faced in Ephesus seems
to have come from certain people in
the church who were following some Greek philosophers who taught that
the body was evil
and that only the soul mattered. The
false teachers refused to believe that the God of creation was good,
because his very
contact with the physical world
would have soiled him . . . [They] gave stringent rules (such as
forbidding people
to marry or to eat certain foods).
This made them appear self-disciplined and righteous."
Paul
discusses
the true source of these heretical
teachings in 1 Timothy 4:1: Rather than being founded in the Bible,
these teachings originated
with "deceiving spirits and
doctrines of demons." Thus the problem in 1 Timothy 4 was perverted
worldly asceticism, not obedience
to God's biblical laws defining
clean and unclean meats. Paul's perspective was that "those who believe
and know the truth"
(verse 3) would be familiar with the
scriptures that identifying which meats were "sanctified [set apart] by
the word of God"
(verse 5) for our enjoyment. He
encouraged Timothy to remind them to let the Scriptures be their guide
instead of these ascetic
teachers.
In
a similar situation
dealing with asceticism masquerading
as godliness, Paul gave parallel instructions: "Therefore, if you died
with Christ from
the basic principles of the world,
why, as though living in the world, do you subject yourselves to
regulations-'Do not touch,
do not taste, do not handle,' which
all concern things which perish with the using-according to the
commandments and doctrines
of men? These things indeed have an
appearance of wisdom in self-imposed religion, false humility, and
neglect of the body,
but are of no value against the
indulgence of the flesh" (Colossians 2:20-23). This helps us understand
the true nature of
the problem Paul discussed with
Timothy: asceticism, not adherence to God's dietary laws.
A broader view of history
As
we have seen,
no scriptural evidence exists that
indicates that New Covenant Christians of the early Church ever changed
their practice
of following God's instructions
regarding clean and unclean meats.
Does
the Bible
give us any other indication
regarding when and for how long this law is to remain in effect? Let's
set the present aside
and move forward in the history of
humanity to the time of Christ's return to earth to establish the
Kingdom of God. A clear
picture of His will for the future
provides additional understanding to help guide us in the present.
The
book of Revelation,
in describing the end-time events
leading up to the return of Jesus Christ, uses the expression "a haunt
for every unclean
and hated bird" (Revelation 18:2).
If clean and unclean designations no longer exist, why did Jesus inspire
this picture for
John? Could it be that God is
consistent and unchanging? (James 1:17; Malachi 4:4; Hebrews 13:8;
Matthew 5:17-19).
Another
scripture
that refers to the time of Jesus
Christ's return to earth presents this picture: "For behold, the LORD
will come with fire
and with His chariots, like a
whirlwind, to render His anger with fury, and His rebuke with flames of
fire. For by fire and
by His sword the LORD will judge all
flesh; and the slain of the LORD shall be many. 'Those who sanctify
themselves and purify
themselves, to go to the gardens
after an idol in the midst, eating swine's flesh and the abomination and the
mouse, shall be consumed together,' says the LORD" (Isaiah 66:15-17).
The
biblical position
is clear. Distinctions between clean
and unclean meats existed long before the New Testament was written;
they were followed
by the leaders and other members of
the early Church; they are currently to be observed even by their
successors in the modern
Church, which "keeps the
commandments of God and has the testimony of Jesus Christ" (Revelation
12:17).
As
we have seen,
they will continue in effect and
will be enforced by Jesus Christ Himself. Even though first-century
Christians struggled
with their consciences over meat
sacrificed to idols, the Bible indicates that they lived in harmony with
God's instruction
regarding clean and unclean meats.
Shouldn't we also be in harmony with those laws?
God's
laws are
always for our benefit. As the
apostle Paul wrote, "the benefits of religion are without limit, since
it holds out promise
not only for this life but also for
the life to come" (1 Timothy 4:8, Revised English Bible). G |