Guest guest Posted January 28, 2004 Report Share Posted January 28, 2004 Debbi Heiser wrote: > >Another is that w/o proper refrigeration, food was more likely to become >contaminated w/ bacteria. Wouldn't clean as well as unclean meats rot? notan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 28, 2004 Report Share Posted January 28, 2004 notan wrote: > Wouldn't clean as well as unclean meats rot? I don't recall exactly what that part referred to... it was probably a decade or so ago that I read it. Now that I think about it, it seems to me that article was more about " kosher " and the rationale behind it; about sanitation and food spoilage/contamination -- maybe in reference to not cooking in a non-kosher container to prevent cross-contamination, etc., rather than to which actual foods were allowed or not (according to the Bible.) What really struck me / the part I remembered was how when I read the article, it *made sense* why The Rules would have been made in the first place. (note: " making sense " is a completely subjective thing -- what makes sense to me may not (and often does not!) make sense to someone else.) To the average person reading about Kosher, it can sound like just a bunch of silly rules that don't make any sense. But when I read that article, it really made sense to me. Kind of like how the Catholic Church uses the ban on birth control to increase its numbers, even though there's no biblical basis for it whatsoever -- it's simply the age-old situation where the authority figure (the Pope, in this case) says, " Because I said so and I'm in charge so you have to do what I say and I don't care if you like it. " (how many parents have used similar lines on their kids? LOL) It doesn't make sense why the Catholic Church would ban birth control if the Bible doesn't mention it.... until you look at the self-serving nature of such a ban to increase the Church's numbers (which translates into both political power and wealth.) When I look at it that way, it " makes sense " why they want to ban birth control. Well, notan, you got me curious, so I let my fingers do the walking. I don't think this was the exact article I read, but it sounds a lot like it -- it " makes sense " as I'm reading it. http://judaism.about.com/library/3_askrabbi_o/bl_simmons_kosherwhy.htm or http://snipurl.com/45c9 Reading this article really makes me think it was " keeping kosher " rules from the Torah that I was thinking of, rather than Biblical references. Sorry for my mixup! Debbi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 28, 2004 Report Share Posted January 28, 2004 Debbi Heiser wrote: >http://judaism.about.com/library/3_askrabbi_o/bl_simmons_kosherwhy.htm >or >http://snipurl.com/45c9 Thanks for the link. It says it better than I was and includes some points I didn't want to get into on this list. I like the distinction between " reasons " and " benefits. " I can see health benefits. What I disagree with is when the reason is claimed to be health and because God is perfect therefore the given diet must be perfectly healthy, one size fits all. One day I will have to a post a message about all the bad things in vegetables. notan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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