|
Storytime Tapestry Newsletter
The newsletter devoted to spreading love and cultural
awareness throughout the world.
Special Treat – Johann Christoph Arnold
Oct 13, 2006
Storytime Tapestry Newsletter
The newsletter devoted to spreading love and cultural
awareness throughout the world.
Special Treat – Johann Christoph Arnold
Oct 13, 2006
A NEW GLOBAL THREAT?
Obesity in a World of Hunger
Johann Christoph Arnold
September 4, 2006
Much has been said about obesity becoming a deadly national and global
epidemic. It is being called an international scourge that is engulfing the
entire world, as big a threat as global warming and terrorism. Especially
frightening is the fact that it is skyrocketing among children, making them
prone to diseases that could shave years off their lives. For the first time in
history, children in this generation could die before their parents. But the
harm done to individuals is being ignored; countries like Australia, Britain
and the United States merely think of the effect on their economies, which is
being measured at billions of dollars.
The plague of obesity, especially in children, did not happen overnight. It is
the bitter harvest of decades of catering to ourselves instead of serving
others. It is the fruit of a sedentary lifestyle focused on television and
computers rather than the great outdoors. It is the destructive result of
stressing academics, rather than the sandbox, already in kindergarten.
Ask any doctor and you will find out how huge the obesity problem is. It can
only be solved if we all work and pray together. The Bible says, "The sins
of the fathers shall visit children to the third and the fourth
generations." Sadly, it is our children who will pay the price.
Not everyone in the world is obese. There are still millions of people starving
in Africa and other continents. Having traveled in Africa, I am still
haunted by the many children I saw in Lagos, Nigeria, with
potbellies because of malnutrition.
In the end, obesity is primarily a problem in First World countries,
where we have become a sick society. Yet we are afraid to face the root of this
illness. Instead we give it band-aid solutions, such as banning vending
machines in schools. Nobody is asking about the spiritual aspects of this
problem.
Obesity is actually only a symptom of a much bigger problem confronting our
nation. Our whole society is collapsing because of fear, violence and the
breakdown of the family. When God is forgotten, all evils become permissible.
Globalization also plays a big role. Large corporations like McDonald's and
Pizza Hut have become the American way of life, driving out smaller restaurants
that offered healthier foods.
Yes, we in America have it good.
We are enjoying decades of wealth and prosperity. But it is not making us
happy, because we have lost the most precious aspect of civilization--a sense
of community, which leads people together and not apart.
We would do well to read the story of Joseph in the Old Testament. It tells how
Pharaoh dreamed of seven fat cows and seven lean cows. Joseph told him that
seven years of plenty were coming, during which he should gather and store all
the grain he could. These seven years of plenty were to be followed by seven
years of famine. During the famine, he would then be able to help his country.
Let us not be lulled to sleep: the famine is coming. God will not be mocked.
The time of over-indulgence will be gone before we know it. We need to build a
community, in which people are treated like human beings. We must share our
riches with the many who are starving. When we discover that our riches do not
belong to us, but rather to God and to all the people on the globe, then our
nation will become strong again.
To Contact Johann Christoph Arnold about his story please
email his assistant Sam Hine: samhine@Mailstack.com
Obesity in a World of Hunger
Johann Christoph Arnold
September 4, 2006
Much has been said about obesity becoming a deadly national and global
epidemic. It is being called an international scourge that is engulfing the
entire world, as big a threat as global warming and terrorism. Especially
frightening is the fact that it is skyrocketing among children, making them
prone to diseases that could shave years off their lives. For the first time in
history, children in this generation could die before their parents. But the
harm done to individuals is being ignored; countries like Australia, Britain
and the United States merely think of the effect on their economies, which is
being measured at billions of dollars.
The plague of obesity, especially in children, did not happen overnight. It is
the bitter harvest of decades of catering to ourselves instead of serving
others. It is the fruit of a sedentary lifestyle focused on television and
computers rather than the great outdoors. It is the destructive result of
stressing academics, rather than the sandbox, already in kindergarten.
Ask any doctor and you will find out how huge the obesity problem is. It can
only be solved if we all work and pray together. The Bible says, "The sins
of the fathers shall visit children to the third and the fourth
generations." Sadly, it is our children who will pay the price.
Not everyone in the world is obese. There are still millions of people starving
in Africa and other continents. Having traveled in Africa, I am still
haunted by the many children I saw in Lagos, Nigeria, with
potbellies because of malnutrition.
In the end, obesity is primarily a problem in First World countries,
where we have become a sick society. Yet we are afraid to face the root of this
illness. Instead we give it band-aid solutions, such as banning vending
machines in schools. Nobody is asking about the spiritual aspects of this
problem.
Obesity is actually only a symptom of a much bigger problem confronting our
nation. Our whole society is collapsing because of fear, violence and the
breakdown of the family. When God is forgotten, all evils become permissible.
Globalization also plays a big role. Large corporations like McDonald's and
Pizza Hut have become the American way of life, driving out smaller restaurants
that offered healthier foods.
Yes, we in America have it good.
We are enjoying decades of wealth and prosperity. But it is not making us
happy, because we have lost the most precious aspect of civilization--a sense
of community, which leads people together and not apart.
We would do well to read the story of Joseph in the Old Testament. It tells how
Pharaoh dreamed of seven fat cows and seven lean cows. Joseph told him that
seven years of plenty were coming, during which he should gather and store all
the grain he could. These seven years of plenty were to be followed by seven
years of famine. During the famine, he would then be able to help his country.
Let us not be lulled to sleep: the famine is coming. God will not be mocked.
The time of over-indulgence will be gone before we know it. We need to build a
community, in which people are treated like human beings. We must share our
riches with the many who are starving. When we discover that our riches do not
belong to us, but rather to God and to all the people on the globe, then our
nation will become strong again.
To contact Johann Christoph Arnold about his story please
email his assistant Sam Hine: samhine@Mailstack.com
|
|