The
Dallas Morning News has the story of a
diet program that churches are beginning to warm up to. It couples exercise and nutrition
with prayer.
There are
several diet plans and books -- including "What Would Jesus Eat?," "The Hallelujah Diet," "The
Maker's Diet" -- and groups such as First Place that have become popular.
The
PBS program "Religion and Ethics Newsweekly" did a
piece focusing on a weight-loss plan called Weigh Down. By 2001, the Weigh Down program had conducted 30,000 workshops for 60 denominations in 70 countries. The
group teaches that instead of running for another something to eat, a dieter should
turns to prayer. But the method has not
been without some controversy. Some criticize these movements for not paying enough attention to
nutritional issues or exercise.
The
Indianapolis Star says black churches
are focusing on dieting, too:
It's a message that's converging on the black community
through churches and outreach by such organizations as the American Diabetes
Association, the American Cancer Society and the American Heart Association.
Several cookbooks also tweak traditional soul-food recipes.
I think whole topic would be a
fantastic story for you to localize -- and I think it would make a very popular May
sweeps project for TV stations looking for something special to do for the May
ratings book.
Back in 2000, Christianity
Today provided some deep background that is still useful today:
The modern Christian dieting industry probably began in 1957, when
Presbyterian minister Charlie Shedd published "Pray Your Weight Away." The book, which would never fly in today's
Christian self-help market, used the guilt-trip style of a folksy preacher to
persuade readers that God never intended for "one hundred pounds of excess
avoirdupois" to be hanging around their belts.
The story continued:
According to nutritionist David Meinz, author of "Eating by the Good Book," the dieting industry in America is worth $30–50
billion. "A conservative estimate is that 5 percent [$1.5 billion] of that
is the Christian dieting industry," Meinz says. "Many Christians are
also buying Lean Cuisine. The 5 percent estimate does not include that."
Meinz offers another way to parse it: "Thirty-nine percent of the
American population considers itself born again. So [up to] 39 percent of that
dieting industry is Christian dollars. That's a huge amount of money."
The story says Christian dieting programs fall into two camps: those
that
avoid the rules and regulations of many diets, focusing on the
"spiritual" side of eating instead of calorie-counting, and those that
are based on strict guidelines. Of the more regimented programs, the
story said:
They advocate
food exchanges, measuring four ounces of this and two ounces of that. The
national ministry 3D -- Diet, Discipline and Discipleship -- embodies this approach.
Considered the mother of Christian dieting programs, 3D was founded in 1973 by
Carol Showalter, a New England Presbyterian pastor's wife who struggled with
her weight. "Weight Watchers met in the church," she recalls,
"and I had a hard time not noticing it as I was off to Bible
studies." As Showalter considered enrolling "for the third or fourth
time... God spoke to me in a most extraordinary way: through a hand-painted
sign on a Sunday-school wall." The message was this: God has the answer.
Nameless Dead Haunt City Morgues
In every town of any size, there is a case that investigators
just can't solve. Somebody finds a body, but years pass by and nobody can
identify the dead.
What cases are still pending in your town? The Oakland (Calif.)
Tribune says that, in California alone:
More than 2,500 bodies -- the victims of violent
crime and suspicious circumstance -- remain nameless entities in California,
according to the state's Department of Justice. Some of the cases date back to
the 1960s.
First-Class
Government Travel
The U.S. Government Accountability Office just released an audit [PDF] showing millions of dollars
in wasted first-class airline travel by the Department of State.
We are always looking for your great ideas. Send Al a few sentences and hot links.
Editor's Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium
of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of
Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the
information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed
and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is
fact-checked, but depends upon the accuracy and integrity of the
original sources cited. Errors and inaccuracies found will be corrected.
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