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David Moster
There are hundreds of passages in the Bible that describe food, drink and dining. Many Biblical stories are set within the context of a meal.
While most of these are about regular meals, others refer to more bizarre, extreme or supernatural cases of eating and drinking.
Here are 10 of the most notable examples (in no specific order):
• Gold
Powder: When Moses sees the Israelites worshiping the golden calf he grinds
the idol into a fine powder, mixes it with water and forces the people to
drink. (Exodus 32:19–20)
• Scroll
of Lamentations: God gives Ezekiel a two-sided scroll of Lamentations to eat. Ezekiel
fills his stomach and finds the scroll to be “as sweet as honey.” (Ezekiel
2:8–3:3)
• The
Manna: The Israelites survived for forty years in the desert on
daily provisions of manna (Exodus
16:35).
The name manna reportedly comes from the question the
Israelites asked, man hu, “What is it?” (Exodus 16:15).
The Biblical text presents the manna as a miracle food. It
falls six days a week but not on the Sabbath, disintegrates when it is stored
and stops falling when the Israelites enter the land of Canaan.
Manna is even called “the grain of heaven,” “the bread of heaven” or “the bread of
angels” (Psalms
78:24, 105:40; John 6:31; 2).
• Animal Fodder for a King: In accordance with Daniel’s prophecy, Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon lives in the wilderness
for seven years eating grass like an ox (Daniel
4:33).
• The Fantastic Fruits of Eden: There were two
supernatural trees in the Garden of Eden, each with its own
fruit.
The tree of knowledge bestowed a divine knowledge of good
and bad, making one like the gods. The tree of life granted immortality. (Genesis 3:22)
• Food from Nowhere: A number of Biblical figures are saved from thirst and
starvation in the barrenness of the desert.
For example, Hagar and Ishmael are shown a hidden well by
God (Genesis
21:14–19),
Moses finds water in a desert rock (Numbers 20:11), and
Elijah is given bread and meat twice a day by ravens in
the desert. (1 Kings 17:1–6)
• Human
Flesh: Cannibalism on account of hunger is perhaps the most extreme
punishment in the Hebrew Bible.
It is at times described in vivid detail, e.g., in the
threat of Deuteronomy 28 that fathers and mothers will eat their own children
in secrecy so that they do not have to share the meat. (Deuteronomy 28:53–57)
• Free Refills: There are a number of stories about the miracles
performed by the prophets Elijah and Elisha.
According to the Book of Kings, a hungry woman’s jar of flour and jug of oil refilled themselves until a famine subsided (1 Kings 17:10-16),
a poor woman’s single jug of oil was able to fill the many vessels of her neighbors (2 Kings 4:1–7), and
a man’s twenty loaves of bread were miraculously able to feed one hundred hungry men with some left over (2 Kings 4:42–44).
A similar story appears in John 6, where Jesus feeds five thousand men with five barley loaves and two small fish. Again, there is still food left over.
David Moster is a Ph.D. candidate in Biblical studies at New York University. He previously studied Jewish philosophy, Hebrew Bible, Jewish education and rabbinics at Yeshiva University. David has written a number of articles for the Encyclopedia of the Bible and Its Reception and is currently writing about the Bible on his blog The Daily Chapter.
http://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/daily/ancient-cultures/ancient-near-eastern-world/the-10-strangest-foods-in-the-bible/
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