The Bible diet (also known as the Maker's diet) is a diet based on the idea that certain foods are either forbidden or acceptable to God. Which heading a food source falls under depends on certain factors such as how the food was raised, cooked or cleaned; how a particular animal lived, such as if it was a so-called "creeping" animal or not; and its physical form, such as whether a certain fish had fins and scales or not.
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- The Bible diet (also known as the Maker's diet) is a diet based on the idea that certain foods are either forbidden or acceptable to God. Which heading a food source falls under depends on certain factors such as how the food was raised, cooked or cleaned; how a particular animal lived, such as if it was a so-called "creeping" animal or not; and its physical form, such as whether a certain fish had fins and scales or not. The rules for determining clean and unclean foods are derived from certain passages from the Bible in the books of Genesis, Proverbs, Luke, Paul, Exodus, Peter, Leviticus, Judges, Deuteronomy, Isaiah, Corinthians, Habakkuk, and Daniel. The main promoter of the Bible diet is Jordan S. Rubin, who claims that the diet was responsible for his recovery from Crohn's disease at the age of 19. As of 2008, there are no peer-reviewed scientific journal articles that evaluate this diet. In 2004 the United States Food and Drug Administration ordered Rubin's company, Garden of Life, Inc. , to stop making unsubstantiated claims about eight of its products and supplements.
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- December 2008
- February 2009
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- The Bible diet (also known as the Maker's diet) is a diet based on the idea that certain foods are either forbidden or acceptable to God. Which heading a food source falls under depends on certain factors such as how the food was raised, cooked or cleaned; how a particular animal lived, such as if it was a so-called "creeping" animal or not; and its physical form, such as whether a certain fish had fins and scales or not.
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