Is an ice cream habit a sin?

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May 18, 2019
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#1
I have a daily ice cream habit, and I've been wondering if it's a sin. I'd love any opinions.
 

Lanolin

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2018
23,460
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#2
Daily Ice cream habit? how so. Do you deliver icecreams door to door or something.
 

shittim

Senior Member
Dec 16, 2016
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#3
No, letting the adversary make us feel guilty might be.
I enjoy it as well, is it perhaps a sugar craving?
What does the Lord want you to do? Way too often we err in thinking we have a list of does and don't to make ourselves right with God, Jesus made us right 2,000 years ago, we can do nothing, can't fast enough, pray enough , etc to do what Jesus already did for us, ask Him if He wants you to back off a little.
Curry speaks of this a lot.
bless you sister
 
Mar 4, 2020
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#4
I have a daily ice cream habit, and I've been wondering if it's a sin. I'd love any opinions.
Matthew 15:11
11Not that which goeth into the mouth defileth a man; but that which cometh out of the mouth, this defileth a man.
 
May 18, 2019
35
17
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#7
No, letting the adversary make us feel guilty might be.
I enjoy it as well, is it perhaps a sugar craving?
What does the Lord want you to do? Way too often we err in thinking we have a list of does and don't to make ourselves right with God, Jesus made us right 2,000 years ago, we can do nothing, can't fast enough, pray enough , etc to do what Jesus already did for us, ask Him if He wants you to back off a little.
Curry speaks of this a lot.
bless you sister

Lol, maybe it's the enemy causing the guilt. I don't have much of an appetite because of illness, and it's one thing I like to look forward to at the end of a day. Thanks for your reply. It helps. I'll ask the Lord.
 
May 18, 2019
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#10
It's the "deny yourself" words of the Lord that keep going through my head. I don't know how much I'm supposed to deny myself. I read Rees Howells Intercessor when I first came to Christ. In the book, the Holy Spirit wanted him to live on boring food, soup and bread and no more than two small meals a day. If I remember correctly, the Holy Spirit wanted him to give up ice cream as well.
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
27,379
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#11
I was going to ask what brand (some store brands are so blah it really IS a sin!) but any brand that has "Extreme Moose Tracks" has to be at least palatable.

Are they extreme tracks or are they tracks made by extreme mooses... er, meece... well, did an extreme moose get some other extreme friends together and make tracks?

I found a good deal on king size dark chocolate kit-kat bars, 59 cents a piece, and bought 55 of them. I now have a daily morning habit of eating a dark chocolate kit-kat bar. :D

They say money can't buy happiness... Well it can't buy joy really, and it can't buy PERMANENT happiness. But I can get three bites per bar, and there are eight bars in a pack, and I have 55 packs. That's a lot of little bites of happiness there.
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
27,379
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#12
It's the "deny yourself" words of the Lord that keep going through my head. I don't know how much I'm supposed to deny myself. I read Rees Howells Intercessor when I first came to Christ. In the book, the Holy Spirit wanted him to live on boring food, soup and bread and no more than two small meals a day. If I remember correctly, the Holy Spirit wanted him to give up ice cream as well.
Are you Rees Howell?

Some people were convicted of how much they played golf and had to give it up. That doesn't mean golf is evil.

One church had to put in a standard against playing dominoes, because dominoes was VERY popular in that town and people would skip church to play dominoes at their friends' houses instead. That doesn't mean playing dominoes is bad. That just means they had a problem they needed to fix.

The root question then is, do you think ice cream is becoming a problem for you? I don't think I'd give it up just because it was something Rees Howell needed to forego.
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
27,379
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#13
For some reason this thread reminds me of some other ice cream addicts I knew... some dogs.

There was a late-middle-aged couple at the store, and their shopping cart had three of those big gallon tubs of ice cream. When they saw the person in front of them doing a double-take at the ice cream, the woman said, "He has our dogs spoiled. They get their ice cream every night, and if they don't get it they stand by the back door and whine."
 

JaumeJ

Senior Member
Jul 2, 2011
21,429
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#14
Nothing is unclean that enters a person, it is what proceeds from the heart that defiles a man.

All foods are clean when received with thanksgiving.

This said, if your conscience is not well with anything, perhaps you should pray about it. Personally, I do not believe ice cream is sinful unless it is controlling the person having it.
 
May 18, 2019
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#15
Are you Rees Howell?

Some people were convicted of how much they played golf and had to give it up. That doesn't mean golf is evil.

One church had to put in a standard against playing dominoes, because dominoes was VERY popular in that town and people would skip church to play dominoes at their friends' houses instead. That doesn't mean playing dominoes is bad. That just means they had a problem they needed to fix.

The root question then is, do you think ice cream is becoming a problem for you? I don't think I'd give it up just because it was something Rees Howell needed to forego.
Thank you, Lynx! Wow, good points and interesting! And no, I'm not Rees Howells. I'll try to remember that. 😂
 
Feb 24, 2019
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#17
Maybe forget about ice-cream and instead wonder if there is anything more you can do to bring a little relief to those around you who are suffering for the want of another's help.
And if there is, and if you do it, know that in loving them, you have Loved God.
 

Lanolin

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2018
23,460
7,188
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#18
Maybe the book 'Should I share my ice-cream?' by Mo Willems will help you with your dilemma.
 

shittim

Senior Member
Dec 16, 2016
13,805
7,788
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#19
Moose Tracks in my morning coffee.. Great minds think alike,
Bless you Summer
 

seoulsearch

OutWrite Trouble
May 23, 2009
16,509
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#20
I have a daily ice cream habit, and I've been wondering if it's a sin. I'd love any opinions.
Hi Summer!

What a great question in submitting all we do to God's will for us! I see that others have already given you some great answers, but I'd like to add a couple of stories.

My Mom is very health-conscious and tried very hard to raise us with very few fried foods or sugary treats. For whatever reason, it worked for some family members -- their idea of a "yummy snack" is, literally, a head of lettuce (they eat it like others would an apple.)

Unfortunately, it didn't work for me, and I pretty much went in the exact opposite direction. Once I had a job and could pay for some of my own food, my lunch of choice would be two candy bars -- every day. The problem for me is that it started to take over other areas of my life -- I was soon tempted to skip dinner so that I could have another form of dessert, or would be trying to obsessively calculate how long I had to exercise to try to burn off all the sugar. I was spending more than I should have been on junk food, and tried to cut calories on healthy foods so I could eat more things I liked, but were completely unhealthy.

In my case, "a daily candy bar habit" was most definitely a sin (and is something I still struggle with today.)

However, in your case, I believe you mentioned getting over an illness and this is the one thing that actually sounds appetizing.

This reminded me of a story I'd seen about a girl who was recovering from anorexia. She said that treatment centers had been worthless to her because the minute she saw a plate of food waiting for her, it brought out her urge to fight anyone who tried to make her eat.

Instead, her family came up with a different kind of recovery plan for her at home. Meals were always with other family members, and were served buffet-style so that EVERYONE, not just her, started out with an empty plate, so she was given the CHOICE of what she put on it and what/how much she ate -- just like everyone else was doing, so she wasn't singled out or coerced.

At every meal they had, her mom made sure it included some kind of sweet treat to the girl's liking -- usually in the form of a brownie, which was deemed her "safety dessert." The girl liked desserts enough that even if she chose not to eat anything else, she would almost always choose to eat this one safety food, and might be her only chosen source of calories for the day.

In this case, "a daily brownie" habit was her literal lifeline to recovery, as she gradually relearned how to feed herself in a healthier way.

From what you described, it sounds like your daily ice cream habit might very well be a connection for you towards a healthy recovery. :)

Take it to God -- and if you feel at peace and don't have any convictions about it, I say raise your spoon in thanks and dig right in. :)

Hope this helps... Please keep us posted on how you're doing.