- Water nourishes plant and animal life on earth (Genesis 2:6,10; Job 8:11) and marine life in the seas (Genesis 1:20,21). Without these, we would have no food source, and without water, we die (Genesis 21:15,19; Psalm 23:2).
Polluting the water is a terrible plague, as in Pharaoh’s judgment when God turned the waters to blood (Exodus 7:17-24; Psalm 105:29). Moses ground up the golden calf and added it to the drinking water, so that the Israelites would be reminded of their sin of idolatry that separated them from fellowship with God (Exodus 32:20).
Springs and fountains are a blessing from God (Joshua 15:19, Judges 1:15, Song of Solomon 4:15), Who provides water (Psalm 78:16; 104:13; 105:41; 107:33-35; Isaiah 35:6-7; 4117-18; 44:3-4, etc.). When we place our faith in Him, we become “like a tree planted by the rivers of water,” (Psalm 1:3; Jeremiah 17:8), growing in the spiritual blessings of fruitfulness and abundant, eternal life (John 10:10).
Water and oil are each necessary for human life, to
quench our thirst and appease our hunger, and to keep our body hydrated and
lubricated like the finely tuned machine that God designed it to be (Psalm 139:14). As I am reminded
whenever I step on our high-tech digital bathroom scale, our body is made up of
about 50% water and less than 13% to more
than 35% fat, depending on age, sex, and physical fitness.
Jesus, the Good Shepherd, provides water and oil to His
sheep, symbolizing the physical blessing of food and water and the spiritual
blessing of joy and peace in Him (Psalm
23). Man may mistakenly think that oil and drink come from the world (Hosea 2:5), forgetting that every
perfect gift comes from above (James 1:17).
Oil is a food staple that binds wheat together into cakes
(Deuteronomy 7:13), and even
the manna from Heaven tasted like fresh oil (Numbers 11:8). The Promised Land was a “land of oil olive,”
along with other bountiful provisions (Deuteronomy
8:8).
God used both Elijah (1
Kings 17:9-16) and Elisha (2
Kings 4:1-7) to demonstrate His sustenance and miraculous provision in
desperate times to those with faith. When the widow gave her last drops of oil
to feed Elijah before she and her son had what she thought would be their last
meal, God rewarded her by continually replenishing the oil in her cruse and the
meal in her barrel until the drought was over.
In Elisha’s case, a woman had a debt so large that she
would have to sell her sons into slavery to repay it, and all she had was a pot
of oil. He told her to pour the oil into every vessel she could find at home
and round up from all her neighbors, and God poured out a blessing of oil so
abundant that it covered her debt and freed her sons. What a beautiful picture
of how God Himself paid the price to redeem us from bondage to sin and death,
if we place our trust in His Son’s death, burial and resurrection (1 Corinthians 15:4) as the only Way to Heaven! (John 14:6)
Although water and oil do not mix, they can be blended
into an emulsion by adding a third substance known as an emulsifier. When we vigorously
shake a mixture of oil and vinegar, we see a cloudy liquid as tiny globules of
oil swirl through the water. This is a temporary emulsion, for as soon as we
set the bottle down, the oil again floats to the top of the water in a smooth
layer. Adding an emulsifier stabilizes the emulsion so that the oil, or fat,
and water mix together in an opaque blend of even consistency. Milk, for
example, is a permanent emulsion of butterfat in water, with casein, or milk
protein, acting as the emulsifier.
Breast milk alone contains all the nourishment needed to
sustain a newborn infant’s life, for it is a perfect blend of water, butterfat,
and protein in ideal proportions for survival and growth, and it also contains
antibodies and other vital substances from the mother’s blood that help protect
the infant from disease. Only God could have designed such a perfect, complete
first food! Job compares God’s nurturing love and source of all provision to “breasts
full of milk.” (Job 21:24).
Throughout Scripture, milk and butter are symbols of God’s
abundant physical and spiritual blessing (Isaiah
7:22; 55:1; Joel 3:18). God promised the Israelites a land of
milk and honey (Exodus 3:8, 17; 13:5,
etc.) and nourished them with milk and butter, animal fat (meat), and grape
juice, which is mostly water but which also symbolizes Christ’s blood shed for
us (Deuteronomy 32:14).
Abraham offered a meal of milk, butter, and a calf to his
three heavenly guests – preincarnate Jesus and two angels – and was rewarded with
the promise of a son who would bring abundant spiritual blessing, as he would give
rise to the great nation of God’s chosen people (Genesis 18:1-19).
Peter wanted new believers in Christ to be fed with the
sincere milk of the Word (1 Peter 2:2). Jesus, our beloved Bridegroom, delights
us as if with milk and honey under His tongue and clear eyes as if washed with
milk (Song of Solomon 4:11; 5:1,12)
Water and oil may also have lessons to teach regarding
worship, healing, and judgment May we thank God daily for His physical
and spiritual sustenance, symbolized by water and oil!
© 2013 Laurie Collett
Reposted from the archives
4 comments:
Dear Laurie,
I will always remember that all three of our daughters were first fed with their mother's breast milk. And yet, we adults have always depended on cow's milk as part of our daily food intake as if God created cow's milk to be compatible for both calves and humans.
In reading your blog, I have gotten the impression of "the trinity of liquids" - oil, water and emulsifier - as making up a vital source of nutrition that benefits all of us.
Wishing you and Richard God's blessings.
how important of water, oil and milk to support our live is scientifically proved.
Thank you for sharing your post.
Have a wonderful weekend.
Dear Frank,
Praise the Lord for the benefits of mother's milk, and for cow's milk to sustain us thereafter. Thanks as always for sharing your insights.
May God bless you and Alex,
Laurie
Hi Tanza,
So true -- we cannot live without water and oil in some form. Thank you for your comment. God bless and have a great week!
Laurie
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