Showing posts with label Tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tips. Show all posts

Friday, March 07, 2025

2 Nephi 24:12; Isaiah 14:12

Why Did Lehi "Suppose" the Existence of Satan?

Lucifer from Milton's Paradise Lost by Gustave Dore (1866)

Lucifer from Milton's Paradise Lost by Gustave Dore (1866) 


“How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning!”

2 Nephi 24:12; Isaiah 14:12

The Know

The Book of Mormon includes a stark portrayal of Satan, or the devil as he is more commonly called in the text. Satan’s main desire, according to Book of Mormon prophets, is to make “all men . . . miserable like unto himself” (2 Nephi 2:27). This he does by leading men and women into sin, lulling them into a carnal security, blinding them towards the things of God, and stirring up strife and contention in the hearts of the children of men.

Some have wondered how the Book of Mormon has such a vivid depiction of Satan while the Old Testament or Hebrew Bible appears to lack a concrete conception of him.3 While it is true that Satan (or “the satan”) appears in such passages as Numbers 22Job 1–2Zechariah 3, and 1 Chronicles 21, biblical scholars have argued over whether this figure is necessarily an evil entity opposed to God, and, if so, whether his identity and function evolved over time in ancient Israelite religion.

The non-Mormon biblical scholar G. J. Riley explained, “In the Hebrew Bible, one finds the concept of the ‘adversary’ (Heb. śāṭān) in two senses: that of any (usually human) opponent, and that of Satan, the Devil, the opponent of the righteous.” That śāṭānin Hebrew can refer to both mortal and divine adversaries (who may or may not always necessarily be evil) has led to conflicting interpretations of the Old Testament passages in which he appears.

Despite this ambiguity, there exist underlying conceptions from ancient Near Eastern mythology that may help us understand the role of Satan in the Bible. Riley explained, “The Biblical idea that God and the righteous angels confronted the opposition of a great spiritual enemy, the Devil backed by the army of the demons, had a long history and development in the ancient world. Very old stories of conflict among the gods are found in each of the cultures which influenced the Biblical tradition, and these stories . . . contributed to the concept of the Devil.” Riley mentioned specifically Mesopotamian and Canaanite myths that feature a head deity fighting back the forces of chaos, death, and evil as underlying elements in the biblical depiction of Yahweh fighting against “terrifying but legitimate spirits of calamity, disease, and death.”

Indeed, it appears that ancient Israelites did possess an understanding of demons or other evil deities that opposed God (NRSV Leviticus 16:817:7Deuteronomy 32:17Psalm 106:37–38Isaiah 13:2134:14). They likewise understood God as combatting sea monsters and waters that personified chaos and destruction (NRSV Psalm 74:12-1789:9-1293:3-4; Job 26:12-13; Isaiah 27:151:9-10). In later biblical writings the chaos monster, “the great dragon” or “old serpent,” would come to be explicitly identified as Satan (Revelation 12:1-11).

Turning to the Book of Mormon, it is important to note that Lehi “supposed” the existence of Satan based on reading something he encountered in the plates of brass. “And I, Lehi, according to the things which I have read, must needs supposethat an angel of God, according to that which is written, had fallen from heaven; wherefore, he became a devil, having sought that which was evil before God” (2 Nephi 2:17, emphasis added). It appears that Lehi was referencing this passage in Isaiah: “How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! Art thou cut down to the ground, which did weaken the nations!” (2 Nephi 24:12Isaiah 14:12).

The name rendered as “Lucifer” (Latin for “light-bearer”) in the Hebrew text is Helel ben Shachar (hēylēl ben šāḥar) and literally means “shining one, son of dawn.” This links him with “a Canaanite myth of the gods Helel and Shahar . . . who fall from heaven as a result of rebellion” (cf. Genesis 6:1–4), as well as a deity from the ancient Near East identified as “a star in the constellation . . . associated with Ištar and through which passes Venus” (cf. Job 38:6–7).

The LDS biblical scholar David Bokovoy explained, “[Lehi] would need to have a biblical text that described a fallen angel. Such a view appears in Isaiah 14. This biblical passage is a lament, mocking the death of the Assyrian king from the time of Isaiah.” According to Bokovoy, “Even though this text refers directly to an Assyrian monarch who tried to make himself a divine being like the most High God, the taunt is based upon an ancient Canaanite motif of a literal divinity who tried to ascend to the throne of El, the highest god in the divine assembly.”

Another LDS scholar, John A. Tvedtnes, wrote, “Lucifer’s attempt to sit on the holy mountain reflects his desire to become part of the heavenly council.” In the words of one biblical scholar, he tried to “sit enthroned on the mountain where the assembly of gods met . . . in effect as the king of the gods.” For his presumption, Lucifer, the mythological personification of perhaps the Assyrian king Sargon II (circa 722–705 BC), was cast down to the underworld, where he was to be stripped of his power and prestige, mocked by those he once oppressed, and ultimately defeated by Yahweh (Isaiah 14:15–232 Nephi 24:15–23).

Knowing, as he did, the essential story of the fall of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden (2 Nephi 2:15–27), Lehi knew of “the captivity and power of the devil” (v. 27), who was “the father of all lies” (v. 18). He also knew that the devil and wickedness were in “opposition” to God and his righteousness (vv. 11–13). But where the devil had come from was not explicitly stated in Genesis. Perhaps puzzling over this very gap in the records known to him, and with the contextual background to Isaiah 14:12 in mind, it is easy to see how Lehi could have “supposed” the existence of the devil, an angel or divine being who opposed God and so fell to the lowest world (hell). Lehi’s cogent explanation was then picked up by his sons Nephi and Jacob and perpetuated and developed further by subsequent Book of Mormon prophets and authors.

The Why

By providing a clearer depiction of Satan than the Hebrew Bible, the Book of Mormon helps us recognize him and his tactics. “In addition to exposing the tactics and plans of Satan,” wrote Clyde James Williams, “the Book of Mormon gives clear and direct counsel on how to overcome him.”With these two scriptural records combined, we are better prepared to withstand the Adversary and his minions.

On a theological or even literary level, the Book of Mormon appears to draw from Isaiah 14 in its own conception of Satan, which in turn drew some of its imagery or inspiration from a wider ancient Near Eastern mythological environment. Lehi thus seems to have made the same theological innovation that Jews returning from the Babylonian Exile not long after him would go on to make.

Or perhaps this conception of the Evil One was already beginning to circulate among the prophets in Jerusalem in Lehi’s day, thereby allowing it to emerge strongly and without any resistance in later biblical writings. Of course, the “historical approach to the concept of Satan as an evolutionary theological development in Judaism raises the question of whether the Book of Mormon’s references to the Devil should be seen as anachronistic,” but as Bokovoy has acknowledged, “a careful reading of the Book of Mormon, however, shows that in this instance, the Book of Mormon seems to reflect the way biblical scholars who read the Hebrew Bible critically understand this issue.”

Further Reading

David Bokovoy, Authoring the Old Testament: Genesis–Deuteronomy (Salt Lake City, UT: Greg Kofford Books, 2014), 207–211.

John A. Tvedtnes, The Most Correct Book: Insights from a Book of Mormon Scholar (Springville, UT: Horizon Publishers, 2003), 132–153

Clyde James Williams, “Satan,” in Book of Mormon Reference Companion, ed. Dennis L. Largey (Salt Lake City, UT: Deseret Book, 2003), 701

Top 100 Things the Book of Mormon Has Taught Me

100 Things the Book of Mormon Has Taught Me

This is by no means an all-inclusive list. There are hundreds, if not thousands, of precious truths we can pull from this perfect book. Throughout it, we read of prophets of God who were courageous, bold, true, always obedient, filled with love for their brethren, all having a pure love of God and a desire to share His light and gospel with others.


I want to share with you 100 beautiful truths from the Book of Mormon that have helped, and continue to help me, in my journey to be more like my Savior.

1. The Lord provides a way for us to follow His commands (1 Nephi 3:7).

2. The Lord can do all things for us, that are His will, if we have faith in Him (1 Nephi 7:12).

3. Sometimes the Lord commands us to do things for a purpose we don’t understand (1 Nephi 9:5).

4. If we listen to the word of God, and follow it, the devil can’t overpower us (1 Nephi 15:24).

5. We receive strength as we obey God’s commandments (1 Nephi 17:3).

6. Regardless of our afflictions, we should praise God and not murmur (1 Nephi 18:16).

7. Jesus Christ offered himself as a sacrifice for sin. Only through His mercy and grace, can those who believe return to God’s presence (2 Nephi 2:6-8).

8. Everything must have its opposite. You cannot have one without the other (2 Nephi 2:11-13).

9. We all have our free agency to choose to follow Christ or the devil (2 Nephi 2:27, 2 Nephi 10:23).

10. Those who trust man instead of God are cursed (2 Nephi 4:34).

11. The Lord admonishes us to listen to Him and not be afraid of men, for they die. The Lord and His righteousness are forever (2 Nephi 8:7-8, 12).

12. The Lord will bless you and give you knowledge if you are humble. He despises those who value riches and knowledge of men more than His counsel (2 Nephi 9:28-30, 42).

13. We are saved by grace after all we can do (2 Nephi 25:23).

14. People will say they have a bible and don’t need another bible. The Lord answers by saying He loves His people all over the world and He will visit all nations after His resurrection. A written testimony of two nations is a witness of Him, and that He remembers all nations (2 Nephi 29:-78).

15. The Lamb of God was holy, yet He was baptized to fulfill all righteousness. We who are unholy, must be baptized to show obedience to God and His commandments (2 Nephi 31:5-7).

16. After we are baptized, we still have work to do to receive eternal life. We must stay faithful, love God and our neighbors, follow the word of Christ, etc. (2 Nephi 19-20).

17. After we are baptized and receive the gift of the Holy Ghost, we can speak by the power of the Holy Ghost. As we study our scriptures, we will know what we should do (2 Nephi 32:2-3, 5).

18. Pray always. Don’t do anything unto the Lord without praying first for help (2 Nephi 32:9).

19. Seek for the kingdom of God before you seek for riches. If you do obtain riches, use them to do good to others, for we are all precious to God (Jacob 2:18-21).

20. When we serve others, we are serving God. If we praise, thank and serve God all our lives with our whole souls, we will still be unprofitable servants. All we have to do is keep His commandments, and we are blessed. We will always be indebted to Christ, and have no reason to ever boast of ourselves (Mosiah 2:17, 20-24).

21. We must be like little children and put off the natural man, else we are an enemy to God (Mosiah 3:18-19).

22. God created all things, has all wisdom, and all power. We can’t comprehend what He can (Mosiah 4:9).

23. We should teach our children to keep God’s commandments and to love and serve others. We should not withhold our help from those who need it, saying they deserve what they get. We are all beggars and rely on God for all (Mosiah 4:14-19).

24. We must watch our thoughts, words and deeds, and keep God’s commandments, else we will perish (Mosiah 4:30).

25. When we are baptized, we make a covenant to be obedient to all of God’s commands, all our lives. When we make this covenant, we are called the children of Christ. We must remember Him always. How can we know Him if we do not serve Him and keep Him in our hearts? (Mosiah 4:5-13).

26. When we are baptized, we promise to stand as witnesses of God at all times and in all things and in all places (Mosiah 18:9).

27. The Lord will forgive those who repent. We should forgive each other as well. If we don’t, then we will not be forgiven of our sins (Mosiah 26:30-31).

28. The judgments of God are always just, but the judgments of man are not (Mosiah 29:12).

29. Alma asks many questions to see if his people are prepared for salvation. These are great questions to ponder and see how you are doing in your path of righteousness (Alma 5:14-32).

30. The word of God must be fulfilled, regardless if people reject it (Alma 5:58).

31. To walk blameless before God, we must be humble, gentle, patient, grateful, etc (Alma 7:23-24).

32. Christ has loosed the bands of temporal death. All will be resurrected (Alma 11:43-44).

33. Those with soft hearts receive more of God’s word than those who harden their hearts (Alma 12:10).

34. This life is a time to prepare to meet God (Alma 12:24).

35. Do not procrastinate the day of your repentance, but instead watch and pray continually and have faith, and a hope of eternal life. (Alma 13:27-30)

36. Who can glory too much in the Lord? (Alma 26:16).

37. God is mindful of all people and is merciful unto them (Alma 26:37).

38. What profit is it to labor in a church if you don’t get paid? It is to rejoice in the joy of others (Alma 30:34-35).

39. All things denote there is a God (Alma 30:44).

40. The Lord provides strength, comfort and patience to those who suffer afflictions, as long as they pray in faith (Alma 31:30-38).

41. It is better to humble yourself because of God’s word than to be compelled to be humble (Alma 32:12-16).

42. Faith is not to have a perfect knowledge, but a hope for things which are not seen, which are true (Alma 32:21).

43. Faith begins with a desire to believe. Alma the younger, a prophet, compares the word of God unto a seed and explains how it can grow and bring forth fruit to you (Alma 32:27-43).

44. By small and simple things God brings about great things, including the salvation of souls (Alma 37:6-7).

45. The Lord keeps His promises, and always has (Alma 37:17).

46. If you counsel with the Lord, He will direct you. Those who pray daily and have hearts filled with gratitude daily will be lifted up at the last day (Alma 37:37).

47. You cannot hide your crimes from God. You must repent of your sins (Alma 39:8).

48. Do not seek after riches, for you can’t take them with you (Alma 39:14).

49. Wickedness never was happiness. Those who do not follow God cannot be happy (Alma 41:10-11).

50. Christ’s atonement has brought about the plan of mercy and appeases the demands of justice by allowing us to repent of our sins (Alma 42:13-15).

51. War is justified to protect families, lands, rights and religion (Alma 43:46-47).

52. God will preserve the faithful. The Lord will not allow a people to be destroyed unless they fall into transgression and deny their faith (Alma 44:4).

53. Captain Moroni’s character is explained, and then it issaid that if all people were like him, the devil could have no power over anyone (Alma 48:11-13, 17).

54. If you do not doubt, God will deliver you from your enemies (Alma 56:47-48).

55. Joy and pureness of heart comes from humility and giving your heart to God (Helaman 3:35).

56. If you build your foundation on the rock of Christ, the devil cannot drag you down into misery and despair. Those who build a sure foundation cannot fall (Helaman 5:12).

57. Samuel, a Lamanite prophet, prophesies that the night before Christ is born, there will be no darkness, but a day and a night and a day of only light. A new star will arise and signs and wonders will come from Heaven (Helaman 14:3-6).

58. Jesus must die so that the dead can be resurrected. His death redeems mankind and, through repentance, allows all to enter back into the presence of God (Helaman 14: 15-18).

59. Samuel prophesies that upon Christ’s death, there will be darkness until He is resurrected. During this period of darkness, there will be terrible natural disasters, changing the face of the whole earth, above and beneath (Helaman 14:20-27).

60. The words of the prophets are fulfilled every whit (3 Nephi 1:20).

61. Christ extends His mercy to all who come to Him (3 Nephi 9:14).

62. Heavenly Father speaks to the Nephites in the land Bountiful, and testifies of His beloved son. Jesus descends out of heaven and stands in their midst. He speaks of his atoning sacrifice and invites the multitude to thrust their hands into His side, and feel the prints in His hands and feet (3 Nephi 11:7-15).

63. Jesus instructs the prophet Nephi on how baptism should be done – in His name, having proper authority, and by immersion (3 Nephi 11:21-26).

64. Contention and anger are of the devil (3 Nephi 11:29-30).

65. Jesus speaks the Beatitudes to the Nephites, just as He did at the Sermon on the Mount (3 Nephi

12:3-12).

66. The Father knows what you need before you ask Him (3 Nephi 13:8).

67. If you first seek the kingdom of Heaven, you will be blessed with your temporal needs (3 Nephi 13:33).

68. Do not judge others. First look at yourself and what you need to change before you point out others’ faults (3 Nephi 14:1-5).

69. Only those who do the will of the Father will enter the kingdom of Heaven (3 Nephi 14:21).

70. When Christ told the Jews that He had other sheep which were not of this fold, they thought He meant the Gentiles. However, Jesus tells the Nephites that this is not so; that the other sheep are them and other people around the world that He would visit after His resurrection (3 Nephi 15:16-24).

71. Just as in His mortal ministry, Jesus, full of compassion, heals the sick. He then blesses the children one by one and prays for them. Angels descend out of heaven and minister to the little ones (3 Nephi 17:6-25).

72. Jesus ordains a disciple with power to bless and administer the bread and wine to all those who are baptized in His name. Partaking of the bread and wine shows Heavenly Father that we remember Jesus and keep His commandments. He promises that if the people remember Him, they will always have His Spirit to be with them. Those who partake worthily of these emblems are built upon His rock (3 Nephi 18:5-12).

73. Jesus commands us to watch and pray always to avoid temptation. Satan want to overtake us. Anything we ask the Father in Christ’s name will be given to us as long as we ask in faith and it is God’s will. Jesus commands us to pray in our families (3 Nephi 18:15-21).

74. Jesus says to meet together often and to accept all people into the congregation of the church. Pray for them. Set an example for them, as He has set for us (3 Nephi 18:22-24).

75. The words of Isaiah are great, and all things that he prophesied have been and shall be (3 Nephi 23:1-3).

76. Jesus Christ’s church should bear His name, and should be built upon His gospel, or else it be another man’s church (3 Nephi 27:3-8).

77. All will be judged by Jesus Christ according to their works. All who repent, are baptized, and endure to the end will be held guiltless before the Father on judgment day (3 Nephi 27:13-17).

78. We should do what Jesus would and did do. We should be like Him (3 Nephi 27:21, 27).

79. The way to eternal life is strait and narrow. Few will find it (3 Nephi 27:33).

80. The judgments of God will overtake the wicked. (Mormon 4:5).

81. The Book of Mormon shall be hidden until the Lord sees fit for it to be brought forth. Its purpose will be to persuade the House of Israel that Jesus is the Christ, the son of God (Mormon 5:12-14).

82. God has all power, and at His command anything can come to pass (Mormon 5:23).

83. Mormon invites the Lamanites of the latter days to repent, to be baptized and to take hold of the gospel of Christ, set forth in the Bible and the Book of Mormon. The Book of Mormon is written to help people believe in the Bible. If you will believe the Bible, you will believe the Book of Mormon too (Mormon 7:8-9).

84. Moroni prophesies about the coming forth of the Book of Mormon. It will only be able to come forth by the power of God by one whose eye is single to His glory. It shall come forth in a time where people no longer believe in miracles, when churches and teachers are lifted up in pride, when there are wars and rumors of wars, great pollutions and sin upon the earth, etc. (Mormon 8:14-33).

85. Miracles have not ceased. Because God is the same yesterday, today and forever, miracles still happen for the faithful. They only cease for the wicked (Mormon 9:15-21).

86. The promised land (the Americas) will be free from bondage from all other nations as long as its people serve Jesus Christ (Ether 2:9-10, 12).

87. Anything that persuades to do good is from God (Ether 4:12).

88. Do not say something doesn’t exist because you can’t see it or have proof. You will not receive a witness until after your faith is tried (Ether 12: 6).

89. Miracles only occur when one first has faith in the son of God (Ether 12:12-18).

90. God gives us weakness so we will be humble. If we are humble and have faith, God will make our weaknesses strengths (Ether 12:27).

91. In the church of Christ, members will fellowship each other and help each other keep the faith. They will meet often to fast, pray, help each other, and to partake of the Sacrament in remembrance of the Lord, Jesus Christ (Moroni 6:4-6).

92. A good person will do good things. When offering a gift or praying, we must do so with real intent to do good (Moroni 7: 5-10).

93. All things of God invite one to do good. We all have been given the light of Christ, which helps us discern between good and evil. The devil never persuades anyone to do good (Moroni 7:12-17).

94. We must have charity. It is the pure love of Christ, and never fails. We must pray to the Father to be filled with His love, and be like Christ (Moroni 7:45-48).

95. Little children are not capable of committing sin. They are not accountable and need no repentance. Thus, they do not need to be baptized. They are alive in Christ (Moroni 8).

96. Perfect love removes all fear (Moroni 8:16).

97. As we are forgiven of our sins, we become more gentle and not easily offended. With these traits, we are filled with the Holy Ghost, which brings hope and perfect love. This love can endure through diligent prayer (Moroni 8:26).

98. Moroni promises that those who ask Heavenly Father in sincere, faithful prayer if the Book of Mormon is true, will receive an answer through the Holy Ghost, who testifies of all truth (Moroni 10:4-5).

99. God has given us many different spiritual gifts. They are manifested to us by the Holy Spirit to help us and others draw closer to Christ (Moroni 10:8-18).

100. If we come unto Christ and deny ourselves of all ungodliness, loving the Lord with all our hearts, we can be perfected and made holy through His grace (Moroni 10:32-33).

This is by no means an all-inclusive list. There are hundreds, if not thousands, of precious truths we can pull from this perfect book. Throughout it, we read of prophets of God who were courageous, bold, true, always obedient, filled with love for their brethren, all having a pure love of God and a desire to share His light and gospel with others.

The most perfect example from the Book of Mormon is Jesus Christ Himself. The words he spoke to the Nephite people, whom He visited in the Americas following His resurrection, are of supreme value.

As I went through the Book of Mormon’s 531 pages, making this list, I was overwhelmed with how often Jesus Christ is mentioned, praised, prophesied of, and reverenced. The Book of Mormon truly is a companion to the Bible – another testament of Jesus Christ.

I know it is true. I invite you to read it and to pray about it to see if it is true for yourself. Let the Spirit of the Lord work within you, and testify to you of its truthfulness.

Tuesday, March 04, 2025

Homesick For Eternal Home

There’s a reason we feel out of place and uncomfortable in life sometimes.

Elder Dieter F. Uchtdorf of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles discusses how every eternal being has a deep-rooted longing to return to our heavenly home. In the accompanying article, the author shares her own feelings about her homesickness for that same eternal home.

I was the poster child for homesickness.

When I was small, despite the fun I would be having at slumber parties, there always came a point in the night when I would call my parents, asking to go home while the rest of my friends slept soundly. I remember nights when I would be giggling with my friends while playing hide-and-seek and eating too much pizza and chocolate licorice, only to feel a deep anxiety settle into my chest when I noticed the sun disappearing outside and how “far away” from home I seemed to be. Fun fact: most of these sleepovers took place only about five minutes away from my house (luckily I can laugh about it now).

Interestingly enough, I still get homesick. Sure, I like to travel as much as the next young adult, but after a few days of exploring a new city, there is nothing quite like returning to the comfort and familiarity I can find only at home. But lately, with my life being filled with making never-ending to-do lists, worries about the future, and exhaustion that never seems to go away, I’ve again noticed that same deep-rooted anxiety I used to feel as a child when I was away from home. Which confused me at first, because how could I possibly feel homesick within my home? But one day I finally realized what this odd feeling is: It’s homesickness for my real home. My eternal home.

Elder Dieter F. Uchtdorf of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles recently spoke about this sort of homesickness, saying: “I believe that every man, woman, and child has felt the call of heaven at some point in his or her life. Deep within us is a longing to somehow reach past the veil and embrace Heavenly Parents we once knew and cherished.”

Sometimes I forget that this earth is our temporary home. We are spiritual beings on a mortal journey. We’ve never done this before! No wonder we feel so lost and awkward and freaked out from time to time. We are here on a journey to return to our true home. When you think about it that way (and when you realize that this extended time on earth is not meant to be as much fun as a vacation at the beach), it’s only natural that we all long to go back to our Heavenly Father.

I think we feel this homesickness for our eternal home especially when we try to do our best and see minimum results, when we face certain trials that never seem to end, and when we are completely exhausted and overwhelmed from everything life throws at us. Sometimes it feels like just as I manage to take a step forward, some crazy situation or mistake flips me around and pushes me back in the opposite direction! And that can make my eternal home seem farther away than ever.

That’s when I have to remember.

I have to step back, breathe, and remember who I am, where I am, and where I will be someday if I keep moving forward on the path of discipleship. I have to remember that this life is a mere speck on the time line of eternity. I have to remember that Heavenly Father once told me that this temporary home would be filled with sorrow and confusion and challenges, but if I would keep going even when things got hard, I could make it back to Him. I have to remember that the Savior can help me overcome my weaknesses and move on. I have to remember that I chose to come here because this short separation from the comfort of my Heavenly Father that allows me to grow, better myself, and become like Him will be worth everything.

I can’t even fathom the indescribable joy, familiarity, and peace I will feel when I am reunited with my Heavenly Parents. But until then, I’ll treat this temporary home for what it is: a privilege. This life is meant to be a test. We need to be patient with ourselves because this is a new experience for all of us. And though our homesickness for our eternal home may always be deep within our hearts, we don’t have to feel lost or alone. Living the gospel of Jesus Christ can give us a small taste of that peace our eternal home will someday bring us. The gospel can give us hope to keep moving forward, and it is the key to finding our way back.

Just as I knew I could call my parents for help whenever I felt homesick, I know that Heavenly Father is only a prayer away. He wants to help us. He wants us to return to Him. And because of that, we can take comfort in knowing that as we seek Him, He will bring us one step closer to home. As Elder Uchtdorf taught: “When you walk the path of discipleship—when you move toward Heavenly Father—there is something within you that will confirm that you have heard the call of the Savior and set your heart toward the light. It will tell you that you are on the right path and that you are returning home.”


Sunday, February 23, 2025

Hikikomori Syndrome

Hikikomori Syndrome: A Cry for Help or a Lifestyle Choice?

You wake up at noon, staring at the ceiling. Your phone buzzes, but you ignore it. Another day of silence. You tell yourself it’s just temporary but days turn into months, and stepping outside feels harder than ever. If this sounds familiar, you might be experiencing something known as hikikomori syndrome. What Is Hikikomori Syndrome? Originally a Japanese term, hikikomori describes an extreme form of social withdrawal where individuals isolate themselves for months or even years, avoiding work, school, and social activities. While first identified in Japan, cases are now emerging globally, making it a growing concern in the modern world. Read More Here: 6 Therapeutic Japanese Words With Deep Meaning According to the Japanese government, 1.46 million people between the ages of 15 and 64, roughly 2% of the population live as hikikomori as of April 2023. Although hikikomori is frequently linked to Japan, examples of this type have been documented all over the world, including in the US, South Korea, China, Italy, France, and Spain.  The estimated prevalence of hikikomori in South Korea is 2.3%. Research indicates that in certain Western nations, hikikomori-like social disengagement may impact 1% to 2% of the populace. Hikikomori Symptoms: It’s More Than Just Staying Indoors This condition isn’t just about being introverted or enjoying solitude, this condition is a prolonged, often debilitating withdrawal from society. If you’re dealing with this, you might notice some hikikomori symptoms: 1. You Completely Avoid Social Interaction Talking to others feels overwhelming, so you cut off friends and ignore messages. Even casual interactions, like answering the door, cause anxiety. Social events seem unbearable, making isolation feel like the only option. 2. You Spend Long Periods Without Leaving Your Room or House Your world shrinks to your room, and stepping outside feels impossible. Tasks like grocery shopping or even opening a window become overwhelming. Over time, you withdraw further, avoiding any contact with the outside world. 3. Your Sleep Patterns Are Reversed You stay up all night and sleep through the day to avoid social interactions. The quiet of the night feels safer, reinforcing your isolation. Over time, your body adjusts, making it harder to return to a normal routine. 4. You Rely Heavily on Digital Entertainment Video games, social media, and streaming replace real-life connections. The virtual world feels safe, offering control and escape from reality. Hours blur into days as you lose yourself in endless digital distractions. 5. You Neglect Self-Care Basic hygiene, grooming, and healthy eating feel unimportant or exhausting. You may skip showers, wear the same clothes, or eat irregularly. Over time, poor self-care affects your physical and mental health. 6. You Feel Trapped by Shame and Helplessness You recognize the problem, but the longer you isolate yourself, the harder it is to break free. The fear of judgment keeps you stuck in the cycle. Why Does This Happen? 5 Hikikomori Causes This syndrome isn’t caused by a single factor— Hikikomori causes are a combination of psychological, social, and economic pressures. Fear of failure – Societal expectations can feel crushing. Whether it’s school, work, or relationships, the pressure to succeed can make retreating seem like the only escape. Social anxiety and depression – Mental health struggles often fuel isolation, making even small interactions exhausting. Parental dependency – In many cases, family members enable the behavior by providing financial support, making it easier to continue avoiding the outside world. Digital addiction – The internet offers an easy escape, replacing real-world interactions with virtual ones. Cultural or economic stagnation – In places like Japan, intense competition and rigid social structures make it hard for some individuals to find their place, leading them to withdraw altogether. Overcoming hikikomori takes time, but small steps can lead to big changes. 

Practical Steps to Recovery Shift Your Environment: Open the blinds, let fresh air in, and create a comfortable space. Ease Into Interaction: Start with online communities or brief conversations with a trusted person. Step Outside Gradually: A short walk at dawn or late evening can feel less overwhelming. Find a Meaningful Routine: Engage in a hobby, take up remote work, or set personal goals. Be Patient with Yourself: Progress takes time, setbacks don’t mean failure. 

 

Tuesday, February 18, 2025

10 Bible Verses About Being Fat

What Does the Bible Say About Being Fat?


Weight is a topic that many people think about, whether for health, appearance, or self-esteem.

In today’s world, body image is often a big concern, and people wonder what the Bible says about being overweight.

Does God care about our physical bodies?


Does being overweight mean someone is sinning?

Let’s explore what Scripture really teaches about weight, health, and how we should see ourselves in God’s eyes.

Does the Bible Say Anything About Being Overweight?

The Bible does not directly say that being overweight is a sin.

There are no verses that condemn a person simply for their body size.

However, the Bible does talk about self-control, caring for the body, and avoiding gluttony.

1 Corinthians 6:19-20 says, “Do you not know that your bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God? You are not your own; you were bought at a price. Therefore, honor God with your bodies.”

This verse reminds us that our bodies belong to God, and we should care for them.

That doesn’t mean we have to be a certain weight, but it does encourage us to live in a way that is healthy and honors God.

Gluttony vs. Being Overweight

Some people assume that being overweight automatically means someone is guilty of gluttony.

However, these two things are not always the same.

Gluttony is defined as excessive eating and overindulgence.

Proverbs 23:20-21 warns, “Do not join those who drink too much wine or gorge themselves on meat, for drunkards and gluttons become poor, and drowsiness clothes them in rags.”

This verse shows that overeating and overdrinking can lead to negative consequences. However, not everyone who is overweight eats excessively.

Many factors can contribute to a person’s weight, including genetics, medical conditions, stress, and life circumstances.

Instead of judging others, the Bible encourages self-examination and kindness.

Romans 14:3 says, “The one who eats everything must not treat with contempt the one who does not, and the one who does not eat everything must not judge the one who does, for God has accepted them.”

This means that food choices and body size should not be reasons for judgment.

God looks at the heart, not just the outward appearance.

The Importance of Self-Control

While being overweight is not a sin, the Bible does emphasize self-control.

Galatians 5:22-23 lists self-control as one of the fruits of the Spirit.

This means that part of living a God-honoring life is being mindful of our actions, including how we eat and care for our bodies.

Philippians 4:5 says, “Let your gentleness be evident to all. The Lord is near.”

This applies to how we treat our bodies as well. We should strive for balance—eating in a way that nourishes the body while also enjoying food in moderation.

The goal is not to focus on weight alone but to develop a lifestyle that is both spiritually and physically healthy.

Does God Care About Appearance?

In a world that often judges people by how they look, it’s important to remember that God does not see us the way the world does.

1 Samuel 16:7 says, “The Lord does not look at the things people look at. People look at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart.”

God is far more concerned with our character than our clothing size.

He does not define a person’s worth by their weight.

What matters most is our relationship with Him, our love for others, and the way we live our lives.

Society may place high importance on appearance, but God values the heart above all else.

Taking Care of the Body Without Obsession

Caring for our health is important, but the Bible also warns against obsessing over physical appearance.

1 Timothy 4:8 says, “For physical training is of some value, but godliness has value for all things, holding promise for both the present life and the life to come.”

This verse acknowledges that physical health has benefits, but it also reminds us that spiritual health is even more important.

A healthy lifestyle is good, but it should not become an idol.

Our identity should be rooted in Christ, not in a number on a scale.

Finding Confidence in God’s Love

Many people struggle with body image and self-worth.

The good news is that our value is not based on what we weigh, but on the fact that we are loved by God.

Psalm 139:14 says, “I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well.”

Each person is created by God with care and purpose.

Weight does not change God’s love for us.

No matter how we look, we are valuable in His eyes.

Should Christians Diet?

Many Christians wonder if it is okay to go on a diet.

There is nothing wrong with making healthier choices, but the Bible encourages balance rather than extremes.

Ecclesiastes 3:13 says, “That each of them may eat and drink, and find satisfaction in all their toil—this is the gift of God.”

Food is a blessing, not something to fear.

If someone chooses to diet, it should be done in a way that is sustainable and healthy, not in a way that leads to guilt or frustration.

Whatever we do, it should be done with a heart that seeks to honor God.

Encouraging Others Instead of Judging

Christians are called to build one another up, not tear each other down.

Ephesians 4:29 says, “Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen.”

Shaming others for their weight does not reflect God’s love.

Instead, we should encourage each other in kindness, supporting one another in both physical and spiritual health.

Jesus spent time with all kinds of people and showed love to everyone, regardless of their appearance.

As His followers, we should do the same.

Balancing Health and Enjoying Life

The Bible does not demand perfection when it comes to eating or body size.

It teaches balance.

Proverbs 25:16 says, “If you find honey, eat just enough—too much of it, and you will vomit.”

This verse highlights moderation.

It is okay to enjoy food, but overindulgence can lead to problems.

Likewise, completely avoiding enjoyable foods out of fear can also be unhealthy.

A balanced approach—one that includes nourishment, enjoyment, and gratitude—is the best way to care for the body while still honoring God.

Final Thoughts

The Bible does not condemn being overweight, nor does it say that body size determines a person’s worth.

God cares about the heart far more than physical appearance.

While the Bible encourages self-control and healthy living, it also reminds us that our identity is found in Christ, not in a number on a scale.

Instead of focusing on weight alone, believers should strive for a lifestyle that honors God in all areas—spiritually, mentally, and physically.

Whether a person is thin, heavy, or somewhere in between, God’s love remains the same.

True confidence comes from knowing we are created by Him, loved by Him, and valuable in His sight.

Our goal should be to honor God in everything we do, including how we care for our bodies, while also remembering that our worth is never based on our size.

Tuesday, August 22, 2023

One Barbell Circuit Training

The One Barbell Circuit Workout

 All of the circuit training routines I have seen in the past involved jumping between 5-10 different machines, which really didn’t seem practical to me in a busy gym.

One Barbell Circuit Training

In the 80’s and early 90’s this was pushed extremely hard in a lot of the mainstream gyms.

The selling point was that it took just 3 thirty minute sessions per week to get in amazing shape.

They even sold memberships where you were only allowed access to the gyms on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.

Because of this, I guess circuit training left a bad taste in my mouth.
Taking a 2nd Look at Circuit Training, I’ve Changed My Mind

I think there are A LOT of readers that would benefit tremendously from a well-planned circuit training routine.

There are quite a few people who read this blog and don’t have a gym membership or fancy equipment at home.

Others have weights, but they don’t have a good treadmill or exercise bike.

When I was 15 and started working out at home, this would have been the perfect workout for me.
Burn a Bunch of Fat Without Cardio?

This is a COMPLETELY different approach to anything I’ve ever mentioned on this site when it comes to getting defined. The reason we are going to discuss this approach is that it works.

I will never hold back any information about approaches that work, even they clash with some of my basic philosophies.

Although I will still choose the cardio approach, this may work better for certain people.
A Fat Burning Routine That You Can Do With Weights?

The great thing about circuit training is that it is a way to burn fat while lifting.

You aren’t lifting for mass or strength necessarily, you are lifting to create an HGH response, which in turn will burn a substantial amount of body fat.

Think of this as doing High Intensity Interval Training with weights.

If done properly, you can easy keep your heartbeat between 140-160 beats per minute.

The great thing is that this type of workout works exceptionally well at burning calories long after the workout is over.

Some Circuit Training Basics

A circuit involves following several planned exercises performed back-to-back with as little rest as possible.

It is best to average no longer than 15 seconds in between sets, 30 would be the maximum amount of rest, but probably too much for maximum benefit.

Circuit training is not good for building a lot of mass, which is why I like it as a cardio alternative.

Make no mistake about it, circuit training will kick your butt.
A Circuit Training Routine That Can Be Done With One Barbell

A reader of this blog named Rob came forwarded a great circuit training that can be performed with one barbell…and using the same weight for each exercise.

This is a simple, yet brilliant way to get the most out of a circuit training routine. If you don’t need to hop between equipment or change the weight, you will be able to perform one exercise after another back-to-back. This will make this brutally effective.

Thanks Rob!
Rob’s Barbell Circuit Training Routine

Grab a barbell with a 10 on each side (65 lbs total), perform exercises with no rest in between (women can use lighter weights, dumbbells will work too):

10 Romanian Deadlifts
10 Bent Over Rows
10 Hang Cleans
10 Front Squats
10 Push Presses
10 Lunges, each leg, with barbell on back

Rest 2-3 minutes, repeat 3 times.

Try to work up to doing this 6-8 times in a workout, by the time you can do this 8 times your body will be looking very lean!

Some Great Points Rob Made Regarding Cardio

“I’m sure you know the principle of progressive overload. In order to progress in cardio exercise you must either increase speed or time. Here’s a resistance routine to try, it won’t build huge muscles, doesn’t use heavy weights, but I guarantee it will have you breathing harder than any traditional cardio work. This routine will keep your metabolic rate up for hours and hours.”

I still believe that you can get ripped with cardio, but he has some great points as to why this might be a great alternative or a way to supplement your cardio.

You could take a break from cardio for part of the year and do this, substitute one to two cardio workouts with this circuit routine, alternate every other workout with cardio and this circuit, etc.

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Tuesday, December 06, 2022

The Optimum Temperature For Gyms And Leisure Facilities

Gym and leisure facility use will result in perspiration, whether it’s from working out or relaxing in the sauna afterward. The use of a well-maintained air conditioning unit might assist keep you from becoming too hot when you’re working out hard. However, what is the ideal temperature for a gym or a leisure centre?

The Optimum Temperature For Gyms And Leisure Facilities

Gyms’ humidity and temperature can vary widely. Personalised service is possible in smaller facilities but fulfilling the comfort standards of customers in bigger ones may be challenging. Dehydration and heat stroke are risks that can be exacerbated. Extreme temperatures should be avoided no matter what heating and humidification options are chosen. If people have pre-existing conditions within the gym they should definitely be considered, as it is possible that extreme heat and cold could be very damaging to their conditions.

Why Is It Important to Have Efficient HVAC, Air Conditioning and Commercial Boiler Systems?

When it comes to gym or leisure centre temperatures, there aren’t any special rules in place. However, other safety standards at the gym are covered under generic health and safety legislation that gyms preferably have ceiling-mounted air conditioning units.

Despite the fact that there are no particular standards for indoor recreation areas, we can estimate how to attain the ideal temperature for these locations using the minimal criteria for workplaces.

A workplace’s ideal temperature should be 16°C. However, if the work involves rigorous physical exertion, the optimum environment temperature should be at 13°C. Again, this is not a legal necessity, but it provides you a sense of what a comfortable temperature is for exercising.

So what is the ideal gym temperature in celsius? Fitness experts say that working out inside is best done at a temperature between 13°C and 20°C. Whether you’re running on a treadmill, attending a step class, or lifting weights, this is the range most people can tolerate. This is similar to other leisure centres where moderate to light activities are performed, where the ideal temperature must be around 16°C to 20°C.

This is why it is very important to have an efficient HVAC system like air conditioning units and commercial boilers that work properly to provide the right temperature in your fitness gym or leisure facility.

Risks of High Temperatures in Gyms and Leisure Centres

When the gym is too hot, you’re already sweating before you’ve even started your workout. Working out in a hot gym is also a dangerous activity since it increases the risk of dehydration and heat stroke. When considering the ideal temperature for gyms it is best to consider what activity will be taking place, it is better to be slightly too cool rather than too warm.

The Optimum Temperature For Gyms And Leisure Facilities

Even excessive perspiration, on the other hand, might be harmful. Even if gym-goers perceive an extra pound of weight loss after their workout due to over-sweating, the weight lost is fluids from sweating and will be reversed if they drink enough water afterward. According to the research, working out for an extended amount of time in a hot gym might lead to training that is 50% less productive.

Risks of Low Temperatures in Gyms and Leisure Centres

While it is unusual that your fitness centre would be excessively cold, this can occasionally happen and it is just as bad as sweating it out in a hot gym. Working out in a cold environment increases the chance of injury. This is due to the fact that cold causes muscular spasms which is why warming up before physical activity is so important.

Our muscles work like rubber or clay. If exposed to extremely cold temperatures, they could lose malleability. The muscle will not stretch and instead will break.

Low temperatures can also be risky for people with pre-existing health conditions or people who are older, and these are probably not people you want to discourage from attending your gym. You can see why the ideal gym temperature is such a fine art!

How to Keep Gym and Leisure Centre Temperatures Perfectly Regulated 

In order to keep a gym or any other leisure centre at a constant, ideal temperature, the purpose of each space and the type of activities performed should be taken into account. Installing and performing regular maintenance to air conditioning units that offer low energy consumption models that match your carbon emission objectives.

Investing in an efficient HVAC system will assist manage a pleasant building temperature. It is also important to make sure that your air conditioning units or commercial boilers are working properly to maintain the optimal temperature for your gym or leisure facility.

Summary – Finding the Ideal Gym Temperature

If you want your customers to get the most out of each workout, make sure they are working out in a pleasant setting by keeping an eye on your HVAC system like air conditioning units and commercial boilers and making adjustments as needed.

If a gym or a leisure centre gets a bad rap for being excessively chilly or stuffy, patrons will eventually have to look for another place where they can work out more efficiently or relax more peacefully


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Monday, December 05, 2022

Top Seven Lies Fitness Magazines Love To Tell

Top Seven Biggest Lies Fitness Magazines Love to Tell

What do you think about fitness magazines? Have anything else to share? Let me know in the comments below!
The first problem magazines face is the nature of their business: selling information.

Magazines need to keep people buying and subscribing every month. What do you think is the best marketing button to push to accomplish this?

Top Seven Lies Fitness Magazines Love To Tell

The easiest way to keep people hooked is to continually give new advice–new training methodologies, diet “tricks,” supplement research, and the like.

This isn’t bad per se. Health and fitness are vast subjects with myriad tunnels, caverns, and trails to explore. Most of it won’t sell magazines though.

Your average guy or gal isn’t nearly as interested in the nuances of training periodization as how to lose belly fat. How to change your body weight set point versus how to build bigger arms…which do you think makes for a better magazine cover?

They know their target market wants, more than anything else, abs, bigger armsand a bigger chest, and more sex, money, confidence, intelligence, and health.

Hence, the endless repetition of cover lines like “Six-Pack Abs!” “Dress For More Sex!” and “Build Wealth Fast!” and the endless supply of rehashed…er…re-imagined…articles to go with them.

The truth, however, is it doesn’t take 13 different articles to teach someone how to get six-pack abs or bigger arms or even their “best body ever.”

If magazines told the simple truth every month, they would have maybe 20 articles that they could reprint, verbatim, over and over. And that’s a horrible plan for an information subscription business.

And, to be honest, the articles wouldn’t be terribly exciting. They might have titles like…

How to Build 15 Pounds of Muscle In Your First Year

Move More, Eat Less–The “Secret” to Weight Loss

Why the Most Popular Bodybuilding Supplements Do Nothing

That is, they would teach you “inconvenient truths” like you can’t build muscle as fast as you’d like…you can’t target belly fat for elimination..and you’ll need more than twelve 50-word tips to build the body of your dreams.

It all boils down to diligent and consistent application of the fundamentals and it takes time. The sooner you accept these realities the sooner you can start making real progress.
The second problem magazines face is the nature of their revenue: advertising.



Many of the mainstream fitness magazines are little more than mouthpieces for supplement companies, which either own them outright or control them financially through advertising spend.

If these magazines are to stay in business, they must provide their supplement advertisers with a return on investment, and they’ve gotten really good at it.

They push supplements in various ways: pretty advertisements, “advertorials” (advertisements disguised as informative articles), and “soft-sell” articles that provide workout and nutrition advice that include supplement recommendations.

Thus, much of what you’re “learning” in magazines is geared toward selling you products, not actually helping you achieve your goals as efficiently as possible.

“But wait,” you might be thinking, “don’t supplements help me reach my goals?”

Well, the long story short is most supplements are a complete waste of money and will do absolutely nothing to help you build muscle or lose fat.

Don’t believe for a second that these pills and powders do anything special for the shredded bodybuilders and fitness models hawking them. If you knew the sheer amount of drugs many of these people are on, your head would spin. Their bodies are basically chemistry experiments.

So, as long magazine publishers keep getting their shlock into people’s hands, supplement companies will keep paying and all will be right in the world. This, then, brings us back to problem #1: how to keep selling magazines. And so the vicious cycle continues.

So, now that you know a bit more about the fitness magazine game, let’s move on to the meat of this article: the 7 biggest lies they tell to keep people buying, trying, and failing.
Fitness Magazine Lie #1:

“Ab Workouts” Give You Abs



If there’s one thing that keeps fitness-minded people up late at night Googling, wallet in hand, it’s the quest to get “six-pack abs.”

You may be strong…you may be big…but all the cool kids have killer abs. And just about everyone wants in on the party.

The problem, however, is the sheer amount of awful, misleading, and downright detrimental “six-pack” advice out there.Some people say you just have to do special types of ab workouts every day…and they’re wrong.
Some people say you should just squat and deadlift and you’ll have great abs…and they’re wrong.
Some people say you have to eat certain types of foods and not eat others…and they’re wrong.
Some people say you just have to have a low body fat percentage…and they’re wrong.
And some people say it’s all in the supplements…and they’re just lying.

The reality is you have to do just two things to have great abs:Lose the belly fat.
Build the core muscles.

You see, the first thing you need to know is this:

The main reason you don’t have abs is you have too much fat covering them.

This isn’t exactly news to most people…but…what they don’t know is just how lean you have to be to have a clearly visible six pack.

Well, the rule of thumb is the abs really start to become visible at 10% body fat and under in men and 20% and under in women. And the “shredded” look starts at ~7% and under in men and ~15% and under in women.

If you’re not familiar with how various body fat percentages look, these images will help:

Top Seven Lies Fitness Magazines Love To Tell

Top Seven Lies Fitness Magazines Love To Tell

So, step one is get lean and you’ll have abs. But not necessarily great abs, which is where building your core comes in. And, like most things health and fitness, this is made to seem much more complicated than it actually is.

There are an almost endless variety of ab exercises and far too many opinions on what’s better than what. Fortunately, however, you only need to focus on a handful of to fully develop your core. 

Fitness Magazine Lie #2:

Here’s How So-and-So Got Ripped for Their Movie



Evans in Captain America, Cavill in Man of Steel, Hemsworth in Thor, Jackman in X-Men, Pitt in Troy, Bale in Batman, Butler in 300.

Ever year some new stud pops up on the silver screen with a body that makes the gals swoon and the guys re-up their gym memberships. And the magazines have a field day.

Covers get Photoshopped, workouts that the stars didn’t do get invented, and supplements they didn’t take get hawked.

Well, let’s cut the bullshit and get right the point: when you hear of a guy gaining 30 pounds of muscle in 4 months, the first thing you should suspect is steroids.

I know, I know…people love to cry steroids when they see someone in better shape than them, but hear me out.

Research shows that a guy new to weightlifting can expect to gain anywhere from 15 to 20 pounds of muscle in his first year of weightlifting. (And for women, cut those numbers in half.)

And that’s assuming he’s/she’s following a well-designed training program and diet. Anything less will deliver less results.

The same research shows that in year two, he can expect about half of the year one gains (8 to 10 pounds in men and half in women). Year three, half again. And from year four on out, anywhere from 2 to 5 pounds per year.

Yes, natural muscle growth really does take that long.

That’s why it usually takes 3 to 5 years for guys and gals to gain the 35 to 45/15 to 20 pounds of muscle required to naturally transform their physiques from “normal” to “fitness model.”

Now, how do these projections change when steroids are added to the picture?

Well, let’s first look at an extensive review of anabolic steroid use conducted by scientists at Maastricht University. They found that experienced weightlifters using anabolic steroids were able to gain between 4.5 and 11 pounds of muscle in less than ten weeks. The largest amount of muscle growth they saw was 15.5 pounds over 6 weeks of steroid-fueled weightlifting.

Those are some pretty outrageous numbers that could never be replicated naturally.

Another study that lends insight to the power of steroids was a case study conducted with an elite bodybuilder. Researchers followed him for a year, and he used steroids for all but 4 weeks of the 12-month period. By the end of the year, he had gained about 15 pounds of muscle, or about triple the amount that he should have been able to gain naturally.

So, now that you know how much steroid use affects muscle growth, let’s get back to actors training for movie roles.

The most obvious red flag is the how quickly they get fit and how dramatically their bodies change.

It’s common to hear about so-and-so going from a dad bod to gaining 20+ pounds of muscle in a few months while staying lean, or even reducing body fat.

Some of these guys have muscle memory on their side but that’s just not enough to put up results like that. You can bet that drugs were involved.

Now, did the guys I named earlier do this? I don’t know. But I don’t know why they wouldn’t have. Think about it for a second.

Most actors aren’t gym rats that stay jacked throughout the year and they have some really good reasons to use steroids to secure a role.

Millions of dollars and, often, a career jump are on the line, results are needed very quickly, and world-class bodybuilding coaches and doctors are available to ensure everything is done properly.

Hell, who can blame them really? Can you really say you wouldn’t do the same thing if you were in the same position?

So, my point here isn’t to call out anyone in particular or even speak badly of Hollywood folk that use steroids to prep for movies. I could care less what people do with their bodies.

It’s unfortunate, however, that their transformations are used to sell people on diets and workout routines that simply won’t work without the drugs.

When you hear that so-and-so lifted weights for 2+ hours per day, 7 days per week, and then did conditioning work on top of that…and ate thousands of calories per day…and came out bigger, leaner, and stronger than ever in just 3 months…just know what you’re looking at.
Fitness Magazine Lie #3:

This Supplement Changes Everything

Top Seven Lies Fitness Magazines Love To Tell

Let’s start out by making something abundantly clear:

There is no single supplement that is going to make a dramatic difference in your training, muscle growth, or fat loss.

A combination of the right supplementscan help you reach your goals faster, but you can get there smart dieting and training alone.

The truth is most workout supplements are completely bogus and can’t deliver a fraction of the results they promise. They are, for a lack of better terms, worthless crap.

Oh can they make money, though. A lot of freaking money. And as you know, magazines have a big stake in those numbers growing.

Well, don’t buy into it. Here are the most common types of supplement bullshit:Anything other than creatine that is claimed to directly help you build muscle and strength…
Anything that is claimed to rapidly increase fat loss…
Anything that claims to naturally boost your testosterone levels…

…is bullshit.

If you’d like to know more about which supplements work and which don’t, and about supplementation in general, check this out.

Fitness Magazine Lie #4:

Cardio is a Great “Fat Loss Workout”

Top Seven Lies Fitness Magazines Love To Tell

Every morning I see the same crowd of overweight people grinding away and gushing sweat on the treadmill, StairMaster, and elliptical machines, which I imagine they’ve reserved and named by now.

And these guys and gals are just as fat as they ever were. Some are even fatter than when they started, which begs the question of what they think is going to change.

Well, they’re just stuck following decades of bad weight loss advice centered around doing long hours of cardio, which has produced millions of overtrained, overweight, underfit people addicted to burning calories instead of getting fit.

This isn’t just my opinion, either. Researchshows that just doing regular cardio guarantees little in the way of fat loss and many people wind up even fatter than when they began their exercise routines.

There are several reasons why cardio isn’t all that great for losing fat.
It’s too easy to eat the calories you burn.

You have to work damn hard just to burn a few hundred calories in a cardio workout…and it’s really damn easy to eat them all back without even realizing it. A couple handfuls of nuts and some fruit is all it takes.

The energy you burn during cardio does support your weight loss efforts, of course, but your goal isn’t to just burn calories, it’s to lose fat. And if you’re eating too much, no amount of cardio is going to get you leaner.
Your body adapts to the exercise to reduce caloric expenditure.

If someone at least halfway informed stops losing weight, she will rightly suspect the problem is overeating.

What she probably won’t suspect, though, is the adaptive aspect of exercise.

Research shows that the more frequently you do a certain type of activity, the more your body adapts to increase energy efficiency. This means that, as time goes on, less and less energy is needed to continue doing it.

This can throw people for a loop because it leads them to believe they’re burning more calories doing cardio than they actually are.

This, then leads them to eat too much food, fail to lose weight, and then wonder what the hell is wrong. Metabolic “damage”? Thyroid problems? Genetic curse?

Many people stuck in this quandary refuse to give up, though, and do the only thing they know: more cardio. This “fight fire with fire” approach does increase overall caloric expenditure but also accelerates metabolic slowdown and brings various health risks into play.

The right way to look at cardio and weight loss is this:

The less cardio you can do while still reaching your body composition goals, the better.

Cardio doesn’t preserve muscle, which is just as important as losing fat.

Top Seven Lies Fitness Magazines Love To Tell

We say we want to lose weight but what we really want is to lose fat.

This isn’t pedantry.

Losing weight includes losing muscle,which is what you can expect when you restrict your calories and do a lot of cardio, and which is what causes the “skinny fat” look.

The key here is including resistance training in your regimen, which speeds up fat loss and helps minimize muscle loss. In fact, when you’re dieting for fat loss, I recommend that you do 2 to 3 times as much resistance training as cardio.

The Bottom Line on Cardio Workouts and Weight Loss

Cardio can help you lose fat faster but it just doesn’t deserve all the attention it gets.

I’ve already mentioned that I do no more than a couple hours of cardio per week when cutting, and here’s how I go about it.

Fitness Magazine Lie #5:

You Have to “Eat Clean” to Get Fit

Top Seven Lies Fitness Magazines Love To Tell

The cult of “clean eating” is more popular than ever these days. And while it has its heart in the right place, it really misses the forest for the trees.

What most “clean eaters” don’t realize is the nutritional value of food has little to do with its effect on your body composition.

There’s no questioning that you need to eat plenty of nutritious foods to stay healthy, but there are no foods that directly cause weight loss or weight gain.

Sugar isn’t your enemy and “healthy fats” aren’t your savior.

The key to understanding these “blasphemous” statements is understanding the concept of “energy balance,” which is the relationship between the amount of energy you eat and the amount you burn.

The immutable reality is meaningful weight loss requires eating less energy than you expend and meaningful weight gain requires the opposite (eating more than you burn).

You see, when you eat less energy than you burn, you’re in what’s known as a “negative energy balance” or “calorie deficit.” This results in weight loss. And when you eat more than you burn, you’re in a “positive energy balance” or “calorie surplus.” This results in weight gain.

Thus, in this sense, a calorie is a calorie.

Eat too many calories of the “cleanest” foods in the world and you will gain weight. Maintain a calorie deficit while following a “gas station diet” of the most nutritionally bankrupt crap you can find and you will lose weight.

This is why Professor Mark Haub was able to lose 27 pounds on a diet of protein shakes, Twinkies, Doritos, Oreos, and Little Debbie snacks. He simply ate fewer crappy calories than his body burned and, as the first law of thermodynamics dictates, this resulted in a reduction in total fat mass.

Fitness Magazine Lie #6:

Low-Carb Dieting is the Way of the Future



Top Seven Lies Fitness Magazines Love To Tell

Dietary demagogues are leveling some pretty serious charges against the carbohydrate these days.

If we’re to buy into the hysteria, carbs make us fat, braindead, and diseased, and the sooner we forsake them, the better our chances for vitality, happiness, and longevity.

Well, that’s a bunch of hooey.

Unless you’re overweight and sedentary, carbohydrates aren’t the enemy. They don’t make you fat or unhealthy.

In fact, carbs are vitally important for building muscle and reducing your intake doesn’t help you lose fat faster.

Let’s first look at how eating carbs helps you build muscle.

How Carbs Help You Build Muscle



When you eat carbs, one of the substances they are broken down into is glycogen, which is a form of potential energy stored in the liver and muscles.

Resistance training is an anaerobic activity, which means it pulls heavily on muscle glycogen stores.

When your muscles are full of glycogen, which requires a rather high carb intake, they perform better and sustain less damage during training.

And when we look at the bigger picture of muscle growth, the importance of these benefits becomes clear.

The harder you can push your muscles in your workouts, the better you can progressively overload them over time…which increases muscle growth. And the less exercise-induced protein degradation there is, the greater the gap there will be between protein synthesis and breakdown rates…which increases muscle gain.

Another muscle-building benefit of a high-carb diet relates to insulin production.

Carb haters will tell you that the insulin “spike” that occurs when you eat carbs is one of the biggest reasons they’re so bad for you, but this is laughable.

First, insulin’s job is to shuttle nutrients from your blood into your cells. It’s vitally important and nothing to be afraid of.

Second, low-carb advocates usually extol the virtues high-protein dieting, which I agree with, but most forms of protein “spike” insulin production just as carbs do. For example, whey protein is more insulinogenic than white bread and eating beef causes just as much insulin to be released as brown rice.

They can’t have it both ways. You can’t say the insulin spike that occurs when you eat carbs is worse than the almost identical spike that occurs when you eat protein.

Now, what does all this have to do with building muscle?

Well, insulin doesn’t directly stimulate muscle growth like amino acids do, but it is anti-catabolic, which means it slows down the rate at which muscle proteins are broken down.

This affects muscle growth because, as mentioned earlier, anything that suppresses muscle protein breakdown rates is going to affect the “bottom line” of muscle proteins gained vs. lost is going to, over time, affect total lean mass gained or lost.

That’s not just theory, either. There are several studies that conclusively show that high-carbohydrate diets are superior to low-carbohydrate varieties for building muscle and strength.

Researchers at Ball State University found that low muscle glycogen levels (which is inevitable with low-carbohydrate dieting) impair post-workout cell signaling related to muscle growth.

A study conducted by researchers at the University of North Carolina found that when combined with daily exercise, a low-carbohydrate diet increased resting cortisol levels and decreased free testosterone levels.

(Cortisol, by the way, is a hormone that breaks tissues, including muscle, down. It’s also inversely correlated with testosterone, meaning that someone with chronically high cortisol levels is going to have chronically low levels of testosterone, which isn’t ideal for building muscle.)

These studies help explain the findings of other research on low-carbohydrate dieting.

For example, a study conducted by researchers at the University of Rhode Island looked at how low- and high-carbohydrate intakes affected exercise-induced muscle damage, strength recovery, and whole body protein metabolism after a strenuous workout.

The result was the subjects on the low-carbohydrate diet (which wasn’t all that low, actually—about 226 grams per day, versus 353 grams per day for the high-carbohydrate group) lost more strength, recovered slower, and showed lower levels of protein synthesis.

In this study, researchers at McMaster University compared high- and low-carbohydrate dieting with subjects performing daily leg workouts. They found that those on the low-carbohydrate diet experienced higher rates of protein breakdown and lower rates of protein synthesis, resulting in less overall muscle growth than their higher-carbohydrate counterparts.

All this is why I never drop my carbohydrate intake lower than about .8 grams per pound of body weight when cutting (and yes I get to 6% body fat eating this many carbs per day), and I’ll go as high as 2 to 2.5 grams per pound when bulking.

Why a Low-Carb Diet Isn’t Better for Losing Fat




That statement is fitness sacrilege these days, but the widely popular advice to go on a low-carb diet to maximize fat loss is scientifically bankrupt.

There are about 20 studies that low-carb proponents bandy about as definitive proof of the superiority of low-carb dieting for weight loss. This, this, and this are common examples. If you simply read the abstracts of these studies, low-carb dieting definitely seems more effective, and this type of glib “research” is what most low-carbers base their beliefs on.

But there’s a big problem with many of these studies, and it has to do with protein intake.

The problem is the low-carb diets in these studies invariably contained more protein than the low-fat diets. Yes, one for one…without fail.

What we’re actually looking at in these studies is a high-protein, low-carbohydrate diet vs. low-protein, high-fat diet, and the former wins every time. But we can’t ignore the high-protein part and say it’s more effective because of the low-carb element.

In fact, better designed and executed studies prove the opposite: that when protein intake is high, low-carb dieting offers no especial weight loss benefits.

But we’ll get to that in a minute.

Why is protein intake so important, exactly? Because adequate protein intake while dieting for fat loss is vital for preserving lean mass, both with sedentary people and especially with athletes.

If you don’t eat enough protein when dieting to lose weight, you can lose quite a bit of muscle, and this in turn hampers your weight loss in several ways:

1. It causes your basal metabolic rate to drop.

2. It reduces the amount of calories you burn in your workouts.

3. It impairs the metabolism of glucose and lipids.

As you can see, when you want to lose fat, your number one goal to preserve lean mass.

Now, let’s turn our attention back to the “low-carb dieting is better” studies mentioned earlier. In many cases, the low-fat groups were given less protein than even the RDI of .8 grams per kg of body weight, which is just woefully inadequate for weight loss purposes. Research has shown that even double and triple those (RDI) levels of protein intake isn’t enough to fully prevent the loss of lean mass while restricting calories for fat loss.

So, what happens in terms of weight loss when you keep protein intake high and compare high and low levels of carbohydrate intake? Is there even any research available to show us?

Yup.

There are four studies I know of that meet these criteria and gee whiz look at that…when protein intake is high and matched among low-carb and high-carb dieters, there is no significant difference in weight loss.

The bottom line is so long as you maintain a proper calorie deficit and keep your protein intake high, you’re going to maximize fat loss while preserving as much lean mass as possible. Going low-carb as well won’t help you lose more weight.

Fitness Magazine Lie #7:

Women Shouldn’t Lift Heavy Weights

Top Seven Lies Fitness Magazines Love To Tell

If there’s one lie that causes more harm to women’s physiques than any other, it’s the warning that heavy weightlifting makes you “bulky.”

At first glance, it sounds plausible. Heavy weights are for the boys that want bulging biceps, right? Why would women, who want long, lean, “toned” muscles, train in the same way? Apparent proof of this myth can be found at any local CrossFit box, where you’ll see at least a few women with builds that would make a linebacker jealous.

Well, the first thing you should know it’s very hard for women to build a big, bulky body. It doesn’t happen by accident or overnight. It takes years of intense training and eating to look like a dyed-in-the-wool weightlifter.

Trust me–even if you wanted to get big, bulky muscles, you’d have a hell of a time actually doing it. Men have about 10 to 15 times as much testosterone as women and even we have trouble getting big and bulky. That means it’s damn near impossible for you.

This heavy weightlifting fallacy is so detrimental because heavy weightlifting is actually the only way to get the look most women are after: athletic, tight muscles with curves and lines in the right places.

If this is your goal, you’re going to have to build muscle, and heavy weightlifting is great for doing just that.

The key to building muscle and not “bulk,” however, is staying lean. The more muscle you have, the more you have to pay attention to your body fat percentage.

Take an athletic woman with an enviable body. You know, shapely legs, curvy butt, tight arms, and flat stomach. Add 15 pounds of fat to her frame, however, and you might be surprised how “blocky” she looks.

This is because fat accumulates inside and on top of muscles, and the more you have of both, the larger and more amorphous your body looks. Your legs turn into logs. Your butt gets too big for your britches. Your arms fill up like sausages.

Reduce your body fat levels, however, and everything changes–the muscle you’ve built is able to shine. Instead of looking flabby and malnourished, you look lean and toned. Your butt is round and perky. Your legs have sleek curves. Your arms look defined.

What types of body fat percentages am I talking about, you’re wondering?

If you want that lean, defined, athletic look, you’re going to need to maintain a body fat percentage between 15 and 20%.

I’ve worked with thousands of women and the “sweet spot” for most seems to be around 17 to 18%. This is where they can lift weights and build muscle and look both feminine and fit, and it isn’t so low that health or lifestyle is impaired.

The Bottom Line on Fitness Magazines

I could go on for another 10,000 words but I think I’ll end the assault here. I think I’ve made my point–much of what you read in magazines is just nonsense.

That said, fitness magazines aren’t all bad. Everything has its positives. I mean, even the demonic Third Reich gave us Volkswagon, Hugo Boss, the autobahn, and Wernher von Braun.

Just kidding.

To be fair, magazines do keep many people motivated to keep working out and inspire many more to pursue healthier lifestyles, but they should be viewed accordingly. Think dalliance, not dependency.
What do you think about fitness magazines? Have anything else to share? Let me know in the comments below!