Deuteronomy 8:3
"Man does not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God."
Defilement is fundamentally moral and spiritual; pride, hatred, deceit, etc, not ceremonial or dietary in the way the traditions claim. Likewise, scripture consistently teaches that righteousness is not achieved through what we ingest.
Righteousness is tied to faith, repentance, and following Christ; not consumption rituals. In Romans and Galatians we learn that justification is by faith apart from works of the law. External acts, including food or drink, do not justify.
Romans 14:17
"The kingdom of God is not a matter of eating and drinking, but of righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Spirit"
Even in the high sacramental views, righteousness itself is not caused by swallowing; it’s received by faith. The elements don’t magically override the heart.
So what drives this desire to find something greater than God that satisfies our needs?
Scripture diagnoses it clearly and repeatedly. We were created to find our satisfaction, identity, and life in God Himself, but sin warped that. Instead of resting in the Creator, we chase substitutes that promise what only He can truly give. We suppress truth and worship the creature rather than the Creator. This manifests today as sacramentalism that drifts into magic, chemical "sacraments," prosperity rituals, or even obsessive health/diet fads that promise transcendence or control. Behavior modification. The hunger for something physical we can ingest; whether called a sacrament, a medicine, a ritual, or a "health protocol". This reveals a deeper resistance to living by every word from God’s mouth. We prefer the tangible because it feels more under our control, more immediate, more "real" to our senses than simple, ongoing faith in the unseen Christ.
You can change your behavior all day long but it's not going to change your identity.
What we're talking about is the idolatry of the heart. The creature trying to secure for itself what only the Creator can give, on terms we can manage. Assurance we can taste and swallow rather than assurance received by faith alone. Participation through doing (eat this, drink this, perform this) rather than participation through dying to self and being united to Christ by worship in the Spirit and in truth.
"But, it’s not an indulgence, not earning merit, not based on performance, but Christ’s ordained way of feeding His people by faith."
Matthew 15-10
He [Jesus] said to them, "Hear and understand! It is not what enters the mouth that defiles the person, but what comes out of the mouth, this defiles the person."
The same logic applies in reverse.
It is not what enters the mouth that makes a person righteous. What comes out...faith expressing itself through love (Galatians 5:6). This reveals whether Christ is truly in us.
Behavior modification without heart change is just cleaning the outside of the cup (Matthew 23:25-26). You can fast, take communion, go vegan, microdose, or follow any system; but if the heart remains ruled by pride, fear, or self-will, the identity stays the same.
Only the new birth changes identity. And that birth is "not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God" (John 1:13).
When Jesus says "This is my body…this is my blood," He is pointing to faith-union with His finished work, not a mechanical process where swallowing creates righteousness. The Supper is for remembering (his words), proclaiming, examining the heart, and feeding faith; not for bypassing the need for a clean heart.
Paul warns about this in 1 Corinthians 11:22-34.
It's about unworthy participation, not about the magical efficacy of the elements themselves.
The pull toward making any physical thing greater than God in satisfying our needs is ultimately unbelief dressed up as devotion. It’s the same temptation in the garden; "Take and eat…and you will be like God."
The antidote is daily returning to "every word that comes from the mouth of God." Scripture, prayer, the Spirit’s conviction and comfort.
At its core, idolatry is exchanging the glory of the immortal God for created things. Our culture keeps offering "solutions" we can swallow, wear, scroll, or inject. Supplements is a huge industry. The global dietary supplements market was valued at roughly $200–210 billion in 2025. Vitamins, minerals, herbals, protein powders, nootropics, immune boosters, and longevity compounds dominate. This isn’t just filling nutritional gaps; it’s the cultural liturgy of self-optimization. Marketing promises transcendence through the capsule; better sleep, eternal youth, mental clarity, disease prevention, peak performance. It preys on the same fears and desires that drove ancient idol worship.
All of it is false assurance through the tangible. Something swallowable that delivers righteousness, peace, or joy. Hope is placed in products that may deliver marginal benefits at best while fostering dependence on endless consumption. This supplement treadmill often breeds discontent; you’re never optimized enough.
And it's the same with sacramentalism. The idolatry enters when they become the focus; a substitute for prayer, repentance, rest, community, or simple thankful eating of real food.
The food Christ wants for us is a changed heart. Not elevating the created means above the Creator, and trusting the tangible act (swallowing, performing the ritual) more than ongoing, humble dependence on God.
As He said;
"Do not work for the food that perishes, but for the food that endures to eternal life, which the Son of Man will give to you." (John 6:27)
He said, "I am the bread of life", "I am the living bread that came down from heaven", "unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you."
This "food" is not another physical substance, ritual, or supplement you can swallow. It is Christ Himself, received by faith. Eating His flesh and drinking His blood is a vivid way of saying; believe in His sacrificial death for you, and be spiritually united to Him. It is trusting completely in His finished work on the cross.
His body given.
His blood shed.
So that His life becomes your life.
It's about that changed heart, Spirit and life.
The food that endures to eternal life is Christ Himself; received by faith, not by swallowing.
He said it plainly;
John 6:63
"It is the Spirit who gives life; the flesh is no help at all. The words that I have spoken to you are spirit and life."
Are you saying it's just symbolic?
No...I'm saying that Jesus said His sacrifice is the fulfillment of prophecy.
Ezekiel 36:26
"I will give you a new heart, and a new spirit I will put within you."
This new heart is not manufactured by rituals, substances, or religious performance. It is the sovereign work of God through faith in the finished work of Jesus.
His body broken for us.
His blood poured out for the forgiveness of sins.
When we believe and rest in that, we are united to Him. His resurrection life flows into us. The heart of stone becomes a heart of flesh. What comes out of that heart begins to change: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness…instead of the defiling things Jesus listed in Matthew 15.
The question that remains for each of us is:
Am I feeding on Christ by faith, or am I still reaching for something else to satisfy the hunger?