In the News
Plant City Retreat Offers Diet Changes For Spiritual And Physical Health
By Marie Gilmore
Published April 1, 2011
Christian Voice Monthly
When Terry Calhoun came to
Hallelujah Acres from Bay St. Cloud,
Mississippi in August, she had just
been diagnosed with diabetes, she
had lost her father at 54 to a massive
heart attack and growing up in the
Midwest, thought that vegetables on
the dinner table were reserved for
decoration. Meat and
dairy were the staples
in her life.
But, after reading
the Hallelujah Diet
book and finding the
Plant City-based
retreat and health
center, she grabbed a
friend from New
Orleans and said, "What the heck" and
came to Florida for a
five-day lifestyle
change.
"I decided I am going to do this
for me," said Calhoun. "My father
died of a massive heart attack and I
keep watching the people I know and
love die. I am getting the most wonderful
information and preparing
myself for this trip and eating raw, I
have already lost 10 lbs."
The Hallelujah Acres Diet and
Lifestyle Center is owned by
Christians David and Sherry Orcutt,
who had a life-changing experience
10 years ago when David was diagnosed
with multiple sclerosis. The couple learned
about eating God's
food in their raw
form and began the
transformation that
now has them
teaching, mentoring
and offering their
skills across the
country. "Dave overcame
Multiple
Sclerosis by changing
our lifestyle and
we teach people
how to rebuild our God-given
immune system," explains Sherry.
On a recent raw lunch at the center,
the menu consisted of
macadamia manicotti marinara,
sweet potato soufflé with pecan
Topping and Caesar Salad with pine
nut cheese, avocado and croutons.
Despite the lack of any dairy or meat
products, the luncheon was delicious
and followed the Hallelujah plan.
"Most people come here because
of their health," explains Sherry. "We
are making the effort to stay proactive
and get well. I help people get well."
Attendees at the
retreats live a healthy
lifestyle day and night
at the beautiful six-acre
retreat center.
With sleeping for 12, a
full pool and walking
area and serene surroundings,
the center fosters a sense
of peace.
Students learn to extract juices
and create raw meals, and how to
interact and add the new lifestyle
changes to everyday life. Sherry's
daughter, Amberlee, also works at
the center and is currently working on
recipes for a future book with her
mom.
Dave and Sherry
became Hallelujah Acres
Health Ministers in July of
2002 and are the hosts.
They have countless stories
of lifestyle changes
that have given people
the immunity strength to
battle any number of ailments.
The philosophies of
the raw diet are to give
the body back its natural
processes of digestion
and elimination of
foods to fuel the body
and in their raw form,
foods provide the most
nutrients.
Both five and 10-day programs
and seminars are available. A full calendar
is available online and two
sessions will be held Sundays-Fridays, April 3-8 or April 24-29.
Registration and information is available
at www.edenwellness.org or by
calling 757-1771.
 |
Hallelujah Acres Lifestyle Center co-owner David Orcutt, center, helps participants peel about 50 pounds of carrots for juice. At right, Roger Swanson, 67, of Sioux Falls, S.D., was among those helping. He says he is considering opening a center of his own.
|
A diet to please a deity
By SHERRI DAY
Published January 22, 2007
St. Pete Times
PLANT CITY - Roger Swanson wants to walk again. Daina Roughgarden hopes to rid her body of nodules that could prove cancerous. Rocio Mazzetti desires to keep symptoms of multiple sclerosis at bay.
They each sought help this month inside a rust-colored house on Thonotosassa Road, home to the Central Florida outpost of the Hallelujah Acres Lifestyle Center. For about $1,200 a week, leaders at the center teach would-be adherents the basics of the Hallelujah Diet, a vegan eating plan that centers on the consumption of raw foods and Christianity.
It is not a place for the carnivorous or the carnally minded.
Billed as God's original diet, the plan takes its premise from Genesis 1:29:
And God said, 'Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth and every tree, in the which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat.'
The dieters' goal is to re-create the state of health in the Garden of Eden, where Adam and Eve lived disease-free.
 |
Joyce Swanson, 57, of Sioux Falls, S.D., follows along during a Bible lesson at Hallelujah Acres.
|
"We're choosing to go back to a time when God had the perfect world for man," said Sherry Orcutt, who runs the Plant City center with her husband, David.
While she does not make promises about the diet's healing powers, Orcutt offers her family as testimony. She said she has lost 70 pounds and no longer has anemia or needs blood pressure medication. Her husband, who was diagnosed with MS in 2001, now lives medication- and virtually symptom-free, she said. Her daughter also claims weight loss and clearer skin.
Others on the diet - including the Rev. George H. Malkmus, who created and markets it with books, seminars and DVDs - say strict adherence helped them overcome many health maladies including cancer, body odor, hair loss, diabetes and high cholesterol.
Few nutritionists take issue with vegetarian and even vegan diets, particularly if they are shored up with supplements such as vitamin B-12. But many nutritionists and doctors often look askance at the Hallelujah Diet's health claims and, in particular, Malkmus' assertion that food in its raw state provides more nutrition to cells than its cooked counterparts.
"The human mind is a wonderful thing, and if people feel that they are healthier by following a diet like this, more power to them," said Marian Nestle, a professor at New York University and the author of Food Politics. "There isn't much science to back up these ideas, however."
Some health watchers, including a few of Malkmus' own health ministers, question his claims. Malkmus credits the diet with curing him of colon cancer but acknowledges that he never had a biopsy of his tumor and didn't know if it was malignant. He also says he has not been sick since going on the diet 30 years ago, but he openly speaks of having had a stroke.
Some Christians also regard Malkmus' theories and claims as extreme. But there are plenty of believers. Officials at Hallelujah Acres Inc. headquarters in Shelby, N.C., estimate that more than 2-million people worldwide follow the diet. Malkmus' latest book, The Hallelujah Diet, has sold more than 60,000 copies and is in its fifth printing. He has also trained more than 7,000 health ministers around the world to spread the diet gospel and plans to open four additional franchises this year.
The Plant City dieters believe, too. They signed up for five days filled with Bible study, low-impact exercise, health classes and sunshine breaks for vitamin D.
Food, of course, served as their primary preoccupation as they donned aprons and plastic gloves and learned to prepare food God's way.
The group gathers first in the dining room, which has a collection of crosses on one wall and a picture of Jesus Christ on another. It's breakfast time.
"Bacon and eggs and home fries," said David Orcutt as he gingerly placed an 8-ounce cup of carrot juice and a 2-ounce serving of BarleyMax, which is made from barley and alfalfa grass, before each dieter. The product is made and marketed by Hallelujah Acres.
The carrot juice, freshly juiced, goes down smooth and sweet. The BarleyMax puzzles at least one dieter.
"Do you just, like, down it?" asked Anne De Santis, a New Jersey graduate student, peering at the green liquid. "What's the flavor?"
Orcutt answered with a smile.
"It's kind of grassy," he says. "A lot of people don't like it."
His charges are willing to try. For some, the diet is where their faith meets their food.
"Today, I was supposed to go for my thyroid scan," said Roughgarden, a 54-year-old Sunday school teacher from Naples. "When I was asking the Lord for guidance and wisdom, Hallelujah Acres kept coming to mind. I do believe the Lord led me here."
An answered prayer
In December 2001, David Orcutt lay in a hospital bed, unable to explain weakness in his right leg.
Sherry Orcutt lifted a prayer in desperation. Show her how to help him, she asked God. The answer didn't come right away.
Doctors gave the Orcutts grim news. David had multiple sclerosis. He would need medication for life and would likely see his mobility degenerate.
Soon people at the Crossing Church in Brandon, where the couple worshiped, started telling them to drink carrot juice and BarleyMax. Someone gave them a copy of a book by Malkmus that outlines the Hallelujah Diet. They also met a woman who said the diet helped her overcome the symptoms of MS.
The diet was not the answer Orcutt expected. It requires adherents to eat only two meals a day. Breakfast is usually liquid, BarleyMax and carrot juice, which dieters drink several times a day. Raw fruits and vegetables make up 85 percent of the meal plan.
The diet allows only one cooked dish per day.
Refined sugar, white flour, all meat, dairy products, seafood, refined grains, canned vegetables and fruits, artificial fruit drinks, alcohol, coffee and carbonated beverages are out. Salt and pepper, too.
The Orcutts started the diet in January 2002. Within a month, David Orcutt, now 59, jettisoned his walker. Eight months later, he was running.
"We don't claim that he's totally cured," Sherry Orcutt, 54, said. "We claim that he is managing the disease with our lifestyle choices."
Malkmus, 72, trained the Orcutts to become health ministers, and they began hosting seminars at their church. In 2004, they opened Hallelujah Acres, a five-bedroom house in Plant City.
The Orcutts host about 200 people a year at their center. Their curriculum includes optional Bible lessons, cooking demonstrations and health classes.
Sticky theological questions sometimes get sent to corporate, where Malkmus stands ready to explain his teachings. According to his studies, sickness entered the world after the flood - as in the one with Noah and the ark - only after God began letting people eat meat.
"I believe the only reason he gave permission was that the flood had totally covered all the plant life there was for survival," Malkmus said in an interview. "... I don't think God ever intended this to be a continuing diet for mankind."
Malkmus has decades of biblical anecdotes that support his theories, including the story of how Daniel got stronger after refusing to eat meat from the king's table. The minister doesn't condemn meat eaters, and he sidesteps healing claims - though he's happy to tout dieters' success stories.
"Here we are some 6,000 years after creation and when a person, Christian or non-Christian, goes back to that original diet, almost always they get well, and they don't get sick anymore," Malkmus said. "That's pretty powerful."
Becoming believers
By the end of the week, most of the Plant City dieters are believers in the Hallelujah lifestyle.
Mazzetti, who has come all the way from Lima, Peru, vows to return with her son.
Roger Swanson, who uses a wheelchair and has multiple sclerosis, and his wife are health ministers and contemplate opening a lifestyle center on their 34 acres in South Dakota.
With less than a day left at the center, they each think about the return home. Family members may be difficult to convert. There's even doubt among the dieters. Kris Rademacher, a machine builder from Appleton, Wis., doesn't know if he'll give up all meat.
But they can agree on a few things. The food was excellent, they say. And the center was just the catapult they needed to get healthy in the new year.
"I have no qualms," De Santis said. "This is the best money I ever spent."
Sherri Day can be reached at 813 226-3405 or sday@sptimes.com.