Showing posts with label Perfume Oil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Perfume Oil. Show all posts

Friday, January 10, 2014

The Scent of Love: Ancient Perfumes

“Therefore, when laughter-loving Aphrodite saw [Anchises], she loved him, and terribly desire seized her in her heart. She went to Cyprus, to Paphos, where her precinct is and fragrant altar, and passed into her sweet-smelling temple. There she went in and put to the glittering doors, and there the Graces bathed her with heavenly oil such as blooms upon the bodies of the eternal gods—oil divinely sweet, which she had by her, filled with fragrance.”
—Homeric hymn, tr. H.G. Evelyn-White
The goddess of love, beauty, and desire, Aphrodite was also mistress of the seductive arts, perfume primary among them. Accustomed as we are to the aromas of car exhaust and air-conditioned buildings, to us the ancient world would perhaps be most overpowering in terms of smell. Sweating men and animals and their waste filled a city’s streets, making it vital to set off sacred spaces as well as those of luxury by making them smell sweet. Fragrance was everywhere in the ancient world, from scented oils used to adorn the body to incense burnt in homes and temples.
A visitor at the Spicy Scents activity checks the scent of labdanum, a favorite base note for ancient perfumes
A visitor at the Spicy Scents activity checks the scent of labdanum, a favorite base note for ancient perfumes.
Perfumes had many uses and meanings: they could be holy, used in the worship of the gods or the burial of the dead; they could be a symbol of status and superiority, used by athletes, aristocrats, politicians, and royalty; they could be medicinal, used to relieve ailments of the lungs or skin. In ancient Egypt, Greece, and across the Roman Empire, perfume was part of ritual, beauty, and commerce—much as it is today.
I investigated this ancient art to create Spicy Scents, a hands-on spring break activity for Villa visitors. Here’s a primer on how ancient fragrances were made, followed by a DIY tutorial on how to make your own perfume, ancient-style. (Here’s the handout from our spring program with how-to instructions and an ingredient list.)
Visitors make perfumes inspired by ancient recipes during a Spicy Scents workshop at the Getty Villa

A Short History of Ancient Perfumes

I wanted to mimic as closely as possible the way perfumes would have been made in the ancient world, so I had to find out how that worked. Written sources describing ancient perfuming making are vague at best, though some writers such as Theophrastus (Greek, c. 270–285 B.C.) in his book On Odors and Pliny the Elder (Roman, A.D. 23–79) in his Natural History include lists of ingredients for perfumes, as well as some discussion of techniques and tools.
Tablets from Knossos, Crete, document oil deliveries to be processed by perfumers, and tablets from Mycenae, Thebes, and Pylos mention the work of perfumers. Visual sources of information were a little more helpful—the ancient Egyptians depicted perfume making, and humorous Roman frescoes from Pompeii and Herculaneum showing bands of cupids in perfume shops mixing scents are known. One of these is on view at the Villa in Gallery 207, Women in Antiquity, where we also have many exquisite perfume containers—an industry in itself in the ancient world.
Wall Fragment with Cupids and Psyche Making Perfume / Roman
Wall Fragment with Cupids and Psyche Making Perfume, Roman, A.D. 75–100. Plaster and pigment, 14 15/16 x 22 1/16 in.
Two ancient aryballoi (perfume bottles)
Two aryballoi (perfume bottles). Left: Perfume bottle in the Shape of a Ram, Greek, 640–625 B.C. Terracotta, 3 3/4 in. high. Right: Aryballos, Gallo-Roman, 70-–00 A.D. Bronze and champlevé enamel, 4 1/8 in. high
Archeology provides richer information, showing that in ancient Egypt, Palestine, and the Roman Empire, temples almost always had perfume factories nearby producing the great quantities of fragrances they needed. A 2003 archeological find at Pyrgos on Cyprus, the island where Aphrodite first stepped foot on land after her birth at sea, discovered a perfume-making workshop from circa 1850 B.C., the oldest one in the world. (The leader of this archeological dig is giving a lecture in June here at the Villa.)
My first discovery was that in the ancient world oils were used as the carrier medium for perfumes.  In modern perfume making, an alcohol is usually the carrier medium, with essential oils added for fragrance combined with fixatives, coloring agents and preservatives. Alcohols evaporate much more quickly than oils do, thus dispersing scent into the air more rapidly. An ancient perfume would therefore be more subtle, and you’d have to be closer to the skin of the wearer to feel its heady power.
Ingredients for making perfume: olive oil and a mortar and pestle
To start the creation of your own perfume, you’ll need some olive oil and a mortar and pestle.
In the age of Greece and Rome, the abundance of olive oil made it the most popular oil for the perfume industry, though other oils such as almond were popular as well. Cheaper oil was better (and still is) because it has less of its own scent to compete with the fragrant materials.
To impart fragrance, plant-based ingredients were used, including flowers, leaves, seeds, woods, resins and gums. Animal-derived ingredients were also common, such as musk and civet, which are the glandular oils produced by the musk deer and the civet cat, as well as ambergris, a strange substance secreted and occasionally expelled by sperm whales. These aromas tend to be pungent and even unpleasant in their natural states, but act as fixatives in combination with other scents, accentuating them and making them last longer without imparting their own scents to the mixture.
As in ancient times, today more expensive perfumes still use mostly natural products—essential oils gathered from flowers, spices, and fruits, while cheaper ones are made from synthesized oils that approximate these natural scents.

The Art of Layering Scents

A perfume is made by layering scents according to how volatile they are, that is, how easily they evaporate. Top notes evaporate quickly—they are the first scent you smell in a perfume.  Middle or heart notes form the main body of a perfume. Base notes are fixatives—they hold and blend the other ingredients, and they stay on the skin the longest, so you always smell them in combination with the other aromas of the perfume.
Animal-derived scents were the most precious base notes of the ancient world, as they still are today. Natural musk is almost impossible to come by now, and civet and ambergris are likewise fairly rare, so I had to settle for more common, but no less authentic base notes for our perfume-making activity: frankincense, myrrh, and labdanum. All are resins, or plant sap.
Frankincense tears, myrrh, stick cinnamon, and rose petals
Frankincense tears, myrrh, stick cinnamon, and rose petals
Frankincense and myrrh can be purchased in their raw form of small nuggets, which you can grind and add to the olive oil into which they melt to lend their scent. Labdanum is a viscous, sticky tarlike substance in its resin form. You can also purchase the essential oils of any or all of these substances.
Labdanum resin
Labdanum resin, rumored to be a main ingredient in Julius Caesar’s favorite cologne.
Even as an essential oil, labdanum is thick, black, and sticky. To make your own perfume, only use one of the three though, and only a little of one at that—4 to 5 nuggets or 2 to 3 drops of the essential oils in 2 ounces of olive oil. These scents are strong and can overpower your final perfume. For a man’s cologne, you might choose two, or a little more of one.
For middle notes we used some scents that are still well-known in modern perfumery: rose, cinnamon, benzoin (more commonly known as styrax in the ancient world) and calamus (called by many names by ancient writers, including sweet flag or sweet rush). Rose and cinnamon were a favorite combination for the heart of a perfume. Rose petals can be added directly to the olive oil mixture; no more than 1 to 3 petals though, or the rose will overwhelm your final mixture. Cinnamon can be added by breaking up the sticks into small pieces, or even by shaking ground cinnamon into your oil. This combination makes a sweetly spicy scent, altered this way or that by the base note—atop frankincense’s piney smell it is more spicy, atop myrrh’s gentle warmth the rose can shine, and atop labdanum’s pungency, the cinnamon really pops.
Sweet rush and styrax in their natural form
Sweet rush and styrax. Styrax, also known as benzoin, is still a major ingredient in perfumes.
My personal favorite is styrax, a deep, vanilla-y scent that is, like the base notes, a tree resin. It also can be purchased in its raw form, though it’s expensive that way. The essential oil is a honey-like liquid that can be added to the olive oil using a coffee stirrer to gather and then drip it into your perfume. I also love sweet rush. The root of the calamus plant, which can be ground and added, sweet rush has a strong, light, sweet smell, like gold for the nose.
At the perfume-making workshop, our top notes were spices you’ll recognize from your own kitchen: anise, the seed that gives licorice its distinctive scent; marjoram, the cousin of oregano that the ancient Greeks associated with joyous occasions like weddings; and coriander, the seed of cilantro. We advised visitors to use liberal amounts of these lighter scents so they would not get lost under the power of the heartier middle and base notes. Anise and coriander need to be lightly ground, while marjoram leaves can be added straight to your olive oil.
A favorite recipe of many was myrrh, rose, styrax, and marjoram for a warm, sweet perfume.  Those who liked spicier scents might mix frankincense with cinnamon and a little sweet rush, then top it off with anise and coriander. Brave souls experimented with combinations of sweet and spicy, layering labdanum under styrax and cinnamon, topped with marjoram.
Visitors make perfumes inspired by ancient recipes during a Spicy Scents workshop at the Getty Villa
Heat, Steep, and Complete
To complete your perfume, heat your oil mixture by pouring the oil and other materials into a glass or ceramic dish, heating water in a pot to boiling, turning the heat off and sitting the dish with the oil into the water as it cools.  This process draws the essential oils from the materials and can be repeated more than once. The mixture should then steep for at least 24 hours, at which point it can be strained—cheesecloth lets you wring the oil out while keeping all bits of ground materials out of the final mixture.
I’d love to hear from our visitors who did the activity with us at the Villa. How did your final perfumes turn out? Or if you try this at home, let us know what the results are.  Were they what you expected?
May Aphrodite sweeten your skin with fragrant oils so that you taste a little of her power!
- See more at: http://blogs.getty.edu/iris/the-scent-of-love-ancient-perfumes/#sthash.GSR74C39.dpuf

Thursday, January 9, 2014

15 Ways to Use Myrrh Essential Oil

We have talked about Myrrh in our Essential Oils of the Bible posts and how it is the most popular oil of the Bible with over 139 references.  It was also one of the three gifts given to Baby Jesus!  Today I’d like to give you 15 ways to use Myrrh essential oil.  
(Please note to use only high quality essential oils.  These suggestions will not work with just any oil, and in fact, may not be wise to use with an essential oil from say, your nearest supermarket.)  Please make sure that you know exactly what is in your essential oil of choice and that the bottle is marked “for internal use” if you are going to be ingesting it.

15 Ways to Use Myrrh Essential Oil

Athlete’s Foot
Myrrh on the bottoms of feet nightly and wear only cotton socks and allow feet to air out after shower and then apply Myrrh with Lemon for daytime.
Cancer
Apply topically to area(s) of concern and diffuse for aromatic benefit as well.  Can also combine with Frankincense.
Chapped/Cracked Skin
Apply topically with a carrier oil of your choice such as Fractionated Coconut Oil, Sunflower, Jojoba, Sweet Almond, etc. You can also make your own hard lotion using Myrrh and any combination of oils you want for soft, supple skin.
Congestion
Apply topically on chest and inhale from hands or diffuse.  A great combination to use is Myrrh, Rosemary, Lime, & Peppermint. Combine 2 drops of each oil and rub gently on chest and bottoms of feet for relief of congestion.
Cough
2 drops of each of Cassia, Myrrh, and Lemon in coconut oil or other oil of your choice.  Swallow two times per day as needed. (This suggestion comes from an essential oil meeting I attended)
Gum Disease
Add a drop of Myrrh to your toothpaste.  You can also do oil pulling with coconut oil and Myrrh (just make sure to spit the oils out at the end of the pulling). For more info on oil pulling, check out The Wellness Warrior’s post.
Hashimoto’s Disease
Apply topically – can also add to your shampoo/conditioner, or make a hair rinse with Myrrh, Rosemary, and Lavender mixed in Vinegar and water.
Hyperthyroidism
Apply to throat nightly, or to big toes.  Can combine with Lemongrass, Peppermint, and Clove.
Infection
Apply directly to area of infection.  Diffuse to rid the air of impurities.
Liver Cirrhosis
Apply over liver daily
Skin Ulcers
Apply to area of concern daily.
Sore Throat/Strep Throat
3 drops of Lemon, 1 drop Oregano, 1 drop Clove, 2 drops Myrrh in water.  (Gargle and spit or swallow if you’re tough!) :) (This suggestion was also given at an essential oils event I attended)
Stretch Marks
Apply to stretch marks daily.  Can also combine with Lavender and/or Tangerine.
Weeping Wounds
Apply to area of concern daily or as needed.
Youthful Skin
3 drops of Myrrh, 2 drops Sandalwood, 2 drops Frankincense, 2 drops Geranium, 2 drops Lavender; gently mix and apply to skin at night.  (This suggestion comes from Dr. Sue Lawton’s information handout)
Caution
Due to effectiveness in improving menstruation avoid heavy usage during pregnancy. Use other oils for anti-infection merits on children under 40 Pounds; non-toxic, non-irritant

Essential Oils in the Bible

Essential Oils in the Bible



In the first chapter of Genesis it is written that God placed mankind in the Garden of Eden. God knew from the very beginning that this perfect environment would be the key source for mankind’s healing and health.
Daily applications of essential oils in Biblical times were extensive, indeed. Thirty-six of the 39 books of the Old Testament and 10 of the 27 books of the New Testament mention essential oils or the plants that produce them. These were the medicine provided by God.
The early Christians held the aromatic oils in very high esteem. Paul chose to compare devout Christians as “sweet savors,” “fragrances,” or “aromas” spreading the Gospel “among the perishing.” In Ephesians 5:2, he admonishes his fellow Christians to be imitators of Christ “who gave himself up for us, as a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.”
God provided these plants and oils to heal our bodies, minds and spirits. They were the original source of healing and that connection is still available to us today. "Healing: God’s Forgotten Gift" is meant to be a guide to help us all to explore and learn what tools God make available to us to help keep us healthy physically, emotionally and spiritually.

Oils and Oil Blends Used or Mentioned in "Healing: God's Forgotten Gift"

ALOES/SANDALWOOD* (Santalum album) steam distilled from wood. It takes between forty to sixty years to mature and be available for harvest. Referred to as “aloes” in the Bible. (Not to be confused with Aloe Vera, an American plant.)
Scriptures: Numbers 24:6; Psalm 45:8; Proverbs 7:17; Song of Solomon 4:14; John 19:39
Historical uses of Aloes/Sandalwood:
  • Enhance deep sleep.
  • Rub a drop above eyebrows in a wide circle around the eye 1-3 times daily to help with vision.
  • Used as cologne.
  • Combined with bath salts for a relaxing bath.
  • Used for dry chapped skin and wrinkled skin.
  • Used for acute or chronic diarrhea, rub on stomach area.
  • Place a drop on cold sores to help heal.
  • Massage in hair and on scalp to retard graying.
  • Put a drop on an incision to speed wound healing.

CASSIA* (Cinnamomum cassia) steam distilled from bark. Cassia was an ingredient in the Holy Anointing Oil given to Moses. This exotic fragrance of vanilla/cinnamon might be similar in its aroma to cinnamon, but it is physically and chemically much different. Care must be taken in topical use as it may cause skin sensation. It is antibacterial, antifungal, anti-inflammatory, antiviral, and an anticoagulant.
Scriptures: Exodus 30:24; Ezekiel 27:19; Psalm 45:8
Historical uses of Cassia:
  • Put a scant drop on your tongue and enjoy the delicious taste!
  • A drop or two on your fingers and rub through the hair. Perfumed hair was often used because they did not wash their hair frequently.
  • A drop placed in the hands rub hands together and cup over nose for a joyful, uplifting feeling.
  • Used as mouthwash. A drop placed in water, swish in mouth, and gargle for a delicious and effective mouthwash.
  • Put a drop in a glass of water and shake it up (to disperse the oil) for a protecting & refreshing drink. You may just find it curbs your desire for sugar! Also taking it internally may help with fungal problems!
  • Used in cooking. For example, add a drop or two to yams.
  • Add a drop to hot chocolate and enjoy!
  • Add a drop or two to hot water, stir, and drink to take away the chill.
  • Mixed with olive oil to heal boils, ringworm, and fungal infections.

CEDARWOOD* (Cedrus atlantica) steamed distilled from bark. Produced mainly in Morocco, it is the species most closely related to the cedars of Lebanon. Of all essential oils, cedarwood is highest in sesquiterpenes, which are oxygen-delivering molecules capable of crossing the blood-brain barrier.
Scriptures: Leviticus 14:4, 6, 49, 52; Numbers 19:6
Historical uses:
  • Diffuse or inhale from bottle to enhance prayer and meditation.
  • A drop of oil in your palms and then cup them over your nose and mouth. Inhale, breathing deeply to help with mental clarity.
  • Used as an effective insect repellant).
  • A drop to a cotton balls and place in drawers to repel insects.
  • Egyptians used 1-3 drops rubbed into the scalp may help to inhibit hair loss.
  • A drop or two rubbed on wounded skin may help to clean, disinfect and protect from infection.
  • Rub a drop or two on the chest area to help relieve symptoms of (difficult breathing) bronchitis.
  • Applied to help with sleep.
  • Can help restore hair loss.

CYPRESS* (Cupressus sempervirens) steam distilled from seeds. The oil of Cypress has been used since ancient times for purification and as incense.
Scriptures: Genesis 6:14; Isaiah 41:19; 44:14; I Kings 9:11; Song of Solomon 1:17
Historical uses:
  • Used to help with healing cuts and healing of scars.
  • Used for relieving the pain of arthritis.
  • Apply Cypress neat or diluted on location to ease cramping.
  • Apply a drop of Cypress to a minor injury to facilitate healing and prevent infection.
  • Used around the nasal area to help control a nosebleed.
  • Increases white corpuscle production and enhances immune function.
  • Applied as an insect repellant.
  • Used to help relieve acute chest discomfort.



FRANKINCENSE* (Boswellia carteri) steam distilled from resin. It’s a generational tree that takes forty years to produce its first resin. One of the gifts of the wise men to our Savior, frankincense would have been rubbed all over the body of the baby. Egyptian tradition says that “Frankincense is good for everything from gout to a broken head” or in other words “good from head to toe”. If in doubt, use Frankincense. Other names for frankincense are “olibanum” or “Oil from Lebanon”.
Scriptures: Exodus 30:34; Leviticus 2:1, 5:11, 6:15, 24:7; Numbers 5:15; I Chronicles 9:29; Nehemiah 13:5, 9; Song of Solomon 3:6; 4:6, 14; Isaiah 43:23; 60:6; 66:3; Jeremiah 6:20; 17:26; 41:5; Matthew 2:11; Revelation 18:13
Historical Uses:
  • Used on wounds to stop infections.
  • It was placed on an insect bite to help reduce swelling and speed healing.
  • It was used improve concentration.
  • Spiritual oil that enhanced and promoted emotional and spiritual feeling.
  • Diffused to elevate mood.
  • Often applied on onto each foot at night to help with sore feet.
  • Rubbed on shoulders stomach and bottoms of feet to help with low mood induced insomnia.
  • Egyptians used it to the abdomen to help remove stretch marks.
  • A key ingredient in the holy anointing oils and the oil that stopped Biblical Plagues. 

GALBANUM* (Ferula gummosa) steam distilled from resin derived from stems and branches. Galbanum was valued for its medicinal and spiritual qualities
Scriptures: Exodus 30:24
Historical uses:
  • Galbanum on the bottom of each foot to help bring emotional balance.
  • Uses as incense and for embalming.
  • Combined with frankincense as holy incense.
  • Used for treating wounds and, inflammation.
  • Used in the tabernacle during sacrifices.
  • Applied as oil to help with skin disorders. 

HYSSOP* (Hyssopus officinalis) steam distilled from stems/leaves. It has a very long history as a cleansing herb.
Scriptures: Exodus 12:22; Leviticus 14:4, 6, 49, 51, 52; Numbers 19:6, 18; I Kings 4:33; Psalm 51:7; John 19:29; Hebrews 9:19
Historical uses:
  • Used to prevent the Plague.
  • Applied to help with arthritis pain.
  • Used to help with congestion and coughs.
  • When rubbed on stomach as method of reducing cramp and expelling gas.
  • Applied on shoulders to reduce tension.
  • Incense used to loosen up a tight chest, inhale; it’s highly expectorant.
  • 20th century physicians who used herbs in the United States used hyssop oil to soothe burned skin.
  • Used in bathwater for nervous exhaustion, melancholy or grief.
  • Applied on wounds or on injured area to help prevent scarring.

MYRRH* (Commiphora myrrha) steam distilled from gum/resin and grown in Somalia. Has one of the highest levels of sesquiterpenes, a class of compounds that has direct effects on the hypothalamus, pituitary and amygdala, the seat of our emotions.
Scriptures: Genesis 37:25; 43:11; Exodus 30:23, 34; Esther 2:12; Psalm 45:8; Proverbs 7:17; Song of Solomon 1:13; 3:6; 4:6, 14; 5:1, 5, 13; Matthew 2:11; Mark 15:23; John 19:39; Revelation 18:13
Historical uses:
  • Used in religious rituals.
  • Used in embalming.
  • Applied to as an oil to soften skin.
  • Incensed was burned during childbirth.
  • Applied on umbilical cords to prevent infection.
  • Applied on wounds to promote healing and prevent infection.

MYRTLE* (Myrtus communis) Obtained from shrubs and trees and steam distilled. The Hebrew name for Queen Esther was Hadassah which means myrtle. 
Scriptures: Nehemiah 8:15; Isaiah 41:19; 55:13; Zechariah 1:8, 10, 11
Historical uses:
  • Used as a food flavoring.
  • Incense used to help with congestion.
  • Honey and one drop of oil for a cough.
  • Used to stop diarrhea.
  • Inhaled to open sinus.
  • Used with olive oil for hemorrhoid relief.

ONYCHA* (Styrax benzoin) extracted from the resin. Other names for onycha are “benzoin”, “friar’s balm” and “Java frankincense”. Tincture of benzoin was an antiseptic used in hospitals for more than a hundred years (since the mid 1800s).
Scriptures: Exodus 30:34
Historical uses:
  • Onycha was valued anciently for its ability to speed healing of wounds and to help prevent infection.
  • Applied to open wounds to speed healing and help prevent infection.
  • Applied to a wound to help slow bleeding.
  • Rubbed on the stomach to help ease gripping pains.
  • Applied to chapped or cracked skin to help speed healing.

ROSE OF SHARON/CISTUS* (Cistus ladanifer) is also known as rock rose. Steam distilled from leaves.
Scriptures: Song of Solomon 2:1
Historical uses:
  • Applied to places of concern for arthritis.
  • Used as an insecticide.
  • Used for helping to reduce fever.
  • Diffused for colds.
  • Applied for headaches.
  • Applied as a wound antiseptic and for deodorizing. 

SPIKENARD* (Nardostachys jatamansi) steam distilled from roots. Spikenard has also been known as “nard” and “false Indian Valerian root” oil. It was prized in early Egypt and in the Middle East during the time of our Savior.
Scriptures: Song of Solomon 1:2; 4:13, 14; Matthew 26:7; Mark 14:3; Luke 7:37; John 12:3
Historical uses:
  • Know as a skin tonic for rough or wrinkled skin.
  • Used with olive oil for help with hemorrhoids.
  • Aromatic sent was known for it’s soothing effects.
  • Rubbed on the stomach to help with digestive problems.
  • Apply as a perfume or use for a deodorant.
  • Applied to feet and crown of head to help ground and balance the mind and stimulate a feeling of courage and power.
  • Used on wounds and cuts to help disinfect and speed healing.

THIEVES®
Ancient Blend of Aromatic Oils
This is a blend of oil that has been retraced in use historically to the 15th century. The oils used in this blend are highly anti-viral, antiseptic properties of the singe oils contained in this blend help protect us from the onset of flu, colds, etc. More recent studies show this oil has demonstrated its killing power against airborne microorganisms. It contains the following oils Clove (Syzygium aromaticum), Lemon (Citrus limon) Cinnamon Bark (Cinnamomum verum), Eucalyptus Radiata (Eucalyptus radiata) , and Rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis).
Historical uses:
  • Blisters
  • Colds
  • Canker sores
  • Flu
  • Edema
  • Mold
  • Toxic Chemical Absorption
  • Chicken pox
  • Sinus infection
  • Spider Bite
  • Tick bites
  • Malaria
  • Sore throat
  • Whooping Cough
  • Liver disorders
  • Thrombosis stroke

* Indicates oil that is available in Young Living Essential Oils "Twelve Oils of Ancient Scripture™" kit. Oil blends are available individually from YLEO.
 
NOTE: Not all essential oils are Biblical Grade, i.e. pure, unadulterated, properly cultivated, properly distilled, laboratory tested, accurately labeled, and properly packaged. Over 90% of essential oils available on the market are for fragrance or food applications and not for healing.
 
If you purchase essential oils from a retail store, don't expect to receive the healing properties we attribute to the oils mentioned on this website and in the book and DVD, "Healing: God's Forgotten Gift." The only company we know that reliably and consistently produces Biblical Grade essential oils that yield healing results are those from Young Living Essential Oils, Inc.
 
If you would like purchase to any of these oils to support your Bible Study course, click on any of this website's links to Young Living Biblical Grade Essential Oils.

Information contained on this site is not intended to diagnose, treat or prescribe. The site and its services, including the information above, are for informational purposes only and are not a substitute for professional medical or health advice, examination, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health professional before starting any new treatment, making any changes to existing treatment, or altering in any way your current exercise or diet regimen. The claims made about specific techniques or products have not been evaluated by the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) and therefore the information should not be used to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease without the supervision of a medical doctor or other qualified health professional.