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It is possible to endure in this life but to do it in a self-righteous, resentful survivor-spirit that is self-pitying and angry at those who do not shoulder the burden with you while being inwardly proud of your grit. Instead of the fruit of the Spirit, there is bitterness and joylessness. In truth, God may not consider this kind of life to be one of endurance, and certainly not one of “great endurance” (2 Cor. 6:4). Paul endured with the inner graces of the Spirit. Sweet endurance is what the Scripture here enjoins… Sweet in-Spirited endurance testifies to the reality of Christ and that He is worth our trust and service.
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Genesis 2 does not tell us much more about the significance of this seventh day. But as we learn more about it from Scripture we realize that the “rest” involved was not a lazy rest. Rather, it was intended to be a day when the working man could enjoy the Creator as well as the creation. He could devote himself more directly to fellowship with God and the worship of His Name. This “sabbath,” or “rest-day,” was a further special blessing which God gave to man so he would be refreshed and strengthened, encouraged and heartened by contemplating all that God had done and stimulated to worship God in response.
Sinclair Ferguson

Floating Island

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Eggs, Dairy New Orleans Desserts, Masterchefs, Norleans, Cro 4 Servings

INGREDIENTS

4 lg Eggs, separated
1 c Sugar
2 c Milk
1/8 ts Vanilla
1/2 c Sugar
1/2 c Water

INSTRUCTIONS

Put the egg whites in a mixing bowl and beat slowly at first. As the
egg whites thicken, add 1/4 cup of sugar and increase the beating speed
until the whites hold very stiff peaks.
Scald the milk and add 1/4 cup of sugar and vanilla. Stir the mixture
until the sugar has dissolved.
Poach the egg whites in milk for 4 to 5 minutes, turning once. The
idea here is to drop large dollops of the beaten egg white/sugar mixture
onto the surface of the milk until they are cooked through. These will be
the "islands" for this exotic dessert.  Remove to serving platter.
Beat the egg yolks with the remaining 1/2 cup of sugar in a bowl and
add the hot milk, stirring vigorously. Cool and strain.
Make a caramel by boiling 1/2 cup of sugar and 1/2 cup of water to a
syrup.
Serve the cooled milk-and-egg mixture with the islands and drizzle
caramel on top.
Source: Great Chefs of New Orleans, Tele-record Productions
:    Box 71112, New Orleans, Louisiana - 1983
:    Chef Gerard Crozier, Crozier's Restaurant, New Orleans
From Gemini's MASSIVE MealMaster collection at www.synapse.com/~gemini

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