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God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

Christians often spiritually fail for one of two reasons. Either they deny the reality of spiritual warfare or they try to win the battles in their own strength.
Randy Smith

Shredded flesh against unforgiving wood, iron stakes pounded through bone and wracked nerves, joints wrenched out of socket by the sheer dead weight of the body, public humiliation before the eyes of family, friends, and the world – that was death on the cross, “the infamous stake” as the Romans called it, “the barren wood,” the maxima mala crux. Or as the Greeks spat it out, the stauros. No wonder no one talked about it. No wonder parents hid their children’s eyes from it. The stauros was a loathsome thing, and the one who died on it was loathsome too, a vile criminal whose only use was to hang there as a putrid, decaying warning to anyone else who might follow his example. That is how Jesus died.
Greg Gilbert

Gingerbread

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Vegetables Medieval Desserts 56 Servings

INGREDIENTS

3 1/2 c All-purpose flour
3 c Whole-wheat flour
2 ts Ground ginger
1 ts Ground cinnamon
1/2 ts Salt
1/2 ts Ground nutmeg
1 3/4 c Molasses
3/4 c Vegetable oil
Vegetable cooking spray

INSTRUCTIONS

Combine the first 6 ingredients in a large bowl; add molasses and oil,
stirring until well-blended (dough will be stiff). Knead dough 10 times.
Coat the cookie mold with cooking spray. Press the dough into the mold,
using about 4 ounces for an 8-1/2-inch cookie mold or 1 ounce for a 4-1/2-
inch mold. Trim excess dough, and turn out cookies onto a baking sheet
coated with cooking spray; carefully remove mold.
Bake at 350 degrees for 12 minutes. Carefully remove the cookies from
baking sheets, and let cool on wire racks. Yield: 14 large or 56 small
cookies (serving size: 1 [1-ounce] piece).
Per serving: 104 Calories; 3g Fat (27% calories from fat); 2g Protein; 18g
Carbohydrate; 0mg Cholesterol; 23mg Sodium
NOTES : This sweet was first presented as a favor by medieval damsels to
knights going into tournament battle.  This dough is too sticky to be
rolled out. It must be pressed into the mold instead.
Recipe by: Cooking Light, Nov/Dec 1994, page 162
Posted to MC-Recipe Digest V1 #407 by igor@digex.net on Jan 28, 1997.

A Message from our Provider:

“God grant me the courage not to give up what I think is right even though I think it is hopeless. #Chester W. Nimitz”

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