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

So, what’s so bad about complaining? One – it reveals a thankless heart. How much easier is it to complain about the two things we don’t have as compared to being grateful for the thousands of things we do have? How can we follow the commands to rejoice always (Phil. 4:4) and be thankful for all things (1 Thes. 5:18) if there is a mere morsel of complaining in our hearts? Two – complaining reveals greater sins. Why do we complain? Because we are jealous that someone has what we want. Because we are selfish that things are not going our way. Because we are discontent and unsatisfied in Christ’s sufficiency. And three – complaining distrusts the sovereignty of God. Complaining implies that God made a mistake; that He not ruling the world with perfect justice and wisdom and quite frankly, we could do a better job. That He’s personally unloving and unkind to us. Can we rightly accept the fact that God has a good plan for our lives, or do we complain in believing ours is better and thus cast doubt on our sovereign Creator?
Randy Smith

We dare not, indeed, presume to speculate or dogmatize on the manner of this intercession. It is a silent inarticulate speech and pleading. The voice of Abel’s blood is represented, by a bold figure, as crying from the ground. That blood, it need not be remarked, was in reality mute. So doubtless is it with our Divine Intercessor. There may be no articulate accents, no audible utterances. He sprinkles no material blood. But this we know, that He has carried with Him to His intercessory throne a glorified body, still bearing the visible marks of earthly humiliation and suffering – the perpetual memorials of His atoning sacrifice – so that that blood may still be said to have a voice before the throne – “The blood of sprinkling which speaks better things than that of Abel.”
John MacDuff

Huevos Con Cecina (Eggs with Dried Beef)

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Dairy, Eggs, Meats Cheese/eggs, Mexico, Submitted 2 Servings

INGREDIENTS

2 1/2 oz Beef, dried
1 tb Butter, unsalted
1/2 ts Chile, pequin; crumbled
1 Onions; finely chopped
Salt
Pepper, black
4 Eggs
2 tb Heavy cream

INSTRUCTIONS

Pour boiling water over the dried beef; drain and chop coarsely. Heat the
butter in skillet, saute onion until limp. Add beef and chiles, cook gently
for 2-3 minutes.
Beat the eggs with the cream and scramble them into the beef mixture over
moderately low heat. Stir, with a wooden spoon, slowly and constantly, to
reach the entire surface of the pan, until the eggs are set, about 3-4
minutes. Serve immediately.
From Gemini's MASSIVE MealMaster collection at www.synapse.com/~gemini

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