We Love God!

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

Have you ever in the first five seconds of temptation, demanded of your mind that it look steadfastly at the crucified form of Jesus Christ? Picture this. You have just seen a peek-a-boo blouse inviting further fantasy. You have five seconds. "No! Get out of my mind! God help me!" Now, immediately, demand of your mind - you can do this by the Spirit (Romans 8:13). Demand of your mind to fix its gaze on Christ on the cross. Use all your fantasizing power to see his lacerated back. Thirty-nine lashes left little flesh intact. He heaves with his breath up and down against the rough vertical beam of the cross. Each breath puts splinters into the lacerations. The Lord gasps. From time to time he screams out with intolerable pain. He tries to pull away from the wood and the massive spokes through his wrist rip into the nerve endings and he screams again with agony and pushes up with his feet to give some relief to his wrists. But the bones and nerves in his pierced feet crush against each other with anguish and he screams again. There is no relief. His throat is raw from screaming and thirst. He loses his breath and thinks he is suffocating, and suddenly his body involuntarily gasps for air and all the injuries unite in pain. In torment, he forgets about the crown of two-inch thorns and throws his head back in desperation, only to hit one of the thorns perpendicular against the cross beam and drive it half an inch into his skull. His voice reaches a soprano pitch of pain and sobs break over his pain-wracked body as every cry brings more and more pain. Now, I am not thinking about the blouse any more. I am at Calvary. These two images are not compatible.
John Piper

Since we can’t see Jesus for the day-to-day living, God has provided in our lives godly men and women whom we can watch, question and follow within the church. Let’s remember, this is a team race. We need examples to imitate. Mavericks in the church only hurt themselves and others. To say you don’t need human examples is prideful and clearly unbiblical (1 Cor. 4:16; 1:11; Phil. 3:17; 4:9; Heb. 13:7; 1 Pet. 5:2).
Randy Smith

Molded Cranberry Relish #3

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Dairy, Grains Sauces, **cranberri 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

700 g Marshmallow creme
250 ml Heavy whipping cream
100 g Cream cheese
300 g Fresh cranberries
200 ml Water
180 g Raspberry Jello mix (1 package)
50 g Granulated sugar
300 g Tokay grapes (quartered and seeded)
300 g Celery; chopped fine
500 g Canned crushed pineapple; including syrup (one

INSTRUCTIONS

Dressing: 1. The night before serving the relish, place the cream cheese
and marshmallow creme in a small bowl. Mash lightly with a fork to barely
break up cream cheese. 2. Add whipping cream and cover tightly. Refrigerate
overnight.
3.  15 minutes before  serving, whip mixture with an electric mixer until
it reaches the consistency of thick, but not stiff, whipped cream.
Relish:
1.  Rinse cranberries thoroughly.  Place in .AB "an 8-cup" "a 2-liter
saucepan with water, and cover.  Bring to a boil and cook until the berries
have ``popped.''
2.  Remove from heat and, using an electric mixer, beat gently until all
the berries are broken.
3.  Add Jello and sugar.  Plan saucepan over a bowl of ice and stir
occasionally until mixture has thickened but not jelled.
4.  Add grapes, celery, and crushed pineapple (including packing syrup).
5.  Pour into prepared mold and chill in refrigerator until set (about 3
hours).
6.  To serve, unmold relish onto a plate and place dressing in a separate
dish. Serve a couple of dollops of dressing with each serving of relish.
Author's Notes:
For years my mother required us to taste her ever-changing version of a
fresh cranberry relish she insisted serving at Thanksgiving and Christmas.
The unanimous family response to the inevitably bitter dish was, ``Do we
have to?''  Then one year a friend came to Thanksgiving dinner and
contributed what is now known simply as ``the recipe.''  Mom never tried to
improve on this addictive relish.
The most difficult step is in unmolding the relish.  I always spray my
mold very lightly with a coating of an aerosol cooking oil (such as
``PAM'') before filling it with the relish.  When it's time to unmold, I
run a thin spatula around the outside of the molded relish to barely loosen
it, place the serving plate on top and invert the mold and plate. I rarely
have to dip the mold in hot water to loosen the relish. I usually use a
standard ring mold and put the dressing in a footed compote which sits in
the center of the unmolded ring of relish.
Difficulty    : moderate. Precision
: approximate measurement OK.
Recipe By     : Pamela McGarvey UCLA Comprehensive Epilepsy Program, Los
Ang
Posted to MC-Recipe Digest V1 #278
Date: Mon, 4 Nov 1996 17:11:04 GMT
From: pericles@serix.com

A Message from our Provider:

“If you want to be a leader, you must serve.”

How useful was this recipe?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this recipe.

We are sorry that this recipe was not useful for you!

Let us improve this recipe!

Tell us how we can improve this recipe?