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The Bible warns against being self-willed or creating factions. Furthermore, James tells us that when it comes in corporate worship, we should not play favorites or create distinctions among one another. Of course, we celebrate family and friendships, but Sunday morning is not to celebrate the people we like the most. It is to celebrate the oneness we have in Christ with each other. That’s what makes us different than the world. That’s what heaven is all about. That’s a biblical church with one accord with each other, not several factions splintered among family and friendship distinctions or at worse 'toxic tribalism.' That gets celebrated outside the body, but not when the body of Christ gathers. Understanding the balance calls for discernment and self-control and love. It calls for Christian maturity.
Randy Smith

God has not given us one set of leadership principles for marriage relationships, another set for biological family relationships, and yet another for relationships in the larger (church) family. Though each sphere of influence broadens in terms of function and responsibility, the basic leadership principles are the same. A husband is to be a servant-leader to his wife, a father is to be a servant-leader in his family, and elders/overseers are to be servant-leaders in the family of God.
Gene Getz

Nova Scotia Potato Dressing

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Vegetables, Meats Vegetables 9 Servings

INGREDIENTS

6 c Potato, chop small cubes
1 1/2 c Bread crumbs (2 pc toast)
1/2 ts Pepper
1/2 ts Salt
2 ts Poultry seasoning OR
1 ts sage to taste
1/2 c Margarine melted OR
Part cooking liquid,less fat
1/2 c Onion, to taste

INSTRUCTIONS

Cook potatoes about 20 min or until soft enough to mash. Place onions in a
large microwave safe bowl and cook 1 minute on high or until margarine is
melted. Stir frequently. Place about 1/3 of the cooked potatoes at a time
on top of the margarine/onion and mash. Add seasoning by sprinkling part at
a time while mashing. Blend well. Taste and adjust seasoning if desired.
Divide into meal-sized portions, extra may be frozen. Reheat in microwave
or oven and serve very hot.
Source:  Rodier family recipe card.  This dressing has been served with
every family turkey dinner for about 6 generations, and has become a
favorite freezer item ready to serve with any plain meat. Shared by
Elizabeth Rodier Aug 93, revised Oct 93.
Have not tried a lower fat version, but half turkey fat and half de-fatted
drippings would likely work. Turkey broth is used in a diabetic bread
dressing and no-fat gravy.
From Gemini's MASSIVE MealMaster collection at www.synapse.com/~gemini

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