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The fool’s attention wanders, never focused on wisdom (Pr. 17:24). He ignores all consequences (Pr. 9). He is persuaded that his way is the right way, so there is no reason to listen to others (Pr. 14:12; 28:26). He thinks he will always get away with it, but he will be exposed (Pr. 15:3). He goes with his feelings, not realizing that they can mislead (Pr. 14:8). Of course, the fool feels the consequences of his behavior at times, and he might even have glimpses into how he has brought pain on others (Pr. 17:25), but consequences are no deterrent (Pr. 27:22). The destructive pattern is repeated because folly is enjoyed (Pr. 26:11).
Edward Welch

The church cannot be expected to do its work effectively if their followers are not loyally supporting the leaders. It’s a matter of fact that we’re often slow to realize to this day that effective leadership in the church of Christ demands effective following. If we’re continually critical of them that are set over us, small wonder if they’re unable to perform the miracles that we demand of them. If we bear in mind the work’s sake, we may be more inclined to esteem them very highly in love.
Leon Morris

Pasta with Sauted Vegetables

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Vegetables, Eggs, Grains, Dairy Vegetable, Pasta 4 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1 lb Fresh pasta; 1/2 pound dried
2 tb Extra virgin olive oil
2 Cloves garlic; peeled and sliced
3 c Prepped raw vegetables such as onion, pepper, squash, mushrooms, eggplant, spinach, or chard
1/4 c Fresh basil; chopped
1 lg Tomato; peeled, seeded, and chopped
1/4 ts Red pepper flakes; crushed
Kosher salt; to taste
1/2 c Parmesan cheese; grated

INSTRUCTIONS

Bring 1 gallon of water to a boil in a large pot. Add dried pasta, and cook
to al dente-to the tooth- (just soft enough so that it still must be
chewed). Drain in a colander. For fresh pasta, turn the heat down to low,
cover the pot and hold water on warm until the vegetables are almost done
before you cook the pasta. Put oil and garlic into a large skillet. Turn
the heat to medium and cook the garlic just until it begins to color, not
beyond or it will burn and be bitter. Add the vegetables in the order that
they will cook, starting with those that will take the longest. Move them
constantly with a spatula so they will not overcook in one spot. For fresh
pasta, reboil the water at this point, and cook the pasta during final
minutes of cooking the vegetables. Drain. Add the herbs to the vegetables
and mix to distribute. When the vegetables are almost cooked (still a bit
too crunchy), add canned tomato and crushed pepper flakes, turn the heat
down to low, and simmer for 3-4 mi! ! ! nutes to blend the flavors. Taste
and add kosher salt if necessary.
NOTES : This quick, easy, and straight forward pasta recipe has been dinner
hundreds of times in my house. Timing is important: fresh pasta cooks in 3
~ 5 minutes, but dried pasta takes up to 12 - 15 minutes. I usually cook
dried pasta first, drain it, toss it with 1 1/2 tbsp. olive oil and cover
it while the vegetables cook. To serve, transfer the cooked, drained pasta
to the plates (with tongs) or to a pasta platter. Ladle the vegetables over
the pasta and garnish each serving with 2 tbsp. Parmesan cheese. Yield: 4
servings. Recipe by: Heidi Rabel Posted to MC-Recipe Digest V1 #672 by Lisa
Whittington <wildrose@community.net> on Jul 14, 1997

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