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We sometimes use the analogy of beef stew to illustrate how we think racial diversity will play out in our church. We don’t want to be a bag of marbles, where each culture exists side by side in a congregation but with interpenetration with the others. We also don’t want to be a melting pot, however, where each culture loses its distinctive flavor. If you mix a hundred different paint colors together, you end up with a dull gray. We want the church to be like beef stew, where each element retains its basic consistency but “flavors” the others, too. That’s cheeky, for sure, but it helps us picture what racial diversification might look like in a local body.
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It’s a striking fact that every New Testament passage discussing the role of a wife in relation to her husband requires her to submit to him (Eph. 5;22-24; Col. 3:18; 1 Pet. 3:1; Titus 2:5), while no passage indicates that a husband should be subordinate to his wife. Any honest reading of Scripture must conclude that a wife is commanded to submit to her husband.
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Pecan Sausage Corn Bread Stuffing

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats Italian Sausage 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

4 c Dry bread cubes
4 c Crumbled corn bread
1/2 c Raisins
1/4 c Butter or margarine
2 c Finely chopped onions
1 c Finely chopped celery
1 c Chopped pecans
1 lb Italian sausage or breakfast sausage
1 c Chicken stock or enough to moisten
3 ts Poultry seasoning
1/2 ts Freshly ground black pepper

INSTRUCTIONS

In a large bowl, combine bread cubes and crumbled corn bread. Pour 1/2 cup
boiling water over raisins and allow to plump. In large skillet, heat
butter until melted and saute onions, celery and chopped pecans until
onions are wilted, about 7 minutes. Add to bread mixture. Remove casings
from sausages and discard. Chop sausage coarsely. In skillet, fry sausage,
stirring until cooked through and starting to brown. Using a slotted spoon,
lift sausage from skillet, leaving drippings. Drain raisins and add to corn
bread mixture, along with sausage, stock to moisten, poultry seasoning and
pepper. Mix well. Spoon into a greased 2 1/2 quart casserole or use to
stuff turkey. If baking separately, bake, uncovered, in 325 degrees oven
for 1 hour. Makes about 2 quarts. Note: Use about 3/4 cup of stuffing per
pound of turkey and stuff turkey just before roasting.
Posted to recipelu-digest by "Diane Geary." <diane@keyway.net> on Feb 4,
1998

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