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

The mercies of God make a sinner proud, but a saint humble.
Thomas Watson

Our religion is one which challenges the ordinary human standards by holding that the ideal of life is the spirit of a little child. We tend to glorify adulthood and wisdom and worldly prudence, but the gospel reverses all this. The gospel says that the inescapable condition of entrance into the divine fellowship is that we turn and become as a little child. As against our natural judgment we must become tender and full of wonder and unspoiled by the hard skepticism on which we so often pride ourselves. But when we really look into the heart of a child, willful as he may be, we are often ashamed. God has sent children into the world, not only to replenish it, but to serve as sacred reminders of something ineffably precious which we are always in danger of losing. The sacrament of childhood is thus a continuing revelation.
Elton Trueblood

Provencal Vinegar

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1 Sprig (5 in) fresh rosemary; rinsed
1 Sprigs (each 3 in) fresh sage, rinsed (up to 2)
2 Sprigs (each 4 in) fresh thyme, rinsed (up to 3)
1 1/2 c White wine vinegar (up to 2)

INSTRUCTIONS

With a chopstick or skewer, push rosemary sage and thyme into a clean 12-
to 16-ounce bottle. Pour vinegar through a funnel into bottle to fill. Seal
and store in a cool, dark place at room temperature for at least a week or
up to 4 months.
Posted to recipelu-digest Volume 01 Number 182 by Mandy Rose Bell
<mbell@gladstone.uoregon.edu> on Oct 29, 1997

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“Plan ahead — It wasn’t raining when Noah built the ark.”

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