We Love God!

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

But Pastor, doesn’t the verse teach that I am to love myself? Doesn’t it say to love your neighbor “as yourself?” Yes it does. So shouldn’t we then teach, as many secularists do that we cannot love others until we learn to first love ourselves? Answer: no. Because everything about the Christian faith is a death to self. 1 Corinthians 13:5, “Love “does not seek its own.” There is nothing supernatural about loving yourself. Jesus Christ did not deny Himself and give up Himself to make us learn to love ourselves more. He died because we already love ourselves too much! We are experts at putting ourselves first. Ephesians 5:29, “For no one ever hated his own flesh, but nourishes and cherishes it.” So this is not a command for self-love. This is an assumption that we already love ourselves (not of which all is evil) and the way we love ourselves already is to be the example of how we are to love others.
Randy Smith

When Christians meet together, do they not talk too much about religion, preachers, and sermons? I cannot but think, that if they communed less about religion, and more of Jesus, it would give a higher tone of spirituality to their conversation, and prove more refreshing to the soul. He would then oftener draw near, and make Himself one in their midst, and talk with them by the way.
Mary Winslow

Rum Omelette

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Eggs, Dairy New Orleans 2 Servings

INGREDIENTS

4 lg Eggs
2 tb Milk
1/4 ts Salt
1/8 ts Freshly ground white pepper
3 tb Plus 2 tsp. sugar
1/2 c Rum
3 tb Butter

INSTRUCTIONS

New Orleans Cookbook
In a mixing bowl combine the eggs, milk, salt, pepper, and 3 tablespoons
sugar and beat with a wire whisk until throroughly mixed and airy. In a
10-inch omelette pan melt the butter until it begins to sizzle, then pour
in the egg mixture. Cook over high heat for about 1 minute, then lower the
heat to medium. Keep tilting the omelette pan from side to side with a
circular motion to keep the omelette from sticking. Cook until the top is
no longer wet, then sprinkle with 2 teaspoons sugar. Pass the pan under a
preheated broiler for 30 seconds to carmelize the sugar. Heat the rum in a
small pan until it bubbles. Pour it over the omelette and ignite, then
spoon the burning rum over the omelette until the flame dies out. Divide it
in half and serve immediately, with the liquid from the pan poured over.
Posted to Bakery-Shoppe Digest V1 #177 by "Mandy Rose Bell"
<mbell@cdsnet.net> on Aug 1, 1997

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