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

Because we often associate hospitality with our homes, here are some ways in which we can use those homes for the good of others. We can offer our homes for: 1. Home Bible Studies. 2. Home Cell Groups. 3. A place for traveling evangelists or conference speakers. 4. A place for visiting missionaries. 5. Sunday School parties. 6. Hosting singles’ groups. 7. Hosting youth activities. 8. Hosting dinners for the staff or pastors. 9. Providing dinners for international students. 10. Hosting Christian singing groups who may be traveling in our area. 11. A temporary place to stay for those families who move into our area. 12. Hosting dinners for the senior members of the church (golden agers). 13. A place for various church committees to meet. 14. A place where children can be provided for when their mothers need a day out. 15. By taking in people who do not have a home.
Curtis Thomas

We are trusted to spread the spirit of love. Tenderness in judgment, the habit of thinking the best of one another, unwillingness to believe evil, grief if we are forced to do so, eagerness to believe good, joy over one recovered from any slip or fall, unselfish gladness in another’s joys, sorrow in another’s sorrow, readiness to do anything to help another entirely irrespective of self – all this and much more is included in that wonderful word love. If love weakens among us, if it ever becomes possible to tolerate the least shadow of an unloving thought, our Fellowship will begin to perish. Unlove is deadly. It is a cancer. It may kill slowly but it always kills in the end. Let us fear it, fear to give room to it as we should fear to nurse a cobra. It is deadlier than any cobra. And just as one minute drop of the almost invisible cobra venom spreads swiftly all over the body of one into whom it has been injected, so one drop of the gall of unlove in my heart or yours, however unseen, has a terrible power of spreading all through our Family, for we are one body – we are parts of one another. If one member suffers loss, all suffer loss. Not one of us liveth to herself.
Amy Carmichael

Tarka Dal

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Indian Indian, Main dish 4 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1/2 c Red split lentils
3 c Water
1 ts Level salt
1 sm Onion chopped
3 Cloves garlic finely chopped
4 tb Melted ghee
Pinch turmeric
1/2 ts Garam masala
1 sm Tomato
2 ts Chopped coriander

INSTRUCTIONS

Check the lentils for stones and wash them in several changes of water or
until the water starts to run clear.
Put the lentils into a saucepan with the water and salt  and bring to the
boil.
Turn the heat down and simmer uncoverd for 20 minutes skimming off the
froth that collects at the top.  Now partly cover the pan.
Cook for a total of an hour stirring now and again.  At the end of the hour
you should have a pale yellow soup like mixture.
While the dal is cooking fry the onion and garlic in the ghee until the
onions are pale brown.  Be careful not to burn the garlic as this will add
a bad flavour to the dish.
Add the turmeric and garam masala to the onions and cook for a few more
seconds.
Stir the onion mixture into the cooked lentils.  Serve hot sprinkled with
chopped tomato and green coriander.
This dish can also be used as an ingredient in chicken Dhansak.  Make a
chicken curry using the basic sauce recipe I posted the other day but using
less of the curry sauce.  Also put a Tablespoon or two of lemon juice in
with the sauce when you are making the dish.
In case you are wondering what ghee is, it is clarified butter.  If you
cannot get it you can make it.  Here is how I do it.
Melt a pack of unsalted butter in a pan and then drain through a coffee
filter.  Discard all of the sludge that is left and leave the rest to cool.
You should be left with a clear golden liquid that sets hard. Ghee is used
in indian cooking because it has a much higher burn temperature than normal
butter.
Posted to MM-Recipes Digest V4 #257 by Matt <recipes@cableinet.co.uk> on
Sep 21, 1997

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