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When ye murmur and repine under cross and afflictive dispensations, this is a presuming to instruct God how to deal with you, and to reprove Him as if He were in the wrong. Yea, there is a kind of implicit blasphemy in it, as if you had more wisdom and justice to dispose of your lot, and to carve out your own portion in the world. This is upon the matter the language of such a disposition, Had I been on God’s counsel, I had ordered this matter better; things had not been with me as now they are. O presume not to correct the infinite wisdom of God, seeing He has decreed all things most wisely and judiciously.
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Even when preaching the Word of God does not soften and save and heal, it is not necessarily ineffective. This preaching of the Word may be doing God’s terrible work of judgment. It may be hardening people, and making their ears so dull that they will never want to hear again. There is a judgment in this world – not just in the world to come (Romans 1:24) – and oh, how we should flee from it…. Take heed how you hear! Don’t be cavalier in the hearing of God's Word week after week. If it is not softening and saving and healing and bearing fruit, it is probably hardening and blinding and dulling (see 2 Corinthians 2:16).
John Piper

The Eikenburg’s Tenolang Manok (Ten Oh Lahng

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats, Grains, Seafood Filipino Poultry, Main dish, Oriental 1 Serving

INGREDIENTS

1 md To lg whole chicken, cut into pieces (option: skin removed)
3 Chayote squash, peeled, deseeded and sliced
8 cl To 12 cloves of garlic, crushed with a knife flat and chopped fine
5 6 jalapenos, serranos or habaneros, whole
1 pk Fresh spinach (or approximately 10 oz.)
10 c 12 c. water
1 md Onion; sliced
1/4 c 1/3 c FRESH ginger; peeled and julienned
2 tb Canola oil
4 tb Patis (fish sauce)* approximately
1/4 ts Freshly ground black pepper

INSTRUCTIONS

In a LARGE pot lightly saute the garlic in the oil until lightly brown. Add
ginger and onions, cook till onions turn translucent. Add chicken pieces,
mix well. Add patis and black pepper to mixture. Add at LEAST 10 cups of
water. Bring to a boil, then cover and reduce heat, cook until the chicken
is tender, about 45 minutes. When chicken is done, add the chayote squash
and the chiles, then return to a boil and cook over a medium heat for about
10-15 minutes until the squash is tender. Then, add the spinach on top of
the soup, cover and cook until spinach wilts, about 1-2 minutes. Serve with
brown rice, and the traditional Filipino way is to take one of the cooked
chiles out and put it in a small bowl with enough patis to cover, then
smash the chile up in the sauce. You then use the chile/patis mixture to
season, if it's not salty enough. * This is easiest found in an oriental
grocery. The best brand is Rufina,  if you can't get that, Tiparos (from
Thailand) is OK. Submitted By RICHARD EIKENBURG Submitted By MARIE CULVER

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