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The hypocrite (Greek- hupokrites) was originally an actor. Theatrical make-up in those days took the form of a mask which the actor wore. On it would be painted the character and the mood which the actor portrayed. It might be a smiling face which hid the sad heart of the actor behind it. It might be a face of virtue which hid behind it a life of vice. In acting there can be a great discrepancy between the part which is played and the reality of the life which lies behind it… The same can be true of faith. We can profess much and possess little. Indeed there is always the temptation in Christian fellowships to pretend to be something other than what we are.
Sinclair Ferguson

What once bothered us doesn't bother us anymore. What once activated our conscience doesn't seem to anymore. What we knew was outside of God’s boundaries, and therefore functionally outside of ours, lives inside our boundaries, and it doesn’t matter to us anymore. It is a scary place to be. The hard heart is a stony heart. It is not malleable anymore. It’s hard and resistant to change, no longer tender and responsive to the squeeze of the hands of the Spirit. There is evil in our hearts and in the acts of our hands, and we’re okay with it. Could there be a more dangerous place for a believer to be?
Paul David Tripp

Trail Mix Cookies

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Grains, Eggs, Fruits, Dairy 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1/2 c Butter or Margerine
1 Jar (18 oz) Chunky Peanut Butter (unsweetened is best)
1 c White Sugar
1 c Firmly packed brown sugar
4 lg Eggs
1 ts Vanilla extract
6 c Quick Cooking Oats, uncooked
2 1/2 ts Baking soda
1 c (or more) Mix-ins, such as: chocolate chips, raisins, dates, dried fruit (apricots, apples, papaya, pineapple, etc.)
1/2 c Dried milk solids (add another egg or 2 Tablespoons of oil or cookies will be crumbly)

INSTRUCTIONS

OPTIONAL
Here is a recipe that I adapted out of Southern Living Magazine several
years ago. One cookie is a great breakfast or snack and is gram per gram
lower in fat and calories than commercial granola bars. I like to mix up a
whole batch then bake 6 at a time, freezing the rest of the dough for later
use.
Beat butter and peanut butter until fluffy; gradually add sugars, beating
well. Add eggs and vanilla, mixing well. Combine oats, baking soda, and
optional milk solids; add to peanut butter mixture, mixing well. Divide
into 24 balls and place on ungreased cookie sheet. Flatten slightly. Bake
at 350F for 15 to 18 minutes, or until golden brown throughout (will still
look somewhat uncooked when hot).
Nutrition profile for cookies with fruit and without milk solids:
Serving size 1 cookie (97.1 g). Calories: 380; from fat: 146, Total fat:
16.2 g, Saturated fat: 4 g, Cholesterol: 64 mg, Sodium 216 mg,
Carbohydrates: 43 g, Fiber: 1 g, Sugars: 21 g, Protein: 6 g, Vitamin A: 6%,
Calcium: 2%, Vitamin C: 6%, Iron: 4%.
Posted to EAT-L Digest 05 Sep 96
From:    Andi Hosler <adh@ASCIENCES.COM>
Date:    Thu, 5 Sep 1996 12:18:34 -0400

A Message from our Provider:

“You’re not God’s judge. One day you’ll discover it’s the other way around”

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