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

Christian liberty [also] may legitimately manifest itself in abstinence or asceticism. Christian liberty includes the right to abstain from otherwise legitimate pursuits if one is convinced in his/her own mind that such is the will of God for them personally. In other words, you may fully believe in the truth of Rom. 14:14a, yet choose to abstain anyway. Christian liberty does not include the right to insist that others likewise abstain simply because you do. Far less does it include the right to judge them as sub-spiritual for choosing a different course of action from you.
Sam Storms

The invisibility of God is a great problem. It was already a problem to God’s people in Old Testament days. Their pagan neighbors would taunt them, saying, “Where Is now your God?” Their gods were visible and tangible, but Israel’s God was neither. Today in our scientific culture young people are taught not to believe in anything which is not open to empirical investigation. How then has God solved the problem of His own invisibility? The first answer is of course “in Christ.” Jesus Christ is the visible image of the invisible God. John 1:18: “No one has ever seen God, but God the only Son has made him known.” “That’s wonderful,” people say, “but it was 2,000 years ago. Is there no way by which the invisible God makes Himself visible today?” There is. We return to 1 John 4:12: “No one has ever seen God.” It is precisely the same introductory statement. But instead of continuing with reference to the Son of God, it continues: “If we love one another, God dwells in us.” In other words, the invisible God, who once made Himself visible in Christ, now makes Himself visible in Christians, if we love one another. It is a breathtaking claim. The local church cannot evangelize, proclaiming the gospel of love, if it is not itself a community of love.
John Stott

Baked Egg

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Eggs Worrall tho, Worrall1 1 servings

INGREDIENTS

4 tb Creme fraiche
3 ts Truffle paste
3 ts Grated parmesan
Salt
Pepper
2 Eggs

INSTRUCTIONS

Preheat the oven to 200C. Mix together the creme fraiche, truffle
paste, parmesan, salt and pepper in a bowl. Take two ramekin dishes
and rub butter around their edges and leave a knob of butter in the
bottom. Spoon 2dsp of the mix in the bowl on top.
Break an egg into the dish and add a touch of salt and pepper and a
dribble of cream on top. Repeat this process for a second egg and
then place the ramekins onto a baking tray which has 1/4inch of water
in it. Place this in the oven for 10 minutes or until the yolks of
the eggs are soft and the whites hard.
Converted by MC_Buster.
Converted by MM_Buster v2.0l.

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