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

One of the lessons I’ve learned and re-learned in more than one church is the danger of selecting a man to serve as elder who has a history of protracted, repeated, and/or unresolved conflict. On more than one occasion I have overlooked conflict in a man’s life, reasoning either that it was justified by the circumstances, a function of immaturity that has been outgrown, or foisted upon him as the innocent party. The fact is, however, that even when circumstances or theology vindicate his side of the conflict, a man can still be a quarrelsome man. This may demonstrate itself in a lack of gentleness, a propensity to taking rigid positions when none are required, an inability to lose graciously, or simply an over-love of debate. Whatever the form it takes, quarrelsomeness is a serious impediment to effective service as an elder; unchecked it is a clear disqualification (1 Tim. 3:3).
Michael Lawrence

Basic Applesauce

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Grains St. Louis St. louis p, Post1 8 servings

INGREDIENTS

4 lb Apples; cored
1/2 c Granulated sugar; or to taste
1/2 c Water
1 Vanilla bean; split
(or 1 cinnamon stick); optional
1 tb Lemon juice – (to 2 tbspns); optional

INSTRUCTIONS

If using blender or food processor to puree apples, peel and core
them. For chunky applesauce, leave them unpeeled. Cut apples into
quarters; combine with sugar, water and vanilla bean in large
saucepan. Bring to a boil. Cover and cook over medium-low heat 10
minutes. Uncover; cook, stirring often, about 15 minutes, until
apples are very tender. For chunky applesauce, simmer 5 minutes
longer, until apples fall apart. Remove vanilla bean. If using
blender or processor, let mixture cool slightly before pureeing it.
Taste applesauce and add lemon juice or more sugar if needed. If
adding more sugar, simmer and stir applesauce 1 minute to blend it
in. Yield: 8 to 12 servings.
Note: For applesauce made with food mill, there's no need to peel or
core apples. Fit food mill with coarse disk. After cooking apples,
transfer them in batches to food mill with slotted spoon, and puree.
Return puree to saucepan and simmer until applesauce is as thick as
you like.
Recipe Source: St. Louis Post-Dispatch - 11-30-1998 By Faye Levy
Formatted for MasterCook by Susan Wolfe - swolfe1@prodigy.net
Converted by MM_Buster v2.0l.

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