We Love God!

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

Yes, apostasy happens. Sometimes the catalyst is flagrant sin. The pain of conviction and repentance is refused, and the only alternative to it is wholesale rejection of Christ. But sometimes the catalyst is a thorn growing quietly in the heart, an indifference to the way of the Cross, a drifting that is not reversed by the knowledge of biblical warnings.
Sinclair Ferguson

If Jesus actually stood in my place and bore my sin on the cross as the Bible teaches, then I can never be punished for that sin. In order for Christ’s atonement to truly be a substitutionary or vicarious atonement, then it must actually secure a real salvation for all for whom Christ died. If the atonement only makes salvation a possibility, then it cannot be a vicarious atonement. If Christ acted as a real and true substitute for those for whom He died, then all for whom He died will be saved. To say that Christ died a vicarious death in the place of all sinners but that not all sinners will be saved is a contradiction.
Unknown Author

Chicken in Port

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats, Dairy Frugal01 4 servings

INGREDIENTS

10 Chicken thighs
2 Garlic clove; crushed
1/2 c Onion; chopped
1/2 c Mushrooms; chopped fine
1 c Ham steak; cut into julienne
2 c Dry port or tawny wine
1/2 c Whipping cream
2 tb Butter
2 tb Flour
Freshly-ground black pepper; to taste
Salt; to taste

INSTRUCTIONS

Heat a large frying pan and then add the olive oil. Season thighs
with salt and pepper and fry until brown on both sides. Remove to a
heated platter. Saute the garlic, onion and mushrooms until the
onions are clear. Add the ham to the onions and cook for 3 minutes.
Add the chicken thighs and port to the pan and cover. Simmer until
the chicken is tender, about 15 minutes. Cook the two tablespoons of
flour together with the two tablespoons of butter to form a roux.
Remove the chicken to a heated platter and add the cream to the
sauce. Reduce the sauce a bit and thicken with the roux. Correct the
seasoning for salt and pepper. Return the chicken to the sauce and
serve over pasta or rice.
Comments: This does sound strange, doesn't it? Cooking chicken in a
heavy red wine seems to be against all the rules. Red wine with beef
and lamb, white wine with chicken and fish. This will convince you
that most rules were made by people with little imagination.
Recipe Source: THE FRUGAL GOURMET by Jeff Smith From the 11-28-1990
issue - The Springfield Union-News
Formatted for MasterCook by Joe Comiskey, aka MR MAD -
jpmd44a@prodigy.com -or- MAD-SQUAD@prodigy.net
07-27-1994
Recipe by: Jeff Smith
Converted by MM_Buster v2.0l.

A Message from our Provider:

“If God were an impersonal force we’d be superior to our Maker”

How useful was this recipe?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this recipe.

We are sorry that this recipe was not useful for you!

Let us improve this recipe!

Tell us how we can improve this recipe?