We Love God!

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

So, what’s so bad about complaining? One – it reveals a thankless heart. How much easier is it to complain about the two things we don’t have as compared to being grateful for the thousands of things we do have? How can we follow the commands to rejoice always (Phil. 4:4) and be thankful for all things (1 Thes. 5:18) if there is a mere morsel of complaining in our hearts? Two – complaining reveals greater sins. Why do we complain? Because we are jealous that someone has what we want. Because we are selfish that things are not going our way. Because we are discontent and unsatisfied in Christ’s sufficiency. And three – complaining distrusts the sovereignty of God. Complaining implies that God made a mistake; that He not ruling the world with perfect justice and wisdom and quite frankly, we could do a better job. That He’s personally unloving and unkind to us. Can we rightly accept the fact that God has a good plan for our lives, or do we complain in believing ours is better and thus cast doubt on our sovereign Creator?
Randy Smith

Because God is so concerned for the holiness of His people, they should be equally concerned. The church cannot preach and teach a message it does not live and have any integrity before God, or even before the world. Yet in many churches where there is no tolerance for sin in principle there is much tolerance for it in practice. And when preaching becomes separated from living, it becomes separated both from integrity and from spiritual and moral effectiveness. It promotes hypocrisy instead of holiness. Divorcing biblical teaching from daily living is compromise of the worst sort. It corrupts the church, grieves the Lord, and dishonors His Word and His name.
John MacArthur

Larb with Minced Pork

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats, Seafood, Grains Thai Taste1 4 servings

INGREDIENTS

1 oz Dried snow fungus
1 lb Ground pork
2/3 c Lime juice
6 tb Fish sauce
1 tb Sugar
6 tb Julienned fresh ginger
3 ts Ground dried thai chilis
12 tb Sliced scallions
2/3 c Coarsely-chopped roasted peanuts; unsalted
4 tb Chopped mint
4 tb Lemongrass; tender inner leaves, minced
2 ts Finely-minced fresh hot chili; (to 6 tspns)
2 Green leaf lettuce heads; leaves separated,
Rinsed and dried
4 ts Toasted Rice Powder; see * Note

INSTRUCTIONS

* Note: See the "Toasted Rice Powder" recipe which is included in this
collection.
Soak the mushrooms in hot water until softened, about 15 minutes, then
slice them in 1-inch pieces. Boil the pork in a sieve set into a pot of
water for about 1 minute, or until cooked. Remove and drain. In a mixing
bowl combine the lime juice, fish sauce and sugar. Add pork and mix. Add
the ginger and ground chili. Add 6 tablespoons of scallions, the nuts,
mint, lemongrass, mushrooms, fresh chilis, and mix. Put 3 leaves of lettuce
on each serving plate. Divide and mound the pork mixture on top of the
lettuce. Sprinkle 1 teaspoon Toasted Rice Powder on each portion, then
divide the remaining scallions between 4 plates. Spoon the liquid left in
the bottom of the pork mixture bowl equally over each portion, and serve.
You can roll the mixture up in the lettuce and eat it out of hand. This
recipe yields 4 appetizer portions.
Recipe Source: TASTE with David Rosengarten From the TV FOOD NETWORK -
(Show # TS-1G11 broadcast 01-13-1998) Downloaded from their Web-Site -
http://www.foodtv.com
Formatted for MasterCook by Joe Comiskey, aka MR MAD - jpmd44a@prodigy.com
~or- MAD-SQUAD@prodigy.net
03-28-1998
Suggested Wine: Suggested drink:  Mekong Whisky
Recipe by: David Rosengarten
Converted by MM_Buster v2.0l.

A Message from our Provider:

“Don’t confuse God’s patience with his final response”

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?