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During the Protestant Reformation of the 1500s, Martin Luther articulated a timeless distinction between two approaches to knowing God. He labeled one a “theology of glory,” and applied it to those who believe they can attain to a glorious knowledge of God by human goodness, religious effort, mystical experiences, or the wisdom of human reason. According to this view, God manifests Himself most often through blessings, victory, success, miracles, power, and other exhilarating experiences of “glory.” By contrast, Luther argued that the biblical way to know God goes through a “theology of the cross.” God has “hidden” Himself where human wisdom would not expect to find Him, that is, in the lowliness and suffering of the man Jesus Christ, and especially in His humiliating death on a Roman cross. As Luther put it, “true theology and recognition of God are in the crucified Christ.” So rather than finding God by ascending to Him through our efforts, wisdom, or self-initiated experiences, God has descended to us in Jesus whose glory was in the least-expected of places – the cross – and in a way where He can be found by faith alone.
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The devil will try to destroy us by leading us into immoral behavior (Eph. 4:27). That is a real struggle for every Christian. Which is easier: to march around the city and claim it for Christ or to stop running down a fellow believer behind her back? Which is the more demanding: to pray over someone that the demon of jealousy be cast out or going up to someone and asking their forgiveness for the way you have hurt them by your cutting remarks inspired by jealousy? I know which is a real wrestling match for me (Eph. 6:12). This is where the real battle lies in Christian relationships, putting into practice at personal cost Christian truth – not some imaginary Dungeon and Dragons world.
Melvin Tinker

Layered Toasted Hazelnut Fudge

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Grains, Dairy Choco3 1 servings

INGREDIENTS

1 c HAZELNUTS; (8 ozs)
2 c GRANULATED SUGAR
1 c BROWN SUGAR; firmly packed
1 cn EVAPORATED MILK; (NOT sweetened)
1/2 c BUTTER
1 Jar MARSHMALLOW CREME
1 ts VANILLA
1/2 ts SALT
6 oz SEMISWEET CHOCOLATE; chopped

INSTRUCTIONS

Preheat oven to 350-degrees.
Spread the hazelnuts out in a single layer on a baking sheet. Bake 10-12
minutes until toasted and the skins begin to flake off; cool slightly. Wrap
hazelnuts in a heavy kitchen towel; rub against the towel to remove as much
of the skins as possible. Cool completely.
Line an 8-inch square baking pan with foil, leaving a 1-inch overhang on
the sides (again, this helps to get the candy out later on). Lightly butter
the foil; set aside.
Place the hazelnuts into a food processor. Process using ON/OFF pulsing
action until the nuts are coarsely chopped. Remove 1/2 cup and set aside.
Leave the rest of the nuts in the food processor. Continue processing until
it looks like smooth peanut butter; set aside.
Spray (or butter) the inside of a heavy 4-quart saucepan with nonstick
cooking spray. Combine the sugars, evaporated milk and butter in the
saucepan; bring to a full rolling boil over medium heat, stirring
frequently to prevent scorching.
Attach a candy thermometer to the side of the pan. Continue boiling 5
minutes or until sugar mixture reaches soft-ball stage (238F) on the candy
thermometer, stirring constantly. Reduce the heat to low; stir in
marshmallow creme, vanilla and salt until blended. Remove from the heat.
Transfer 2 cups of the sugar mixture to a bowl; stir in the reserved
hazelnut paste.
To the rest of the mixture add the chocolate (mixture still in the pan);
stir until blended. Stir in the chopped hazelnuts. Pour chocolate mixture
into the prepared pan. Smooth evenly into the corners with a metal spatula
or a knife.
Pour the reserved hazelnut (blonde) mixture on top of the chocolate
mixture. Smooth top evenly with clean metal spatula.
Let the candy sit for a minute or so, then score (mark) into 36 squares by
cutting 6 sections lengthwise and 6 sections crosswise halfway through the
fudge with a sharp knife. Cool completely.
Remove candy from the pan by pulling on the foil. Place on a cutting board.
Cut along score lines into squares. Remove the foil from the candy.
Makes 36 pieces. Store in an airtight container at room temperature.
That's it. Have fun.
Recipe by: Linda Magee <Linda.Magee@salata.com>
Posted to CHILE-HEADS DIGEST V3 #, converted by MM_Buster v2.0l.

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