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1. The doctrine of the Incarnation means that two distinct natures (divine and human) are united in one Person: Jesus. Jesus is not two people (God and man). He is one person: the God-man. Jesus is not schizophrenic. 2. When the Word became flesh He did not cease to be the Word. The Word veiled, hid, and voluntarily restricted the use of certain divine powers and prerogatives. But God cannot cease to be God. In other words, when the Word became flesh He did not commit divine suicide. 3. When the Word once became flesh He became flesh forever. After His earthly life, death, and resurrection, Jesus did not divest Himself of the flesh or cease to be a man. He is a man even now at the right hand of God the Father. He is also God. He will always be the God-man. See 1 Cor. 15:28; Col. 2:9; 1 Jn. 2:7 (note use of present tense). 4. Thus, we might envision Jesus saying: “I am now what I always was: God (or Word). I am now what I once was not: man (or flesh). I am now and forever will be both: the God-man.
Sam Storms

To Hard-Boil And Peel Eggs

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Eggs Cklive14 1 servings

INGREDIENTS

=== FOR ===
1 Egg -; (to 4)
2 qt Water
=== FOR ===
12 Eggs
3 1/2 qt Water
=== FOR ===
24 Eggs
6 qt Water

INSTRUCTIONS

How much water? That depends on how many eggs you have. The water should
cover the eggs by 1 inch, so use a tall pan, and I would hesitate, under
home conditions, to do more than 2 dozen eggs at once. Special Equipment
Suggested: An egg pricker or drafting pin; a high rather than wide saucepan
with cover; a bowl of sufficient size with ice cubes and water to cover
eggs. Pricking: There is a bubble of air in the large end of the egg, which
expands when the egg is heated and can crack the shell. To let that air
escape, always prick the large end with an egg pricker or a pin, going in a
good 1/4 inch. The cooking: Lay the eggs in the pan and add the amount of
cold water specified. Set over high heat and bring just to the boil; remove
from heat, cover the pan, and let sit exactly 17 minutes. The 2-minute
chill: When the time is up, transfer the eggs to the bowl of ice cubes and
water. Chill for 2 minutes while bringing the cooking water to the boil
again. The 2-minute chilling shrinks the body of the egg from the shell.
The 10-second boil: Transfer the eggs (6 at a time only) to the boiling
water, bring to the boil again, and boil for 10 seconds -- which in turn
expands the shell from the egg. Return the eggs to the ice water, cracking
the shells gently in several places. Preventing that dark line around the
yolk: Chilling the eggs promptly prevents that dark line from forming, and
if you have time, leave the egg in the ice water (adding more ice if
needed) for 15 to 20 minutes before peeling. Chilled eggs are easier to
peel, too. Or peel them, as described in the next paragraph, and ice them
at once. Peeling: Crack an egg all over by gently tapping it against the
sink. Then, starting at the large end, and holding the egg either under a
thin stream of cold water or in the bowl of ice water, start peeling. As
soon as you have peeled it, return the egg to the ice water so that it will
continue to chill. Storing the hard-boiled eggs: They will keep perfectly
in the refrigerator, submerged in water in an uncovered container, for 2 to
3 days.
Recipe Source: COOKING LIVE with Sara Moulton Recipe courtesy of Julia
Child, "The Way to Cook" From the TV FOOD NETWORK - (Show # CL-8662)
Formatted for MasterCook by Joe Comiskey, aka MR MAD - jpmd44a@prodigy.com
~or- MAD-SQUAD@prodigy.net
02-25-1999
Recipe by: Julia Child
Converted by MM_Buster v2.0l.

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