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Some of you have never preached on election since you were ordained. “These things,” you say, “are offensive.” And so you would rather offend God than offend man. But you reply, “These things will not be practical.” I do think that the climax of all man’s blasphemy is centered in that utterance. Tell me that God put a thing in the Bible that I am not to preach! You are finding fault with my God. But you say, “It will be dangerous.” What! God's truth dangerous? I should not like to stand in your shoes when you have to face your Maker on the Day of Judgment after such an utterance as that.
C.H. Spurgeon

Whosoever shall confess me before men…(Matthew 10:32). The point to be settled over this verse is straightforward: Is Christ here saying that by an act of confession we become Christians or is He teaching that one indispensable mark of those who are Christians is that they live a life which openly acknowledges Him? Is not the modern evangelistic call to confess Christ by coming to the front, in order to receive Him by faith, a reversal of the New Testament order? To confess Christ is the spiritual duty of a Christian. It is no part of the gospel to say that compliance with certain outward duties will help us to become Christians. Yet the whole invitation system inevitably gives the impression that “confessing Christ” by moving forward is in order to conversion.
Iain Murray

Traditional Summer Pudding

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Fruits, Dairy Desserts, Fruit 8 servings

INGREDIENTS

1 1/2 c Frozen unsweetened raspberries
1 1/2 c Frozen unsweetened blackberries
1 1/2 c Frozen unsweetened strawberries
1 1/2 c Frozen unsweetened blueberries
1/2 c Sugar
1/4 c Water
1 pk Unflavored gelatin
8 sl Hearty white bread; crusts removed
1 c Lowfat vanilla yogurt cheese; (strained yogurt)
8 Sprigs fresh mint

INSTRUCTIONS

GARNISH
Gently heat the berries and sugar until the berries are thawed and the
sugar is dissolved. Remove them from the heat to ensure the berries do not
cook.
Pour the water into a small saucepan, sprinkle with the gelatin, and let
sit for 1 minute. Cook on low heat until the gelatin is completely
dissolved and then stir into the berries.
Cut a circle from one of the slices of bread to fit into the bottom of a
6-cup bowl. Fit 6 bread slices around the sides of the bowl, overlapping
them 1/4 inch. If the bottom of the bowl is smaller than the top, cut the
bottom of the slices a little narrower than the top so the bread will fit
in smoothly.
Pour in the berries and cover the top with the remaining bread. Cover the
top of the pudding with a saucer just smaller than the top of the bowl and
weight it down with a heavy can. Let it sit in the refrigerator for at
least 3 hours, or longer for better flavor saturation. You can even make
this delicious dessert the day before you want to serve it and let it set
overnight.
Just before serving, run a rubber spatula around the edge of the pudding
all the way down into the bowl. Cover the top with a plate and turn it over
gently, easing the pudding out of the bowl onto the plate.
To serve: Cut the pudding into 8 wedges and garnish with a dollop of the
strained vanilla yogurt and a sprig of the fresh mint.
From Ellen C. <ellen@elekta.com>
Per serving: 222 Calories; 1g Fat (6% calories from fat); 12g Protein; 42g
Carbohydrate; 2mg Cholesterol; 208mg Sodium Food Exchanges: 1 Starch/Bread;
1 Lean Meat; 1 1/2 Fruit; 1/2 Non-Fat Milk; 1 Other Carbohydrates
Recipe by: Graham Kerr's Best
Posted to EAT-LF Digest by "Ellen C." <ellen@brakes.elekta.com> on Jun 28,
1999, converted by MM_Buster v2.0l.

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