We Love God!

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

I was a sinner, less perfect than God. By conviction of the Holy Spirit I learned that my condition would incur the eternal condemnation of God if I did not submit to His grace. I acknowledged myself a sinner and threw myself on His mercy and grace, recognizing that He had brought salvation to earth through His Son Jesus Christ. After God the Father put God the Son to death on the cross, He could proclaim grace and pardon to all who would submit to Him. I came to the cross, believed His promise about His Son, and God declared me righteous even while I was ungodly and gave me authority to become His child. I ceased to be a child of wrath and became a child of God, justified from all things. Simultaneously, I was declared to be an heir of God, joint-heir with Jesus Christ. I received eternal life, and shall never perish. I was accepted in the Beloved; my body became the temple of the Holy Spirit; I was born of the Spirit into the family of God, baptized by the Holy Spirit into the body of Christ, and sealed by the Holy Spirit unto the day of redemption. I have an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that fades not away, reserved in Heaven for me. Although I know myself to be a sinner, I am not concerned about the penalty for sin, since the Lord Jesus Christ bore the penalty and declared me righteous. The love of Christ becomes the constraining factor in my life, and I seek to glorify Him as Lord. I know Him as my Creator and so have peace of mind. I know Him as Savior and so have peace of conscience. In the measure that I enter into the second rest, I know Him as Lord and find the peace that passes all understanding.
Donald Grey Barnhouse

Five pitfalls to faithful stewardship: 1. Laziness – failing to invest our talents. 2. Lack of faithfulness in what we consider small responsibilities. 3. Thinking that we ourselves are the source of our gifts and abilities. 4. Sowing to the flesh – doing things that serve and please ourselves. 5. Striving for earthly treasures – focusing on the present instead of eternity in heaven.
Karl Graustein

Almost Vegetarian Hot And Sour Soup

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats, Vegetables, Grains, Eggs Asian Asian, Mushrooms, Soup, Tofu 6 Servings

INGREDIENTS

8 c Lowfat chicken broth OR
vegetable broth
1 oz Bean sprouts, rinsed
1 oz Bamboo shoots, rinsed and
julienned
1 Stalk bok choy, diagonally
sliced altertive: celery
and napa cabbage leaves
3 oz Chinese pea pods, rinsed and
strings pulled
6 Dried Chinese mushrooms
soaked in boiling water
rinsed and drained and
julienned
1 T Hoisin sauce
1 T Tamari soy, or more to taste
1 T Kung pao sauce, or more to
taste
Leftover soba noodle
optional
10 oz Firm tofu, or as packaged
drained and sliced *see
instructions
2 T Potato starch, dissolved in
4 T Water
1/4 c Egg substitute, beaten with
1/8 t Light sesame oil
Cilantro leaves, coarsely
chopped
1 ds Dark sesame oil, for aroma
3 T Rice wine vinegar
Hot pepper sauce, optional

INSTRUCTIONS

Rinse the pea pods and trim, pulling strings if necessary; leave them
whole. If bok choy is not available, use a combination of celery and
napa cabbage leaves; slice on the bias into bite-sized pieces.  Slice
the tofo (bean Curd) cakes into 1/4-inch thick pieces, then  carefully
slice again into strips 1 by 1/4-inch (julienned).  Place the broth in
a large soup pan; add the bean sprouts, then bamboo  shoots, bok choy,
pea pods, and mushrooms. Slowly bring to a gentle  boil. Add the
sauces: hoisin, soy and kung pao. Let simmer for 2 to 3  minutes or
until bok choy is wilted and the sprouts have lost their  bitter bite.
Add a little cooked soba noodle, if using.  Add the bean curd slivers.
And as soon as the soup returns to a boil,  slowly stir in the
well-stirred dissolved potato starch. Slowly bring  to a boil again.
Slowly pour in the beaten egg through the gap of a pair of chopsticks
or along the back of a fork, moving the chopsticks or fork in a
circular motion to shirr the egg. Remove at once from heat and cover
for 30 seconds to allow egg to set and the soup will also clear
somewhat.  Remove from heat. Add the coriander leaves. Stir gently to
mix.  Season with vinegar. Then adjust the sauces: soy, hoisin, or kung
pao, to taste. Offer pepper oil at the table for those who want it
hotter.  By KitPATh <phannema@wizard.ucr.edu>  Notes: Recipe was
revised for bottled sauces. Quantities are  approximate; to taste and
to what is on hand. The technique and the  use of potato starch are
ideas from CHINESE COOKING by Yan Kit  Martin. Have ingredients
prepared and assembled. This is a variation  of an egg drop soup. The
boil is also gentle and steady; never allow  the broth to roil.  Recipe
by: Hanneman*  Posted to EAT-LF Digest by KitPATh
<phannema@wizard.ucr.edu> on Apr  20, 1998

A Message from our Provider:

“The Will of God will never take you to where the Grace of God will not protect you.”

Nutrition (calculated from recipe ingredients)
----------------------------------------------
Calories: 81
Calories From Fat: 35
Total Fat: 4.2g
Cholesterol: 37.7mg
Sodium: 360.6mg
Potassium: 263mg
Carbohydrates: 7.6g
Fiber: 1.8g
Sugar: 1.5g
Protein: 8g


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?