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In Jeremiah’s prophecy of the new covenant, Jeremiah explicitly says, “It will not be like the covenant I made with their forefathers, when I led them by the hand out of Egypt” (Jer. 31:32). How will it be different? For one thing, it will be unbreakable (v. 32). For another, all the members of that covenant will be regenerate, the law written on their hearts (v. 33). Yet another difference will be that the covenant will not operate according to natural lines of birth and descent, but through spiritual birth (vv. 29-30). Here the discontinuity between the new covenant and the Mosaic covenant is enormous: a covenant of grace, not works; a covenant that regenerates rather than kills; a covenant entered into through spiritual rather than natural birth. And yet for all this discontinuity, Jeremiah is clear that this new covenant is the ultimate fulfillment of God’s promises to Israel, made to their forefather Abraham.
Michael Lawrence

If you are a true child of God, you will receive the blessings of the heavenly Father’s discipline in this life. So the disciplinary methods that Christian parents use should be the same as God’s. They must use nurture and admonition (or discipline and instruction). That is the kind of discipline that God Himself uses. In Deuteronomy 11:1 (Berkeley), we are urged, “Be mindful of the Lord’s discipline.” Study it, understand it, use it.
Jay Adams

Braised Beef With Baked Macaroni – Serves 8

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(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Dairy, Meats 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1 lb Long macaroni
1 T Butter
2/3 c Freshly grated Parmesan or
aged Gruyere Cheese or a
mixture of both
5 lb Boneless lean stewing beef
cut into 1 1/2 inch cubes
5 oz Salt pork with the rind
removed blanched in
boiling water for 5
minutes drained and
finely
diced
3 T Olive oil
5 Cloves garlic, crushed
2 Sprigs thyme
3 Bay leaves
Coarse salt and freshly
ground pepper
2 Carrots, quartered
lengthwise
About 1 quart red wine

INSTRUCTIONS

From: Bulldogfla <Bulldogfla@aol.com>  This tastes just as good when
reheated, and the leftover meat can be  chopped and used in a ravioli
filling.  In an earthenware or cast iron casserole with a lid, briefly
saute the  diced pork in the olive oil. Add the beef, garlic cloves,
thyme, bay  leaves, salt, pepper and the carrots. Pour in the wine,
making sure it  covers the meat completely. Cover the pot with a piece
of buttered wax  paper or aluminum foil tied on tightly, then put on
the lid. Bring to  a boil and simmer for three to four hours. At the
end of the cooking  time, skim to remove excess fat from the surface.
Cook the macaroni in plenty of boiling salted water until done, about
20 minutes. Rinse in cold water and drain. butter a shallow baking
dish and cover with a layer of macaroni. Sprinkle with some of the
cheese, then add a layer of macaroni, and so on until the dish is
full, ending with cheese. Moisten well with gravy from the beef.  Brown
in a preheated 425 degree oven for seven or eight minutes.  serve the
macaroni from the baking dish, the braised beef from the  casserole.
Posted to recipelu-digest by jeryder@juno.com on Mar 10, 1998

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

Nutrition (calculated from recipe ingredients)
----------------------------------------------
Calories: 3586
Calories From Fat: 1719
Total Fat: 192.7g
Cholesterol: 211.1mg
Sodium: 5259.8mg
Potassium: 1794.2mg
Carbohydrates: 363.6g
Fiber: 20.2g
Sugar: 20.6g
Protein: 94.8g


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