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He wants to know about the problem of evil. My answer to the problem of evil is this: There is no problem of evil in an atheist's universe because there is no evil in an atheist's universe. Since there is no God, there is no absolute moral standard, and nothing is wrong. The torture of little children is not wrong in an atheist's universe. It may be painful, but it is not wrong. It is morally wrong in a theistic universe, and therefore, there is a problem of evil of perhaps the psychological or emotional sort, but philosophically the answer to the problem of evil is you don't have an absolute standard of good by which to measure evil in an atheist's universe. You can only have that in a theistic universe, and therefore, the very posing of the problem presupposes my world view, rather than his own. God has a good reason for the evil that He plans or allows.
Greg Bahnsen

Unless our resolve is the out-flowing of the power of the indwelling Holy Spirit, we, like Peter, will fail (Mt. 26:31-34). As Jesus said to his disciples, “without Me you can do nothing” (John 15:5)… It is our responsibility to exert the effort and develop the essential disciplines of the Christian life if we are to become more like Christ. But as we resolve to discipline ourselves and to diligently pursue holiness, we need to know that there is a deeper truth underlying and empowering our experience – the powerful reality that God is the one enabling, compelling, and willing all that takes place.
Daryl Wingerd

Nier Beurre (channel Islands Fruit Butter)

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Fruits Channel Islands Fruits, Spreads 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

2 lb Dessert apples
1 lb Cooking apples
Granulated sugar
2 pt Dry cider
1/2 Orange
1/2 Lemon
Ground cinnamon & allspice

INSTRUCTIONS

Fast boil the cider until reduced by half.  Peel, core and slice HALF
of each sort of apple; add them to the pan, pushing them well down
into the liquid. Half-cover the pan and simmer gently until the fruit
is soft.  Add the remaining apples, prepared in the same way, together
with the  juice and zest of the citrus fruits. Half-cover the pan and
continue  simmering until all the fruit is well reduced, pulpy and
tender. Stir  occasionally and crush the fruit down into the pan with a
potato  masher as it cooks. Measure the pulp and process it to a puree
if it  is at all lumpy. Add sugar at the rate of 10 oz for every pint
of  apple pulp, and stir in about 1 teaspoon ground allspice.  Simmer,
stirring frequently, until most of the moisture has been  driven off.
The readiness of a fruit butter is judged by its  consistency, not by
set or temperature. It is ready when it is nearly  dry - a spoon drawn
across the mixture should leave its own  impression. Pot in small,
clean, warm jars and store in a very cold  larder or fridge. Once jar
is opened, the contents should be eaten up  within 3 or 4 days. Makes
enough to fill 4 or 5 small jars.  Source: Philippa Davenport in
"Country Living" (British), March 1989.  Typed for you by Karen
Mintzias  From Gemini's MASSIVE MealMaster collection at
www.synapse.com/~gemini

A Message from our Provider:

“God will ultimately have HIS way, not yours!”

Nutrition (calculated from recipe ingredients)
----------------------------------------------
Calories: 497
Calories From Fat: 9
Total Fat: 1.1g
Cholesterol: 0mg
Sodium: 54mg
Potassium: 1419.1mg
Carbohydrates: 86.7g
Fiber: 11.2g
Sugar: 61.8g
Protein: 2g


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