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The example of Jesus and the testimony of lovers of Christ throughout the centuries points us to early morning prayer as decisively important… First, it signals to our conscience that this is of first importance in the day. Second, it strikes the first blow in the battle of the day, instead of waiting till we are besieged from all sides. Third, what we do daily and do early shapes the spirit of our minds and brings us into a disposition of humility and trust that will bear better fruit than anxiety or self-reliance. Fourth, since beginning the day with the Word of God is crucial, prayer is equally crucial since the Word will not open its best wonders to us without prayer (Psm. 119:18). Fifth, it is uncanny how Satan can use even good things to squeeze prayer out of our schedule if we miss the early-morning hour. I have seen it again and again. If I say to myself, “I will give some time to prayer later,” it generally does not happen.
John Piper

Pear Or Apple Crisp

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Dairy Desserts 4 Servings

INGREDIENTS

4 Medium-size Anjou pears
Bartlett pears or Golden
Delicious apples peeled
cored and sliced
1 t Ground cinnamon
1/4 t Ground nutmeg
1 t Lemon juice
1/2 c Water
1 c Sugar
3/4 c All-purpose flour
1/2 c Butter, or margarine
Whipping cream, optional

INSTRUCTIONS

Place pears in a greased 8-inch-square baking pan. Sprinkle with
cinnamon, nutmeg, lemon juice, and water; mix lightly.  In a
medium-size bowl, mix sugar and flour. Using a pastry blender or  2
knives, cut in butter until mixture resembles coarse crumbs; evenly
scatter crumbs over pear mixture. Bake in a 350 degrees oven until
fruit is tender when pierced and crust is lightly browned, about 1
hour. Offer cream to pour over individual portions.  This recipe
appeared in a 1949 issue of Sunset. Pears or apples are  lightly
spiced, then baked beneath a crust of sweet, buttery crumbs.  Per
serving: 622 cal. (35 percent from fat); 4 g protein; 24 g fat  (14 g
sat.); 104 g carbo.; 236 mg sodium; 62 mg chol.  Obtained
electronically from public library databank search and  formatted for
MasterCook by Brenda Adams <adamsfmle@sprintmail.com>  Posted MC 3/2/97
Recipe by: Sunset Magazine, 1949  Posted to MC-Recipe Digest V1 #493 by
Adams  <adamsfmle@sprintmail.com> on Mar 02, 1997.

A Message from our Provider:

“God doesn’t call the qualified, He qualifies the called.”

Nutrition (calculated from recipe ingredients)
----------------------------------------------
Calories: 629
Calories From Fat: 341
Total Fat: 38.7g
Cholesterol: 61.1mg
Sodium: 197.6mg
Potassium: 68.8mg
Carbohydrates: 69.9g
Fiber: 1g
Sugar: 50.1g
Protein: 3.4g


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