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

Naturally, the sluggard begins the day by staying in bed when he should be starting his work. Proverbs 6:9, “How long will you lie down, O sluggard? When will you arise from your sleep?” Next the sluggard will invent any reason to prevent working. Proverbs 22:13, “The sluggard says, ‘There is a lion outside; I shall be slain in the streets!” Rather than beginning his work he simply pacifies himself with his preposterous excuses and return to his bed. Proverbs 26:14, “As the door turns on its hinges, so does the sluggard on his bed.” Once the sluggard finally rolls out of bed, he is even too lazy to provide for his needs to survive. Proverbs 19:24, “The sluggard buries his hand in the dish, and will not even bring it back to his mouth.” Though the sluggard may be too lazy to eat, often, due to his slothfulness, he has no food to eat. Proverbs 20:4, “The sluggard does not plow after the autumn, so he begs during the harvest and has nothing.” Eventually, his laziness leads to a lack of food, a lack of food to deteriorated health, and deteriorated health to death. Proverbs 21:25, “The desire of the sluggard puts him to death, for his hands refuse to work.” His neglect of responsibilities is evident in his health, but also in the care of his house. Proverbs 24:30-31, “I passed by the field of the sluggard, and by the vineyard of the man lacking sense; and behold, it was completely overgrown with thistles, its surface was covered with nettles, and its stone wall was broken down.” His life is simply a selfish pursuit of his laziness. Though he may wish a nobler lifestyle, steps are never taken to accomplish his goal because he’s a dreamer. Proverbs 13:4, “The soul of the sluggard craves and gets nothing.” He thinks his life is okay, but unfortunately he is greatly deceived. Proverbs 26:16, “The sluggard is wiser in his own eyes than seven men who can give a discreet answer.” What the sluggard really needs is stern rebuke of wisdom. The slug is compared to another animal, one that is very industrious. Proverbs 6:6-11, “Go to the ant, O sluggard, observe her ways and be wise, which, having no chief, officer or ruler, prepares her food in the summer, and gathers her provision in the harvest. How long will you lie down, O sluggard? When will you arise from your sleep? ‘A little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to rest’ – and your poverty will come in like a vagabond, and your need like an armed man.”
Randy Smith

[The preacher’s] aim…will be to stand under Scripture, not over it, and to allow it, so to speak, to talk through him, delivering what is not so much his message as its. In our preaching, that is what should always be happening. In his obituary of the great German conductor, Otto Klemperer, Neville Cardus spoke of the way in which Klemperer “set the music in motion,” maintaining throughout a deliberately anonymous, self-effacing style in order that the musical notes might articulate themselves in their own integrity through him. So it must be in preaching; Scripture itself must do all the talking, and the preacher’s task is simply to “set the Bible in motion.”
J.I. Packer

Pizza With Rosemary And Garlic (pizza Bianca)

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1 1/2 c Warm water
1/2 t Dry yeast
4 c Flour, approximately:
unbleached or a 50-50
blend of all-purpose or
hard white flour white
and
whole wheat
1 t Salt
2 T Olive oil
2 T Olive oil, approximately
1 t Fine sea salt
Leaves from 3 sprigs
rosemary optional
approximately 2
tablespoons

INSTRUCTIONS

You will need a large bread bowl, a baking sheet 12 by 18 inches or
two smaller sheets.  Place water in a large bowl. Water should be  warm
but not hot to the touch. Stir in the yeast and allow to  dissolve.
Stir in 1 cup flour, stirring constantly in the same  direction. Stir
in another cup flour, then stir 100 times in the same  direction (one
minute). This helps develop the gluten. You now have a  sponge. Cover,
and let stand for half an hour or up to three hours.  When you are
ready to continue, sprinkle on salt and oil, then add  more flour,
stirring it in a half cup at a time. The dough will be  getting heavier
and harder to stir. When you can stir no longer,  flour a kneading
surface well and have more flour handy beside your  work surface. Turn
dough out and knead, adding extra flour to your  work surface as
necessary to prevent the dough from sticking.  The dough will gradually
become smooth and easy to work. Knead for 10  minutes, clean bread
bowl, oil it lightly, and place the ball of  dough into the bowl to
rise, covered with plastic wrap. Let rise  until more than doubled,
almost three hours. When the volume of the  dough has approximately
doubled, you can proceed to the next step.  Dough can be made ahead to
this point and then stored. If you wish  postpone baking, gently push
dough down, and leave covered in the  bowl to rise again. If delay will
be more than several hours, instead  store dough in a plastic bag in
the refrigerator (for not more than  five days). Bring out of the cold
and take out of the plastic bag at  least an hour before you want to
work with it.Lightly flour your work  surface and lightly oil a 12 by
18-inch baking sheet. Preheat oven to  450 degrees. Turn dough out onto
work surface and flatten with the  lightly floured palm of your hand.
Pull and stretch the dough gently  out into the rectangular shape you
need to fit your baking sheet.  Take your time and give the dough time
to rest if it is resisting  stretching. It will need to get quite thin.
When you have stretched  the dough to approximately the shape and size
you need, transfer it  to baking sheet and continue to gently press and
stretch it to fit.  Don't worry if it tears, just patch the hole with
another piece of  dough and press firmly to join the edges. If you have
extra dough  hanging over the edge, trim it off and use it to make
another small  pizza.  Dough should be of an even thinness across the
flat part of  the baking sheet and should form a slight rounded rim as
it meets the  edge (which is for many people the best part of the
pizza).  Brush top of pizza with oil, then dimple the surface all over
with  your fingers. Sprinkle on sea salt and then optional rosemary
leaves.  Place baking sheet on the bottom rack of the preheated oven
and bake  until the crust around the edge is slightly golden, 5 to 8
minutes,  depending on how thin the pizza is. Remove from oven, brush
crusts  lightly with olive oil and also the center if you wish. Cut
into  large squares and serve warm or hot. We have often made pizza
bianca  several hours ahead, then wrapped it in a clean kitchen towel
to keep  it moist until we are ready to reheat it for serving. To
reheat,  place in a dampened paper bag in a 300'F oven for about 10
minutes.  Yield: one large 12 by 18-inch pizza or two medium, or 3 or 4
small  Recipe By     : BAKER'S DOZEN SHOW #BD1A29  Posted to EAT-L
Digest  5 November 96  Date:    Wed, 6 Nov 1996 20:33:48 -0600  From:  
Jackie Bordelon <jbord@PREMIER.NET>

A Message from our Provider:

“Bibles that are falling apart are usually owned by people who aren’t.”

Nutrition (calculated from recipe ingredients)
----------------------------------------------
Calories: 2539
Calories From Fat: 294
Total Fat: 33.6g
Cholesterol: 0mg
Sodium: 3723.1mg
Potassium: 801.1mg
Carbohydrates: 481.4g
Fiber: 18.8g
Sugar: 2.4g
Protein: 66.1g


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