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Every true prayer has its background and its foreground. The foreground of prayer is the intense, immediate desire for a certain blessing which seems to be absolutely necessary for the soul to have; the background of prayer is the quiet, earnest desire that the will of God, whatever it may be, should be done. What a picture is the perfect prayer of Jesus in Gethsemane! In front burns the strong desire to escape death and to live; but behind there stands, calm and strong, the craving of the whole life for the doing of the will of God... Leave out the foreground, let there be no expression of the will of him who prays, and there is left a pure submission which is almost fatalism. Leave out the background, let there be no acceptance of the will of God, and the prayer is only an expression of self-will, a petulant claiming of the uncorrected choice of him who prays. Only when the two are there together, the special desire resting on the universal submission, the universal submission opening into the special desire is the picture perfect and the prayer complete.
Phillips Brooks

Men will never come to Jesus, and stay with Jesus, and live for Jesus, unless they really know why they are to come, and what is their need. Those whom the Spirit draws to Jesus are those whom the Spirit has convinced of sin. Without thorough conviction of sin, men may seem to come to Jesus and follow Him for a season, but they will soon fall away and return to the world.
J.C. Ryle

Indianaston Baked Beans (synthesis)

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats, Vegetables, Grains American American, Pork, Side dish, Vegetables 5 Servings

INGREDIENTS

500 g Dry navy beans
1 Onion, roughly chopped
300 g Smoked belly of pork
6 T Maple Syrup
80 Molasses
1 1/2 t Dry mustard
1 1/2 t Ground ginger
2 t Salt
1/4 t Black pepper
Hot water

INSTRUCTIONS

Soak beans overnight in a saucepan. In the morning, add more water if
necessary to cover, and parboil beans for 10 minutes. Then run cold
water through beans in a colander or strainer. Cut pork jowl in
one-inch cubes, leaving skin on. The quantity of the pork may be
decreased if desired without affecting flavour.  Put the chopped onions
with half of the cubed pork on the bottom of  the bean pot (a
traditional stoneware 2-3 quart pot is perfect). Put  beans in pot and
cover with the rest of the pork. Mix other  ingredients with hot water
and pour over the beans. Add enough water  to make level with the
beans. Bake in a 300 F. oven for 6 hours,  adding water from time to
time if necessary to prevent the beans from  drying out.  Recipe
synthesised by IMH from recipes by John Hartman (Indianapolis  Baked
Beans) and Dave Sacerdote (Boston Baked Beans)  Posted to MM-Recipes
Digest  by "Rfm" <Robert-Miles@usa.net> on Nov  08, 98, converted by
MM_Buster v2.0l.

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Nutrition (calculated from recipe ingredients)
----------------------------------------------
Calories: 413
Calories From Fat: 14
Total Fat: 1.6g
Cholesterol: 0mg
Sodium: 958.2mg
Potassium: 1285.7mg
Carbohydrates: 79.9g
Fiber: 25g
Sugar: 21.5g
Protein: 22.8g


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