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

[We insist that God] must surely lead everyone as we believe He has led us. We refuse to allow God the freedom to deal with each of us as individuals. When we think like that, we are legalistic.
Jerry Bridges

Note what Christ taught about the inspiration of the Old Testament: 1. Its entirety; the whole of the Bible is inspired (Matt. 4:4; 5:17-18). In Matthew 4:4, Jesus responded to Satan’s temptation by affirming verbal plenary inspiration when He said, man is to live by every word (plenary) that proceeds out of the mouth of God (inspiration). In Matthew 5:17-18, Christ promised that the entire Old Testament, the Law and the Prophets, would be fulfilled, not abolished. In fact, He declared that not even the smallest Hebrew letter, the yodh, which looks like an apostrophe (‘), or stroke of a letter, a small distinguishing extension or protrusion of several Hebrews letters (cf. the extension on the letter R with it absence on the letter P), would pass away until all is fulfilled. Christ’s point is that it is all inspired and true and will be fulfilled. 2. Its historicity; He spoke of the Old Testament in terms of actual history. Adam and Eve were two human beings, created by God in the beginning, who lived and acted in certain ways (Matt. 19:3-5; Mark 10:6-8). He spoke of Jonah and his experience in the belly of the great fish as an historical event (Matt. 12:40). He also verified the events of the flood in Noah’s day along with the ark (Matt. 24:38-39; Luke 17:26-27). He verified God’s destruction of Sodom and the historicity of Lot and his wife (Matt. 10:15; Luke 17:28-29). These are only a few illustrations; many others exist. 3. Its reliability; because it is God’s word, the Scripture must be fulfilled (Matt. 26:54). 4. Its sufficiency; it is sufficient to witness to the truth of God and His salvation (Luke 16:31). 5. Its indestructibility; heaven and earth will not pass away until it is all fulfilled. Nothing can stop its fulfillment (Matt. 5:17-18). 6. Its unity; the whole of the Bible speaks and witnesses to the person and work of Christ (Luke 24:27, 44). 7. Its inerrancy; men are often in error, but the Bible is not; it is truth (Matt. 22:29; John 17:17). 8. Its infallibility; the Bible cannot be broken, it always stands the test (John 10:35).
J. Hampton Keathley

Potato Information

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Vegetables Inca Info, Potatoes, Vegetables 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

INSTRUCTIONS

A humble tuber, the potato was keenly cultivated by the Incas  thousand
of years ago. Like the tomato and eggplant, the potato  belongs to the
nightshade family which was considered throughout  Europe be to
poisonous. Instrumental in its European acceptance was  Sir WAlter
Raleigh who planted potatoes on his Irish property. The  rest, they
say, is history. The potato flourished and commands  respect as a
complete and nourishing food.  A potato low in moisture, low in sugar
with high starch, is termed  floury. Floury specimens bake and mash
perfectly and will render  golden coloured chips or roast potatoes.
Because of their low sugar  they are harder to brown and tend to
collapse with boiled. one the  other hand a waxy potato high in
moisture with low starch, holds its  shape and remains firm when
boiled. These potato varieties are best  for salads or scalloped.
Potato Shapes Our tuber assumes some facsinating shapes. Generally
speaking the shape often relates to the starch content. Fortunely  this
makes identifying the use easier. Ovals Long oval- Long and  slighly
rounded they include the Russet varieties and the New  Potatoes. Low
moisture and high starch makes them floury and  therefore superior
baking potatoes that are excellent for French  fries, crisping and
roasting. Examples: agria (yellow), desiree (red)  Short oval- With
more moisture and less starch their waxy quality  produce good boiling
potatos. They are usually a good all purposse  potato. Ex: bildatar,
draga, fianna, fresia, ilam hardy, iwa, jersy  benner, nadine, peru
peru, rua, sebego, stroma Rounds Red and White-  They ar a waxy potato
and often referred to as boiling potatoes. Good  roasters and some are
great for mashing. (Rima is a good New Zealand  example) Kidney shaped
Not so common and obviously shaped like a  lambs kidney, these waxy
potatoes are boulers and not suitable for  frying or crisping. In New
Zealand Cliff Kidney occasionaly appears  at the greengrocer.  Storage
Store potatoes in a cool dark, well ventilated place for up  to six
weeks. use new potatoes within 4 days of purchase.  Refrigerating
potatoes causes them to sweeten and turn dark when  cooked. Warm
temperatures encourage sprouting and shrivelling.  From: Cuisine NZ,
July 1994 Posted to FOODWINE Digest 18 October 96  Date:    Sat, 19 Oct
1996 09:32:13 +0000  From:    Joell Abbott <abbott@ZIP.COM.AU>

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