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

We need revival: -when we do not love Him as we once did. -when earthly interests and occupations are more important to us than eternal ones. -when we would rather watch TV and read secular books and magazines than read the Bible and pray. -when church dinners are better attended than prayer meetings. -when concerts draw bigger crowds than prayer meetings. -when we have little or no desire for prayer. -when we would rather make money than give money. -when we put people into leadership positions in our churches who do not meet scriptural qualifications. -when our Christianity is joyless and passionless. -when we know truth in our heads that we are not practicing in our lives. -when we make little effort to witness to the lost. -when we have time for sports, recreation, and entertainment, but not for Bible study and prayer. -when we do not tremble at the Word of God. -when preaching lacks conviction, confrontation, and divine fire and anointing. -when we seldom think thoughts of eternity. -when God’s people are more concerned about their jobs and their careers, than about the Kingdom of Christ and the salvation of the lost. -when God’s people get together with other believers and the conversation is primarily about the news, weather, and sports, rather than the Lord. -when church services are predictable and “business as usual.” -when believers can be at odds with each other and not feel compelled to pursue reconciliation. -when Christian husbands and wives are not praying together. -when our marriages are co-existing rather than full of the love of Christ. -when our children are growing up to adopt worldly values, secular philosophies, and ungodly lifestyles. -when we are more concerned about our children’s education and their athletic activities than about the condition of their souls. -when sin in the church is pushed under the carpet. -when known sin is not dealt with through the biblical process of discipline and restoration. -when we tolerate “little” sins of gossip, a critical spirit, and lack of love. -when we will watch things on television and movies that are not holy. -when our singing is half-hearted and our worship lifeless. -when our prayers are empty words designed to impress others. -when our prayers lack fervency. -when our hearts are cold and our eyes are dry. -when we aren’t seeing regular evidence of the supernatural power of God. -when we have ceased to weep and mourn and grieve over our own sin and the sin of others. -when we are content to live with explainable, ordinary Christianity and church services. -when we are bored with worship. -when people have to be entertained to be drawn to church. -when our music and dress become patterned after the world. -when we start fitting into and adapting to the world, rather than calling the world to adapt to God’s standards of holiness. -when we don’t long for the company and fellowship of God’s people. -when people have to be begged to give and to serve in the church. -when our giving is measured and calculated, rather than extravagant and sacrificial. -when we aren’t seeing lost people drawn to Jesus on a regular basis. -when we aren’t exercising faith and believing God for the impossible. -when we are more concerned about what others think about us than what God thinks about us. -when we are unmoved by the fact that 2.5 billion people in this world have never heard the name of Jesus. -when we are unmoved by the thought of neighbors, business associates, and acquaintances who are lost and without Christ. -when the lost world around us doesn’t know or care that we exist. -when we are making little or no difference in the secular world around us. -when the fire has gone out in our hearts, our marriages, and the church. -when we are blind to the extent of our need and don’t think we need revival.
Nancy Leigh DeMoss

Veggie Broth (stock)

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Vegetables Digest, Mar95 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1 Onions
1 Leeks
1 Carrots
1 Celery
1 Apple
1 Garlic
1 Mushrooms
1 Ginger
1 Lemon grass, opt
1 Peelings & tired old
Vegetables
1 Parsely
1 Peppercorns
1 Fresh or dried herbs, thyme
Dill, allspice
1 Water to cover by two
Inches

INSTRUCTIONS

Cut in big chunks (maybe quarters) a couple onions, leeks, several
carrots, some celery ribs and an apple. Toss them with several cloves
of garlic, some mushrooms (old, shriveled ones are the best), a few
slices of fresh ginger (peel and all), lemon grass is good if you  have
it and a couple sprays of pam. Roast all this is 500 degree oven  for
about 20 minutes until very brown. (This kind of carmelizes them,  and
they develop a sweetness).  After roasting, put them in a stockpot, and
add all the peelings and  trimmings you've saved up. plus any veggies
you've had around long  enough they're beginning to look a little
tired. (Or fresh ones,  too!) A bunch of parsely is nice, peppercorns,
sprigs of dried or  fresh herbs (thyme is especially good), maybe some
dill seeds, a  couple of whole allspices, and enough water to cover
everything by 2  inches.  Bring to a boil, simmer for 20-30 minutes
(I've let it go a lot  longer, too), fish out the vegies, strain, and
you have great stock  for soup, sauteeing, cooking pasta or rice and
whatever else.  The great thing about this, is the recipe really
doesn't matter, just  the main principles. Use whatever vegies you've
got and like (or get  rid of some you don't). The roasting and the
apple (or pear) seem to  be key. The rest is pure invention.  Source:
I'm very enthusiastic about vegetable stock. I've been making  mt own
for several years, now and I think it's great. I got a couple  of ideas
from the owner of a Seattle restaunt called Dahlia.  Posted by
jschafer@medio.net (Jerry Schafer) to the Fatfree Digest  [Volume 16  
Issue 21] Mar. 25, 1995.  Individual recipes copyrighted by originator.
FATFREE Recipe  collections copyrighted by Michelle Dick 1995.
Formatted by Sue Smith,  SueSmith9@aol.com using MMCONV. Archived
through kindness of Karen  Mintzias, km@salata.com.  1.80á  File
ftp://ftp.idiscover.co.uk/pub/food/mealmaster/recipes/fatfreex.zip

A Message from our Provider:

“Gratitude produces deep, abiding joy because we know that God is working in us, even through difficulties.”

Nutrition (calculated from recipe ingredients)
----------------------------------------------
Calories: 557
Calories From Fat: 18
Total Fat: 2.2g
Cholesterol: 0mg
Sodium: 135.9mg
Potassium: 2378.5mg
Carbohydrates: 133.6g
Fiber: 14.5g
Sugar: 101.2g
Protein: 15.6g


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