We Love God!

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

There are basically two ways to read the Bible — as a book of law, or as a book of promise. Our natural religious psychology wants to read the Bible as law: “God is explaining here how I can win his favor.” A law-hermeneutic is the pre-understanding we naturally bring to our Bible reading, every page. But in Galatians 3 Paul explains that he reads the Bible as a book of promise, and he wants us to as well. He sees every page of the Bible as gracious promise from God to undeserving sinners. Is there law in the Bible? Yes. But it was “added” (v. 19). Law was inserted after the promises to Abraham were established. It is promise that comes first (Genesis 12), then law comes later (Exodus 20). It is promise, therefore, that defines the all-encompassing framework within which we are to read everything else in the Bible... Every page [in the Bible], most deeply understood, shines forth as a promise of grace to sinners in Christ.
Ray Ortlund

Someone once said we are all brought to the same level at the foot of the cross. The cross pours contempt on our pride and screams to us that reconciliation with God was entirely the work of Jesus. The cross screams to us that God justifies all His children with the same infinite love. The cross screams to us that we are all adopted into the same spiritual family in the same way with the same privileges. The cross screams to us that the sins of disunity such as discord, hatred, bitterness, strife, divisiveness, malice, jealousy, envy, disgust, indifference, unforgiveness have all been shattered by the cross and are therefore unacceptable amongst God’s redeemed. The cross teaches us that the grace that saves us results in grace that transforms us to live more like Jesus Christ, the “Prince of Peace” Himself. And the cross teaches us to join Paul in his never-ending refrain of boasting only in the cross (Gal. 6:14). And with our eyes on the cross, we strike a deathblow to our pride which fuels our divisions.
Randy Smith

Artichoke Salad

0
(0)

CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Cajun Cajun, Salads 10 Servings

INGREDIENTS

4 Fresh artichoke hearts
2 cn Artichoke hearts, quartered
1 Small garlic clove
1 ts Lea & Perrins
1 tb Lemon juice
1 tb Wine vinegar
1 ts Louisiana hot sauce
2 ts Salt
3 tb Olive oil

INSTRUCTIONS

In a wooden salad bowl, mash garlic and salt with a strong fork.
Add fresh artichoke hearts, and mash with the garlic and salt.
Add olive oil, stir, add lemon juice, stir, add wine vinegar,
stir, stir, add hot sauce, stir, add Lea & Perrins Worcestershire
sauce, Mix well.  Put canned artichoke hearts in dressing and let
marinate for 1 hour, then eat as is or serve on a bed of greens.
From Justin Wilson's "Outdoor Cooking With Inside Help."
File ftp://ftp.idiscover.co.uk/pub/food/mealmaster/recipes/cajun.zip

A Message from our Provider:

“Are you wrinkled with burden? Come to the church for a face-lift.”

How useful was this recipe?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this recipe.

We are sorry that this recipe was not useful for you!

Let us improve this recipe!

Tell us how we can improve this recipe?