God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)
Jesus Christ demands self-denial, that is, self-negation (Matt. 16:24; Mark 8:34; Luke 9:23), as a necessary condition of discipleship. Self-denial is a summons to submit to the authority of God as Father and of Jesus as Lord and to declare lifelong war on one's instinctive egoism. What is to be negated is not personal self or one's existence as a rational and responsible human being. Jesus does not plan to turn us into zombies, nor does he ask us to volunteer for a robot role. The required denial is of carnal self, the egocentric, self-deifying urge with which we were born and which dominates us so ruinously in our natural state. Jesus links self-denial with cross-bearing. Cross-bearing is far more than enduring this or that hardship. Carrying one's cross in Jesus' day, as we learn from the story of Jesus' own crucifixion, was required of those whom society had condemned, whose rights were forfeit, and who were now being led out to their execution. The cross they carried was the instrument of death. Jesus represents discipleship as a matter of following him, and following him as based on taking up one's cross in self-negation. Carnal self would never consent to cast us in such a role. "When Christ calls a man, he bids him come and die," wrote Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Bonhoeffer was right: Accepting death to everything that carnal self wants to possess is what Christ's summons to self-denial was all about.
J.I. Packer
Beef Jerky #9
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CATEGORY
CUISINE
TAG
YIELD
Meats
Appetizers
1
Servings
INGREDIENTS
Meat;(beef, deer, etc.)
Soy Sauce
Brown Sugar
Cooking Oil
2
tb
Coarsely ground black pepper
2
tb
Garlic powder
2
tb
Lawry's Seasoned Salt
2
tb
Gebhardt Chili powder
4
hours.
INSTRUCTIONS
Cut meat into 1 1/2 by 1/4 by 5 inch strips.
Soak meat in a mixture of Soy sauce, 1 T. brown sugar and 1 T. oil for 2 to
Pat dry.
Mix seasonings well and place in a clean shaker. (Ed. note: why not
specify a dirty shaker? Might make it more authentic!)
Using a foil-covered cookie sheet, place meat (1 layer) and sprinkle mix
over it to taste.
Fold foil edges up to keep in mixture.
Dry at 140 to 180 degrees for 5 to 8 hours.
Keep in open container at room temperature. Do NOT refrigerate. From:
Wesley Pitts From Anne MacClellan disk 7/24/93
Posted to MM-Recipes Digest by "deborah kuhnen" <debkuhnen@email.msn.com>
on Feb 26, 1998
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