God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)
To believe that two contradictory religions are both true is like saying, “2+2=4, or 5, or 37, or whatever you like.” To believe all religions simultaneously is to become hopelessly entangled in self-contradiction. One simply cannot accept the Hindu belief that there are 3000,000 or more gods and at the same time accept the Muslim belief that there is only one god. Nor can one embrace either Hinduism or Islam and Buddhism because historic Buddhism does not believe in a personal God at all. Or consider the religious opinions about the afterlife. Shintoism says there is no afterlife, just the here and now, so make the most of it. Buddhists seek Nirvana, the complete absence of desire. Christianity teaches that heaven is a place where all pure desires are satisfied in Jesus Christ (Rev. 22:4). Who is right? If there is a heaven at all, does it negate or satisfy desire? Opinions about judgment differ as well. Christianity teaches that “man is destined to die once, and after that to face judgment” (Heb. 9:27). Hindus believe in a seemingly endless series of reincarnations. Well, which is it? Both views cannot be true.
Philip Graham Ryken
Bohemian Stew
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CATEGORY
CUISINE
TAG
YIELD
Meats
Main dish, Beef
10
Servings
INGREDIENTS
2 1/2
lb
Beef stew meat
2
c
Chopped carrots
2
c
Chopped celery
3
Onions, cut up
3
tb
Tapioca
1
tb
Sugar
1
cn
Tomatoes (28 oz size)
1
c
Diced potatoes
2
Bay leaves
1/2
c
Frozen peas
1
tb
Salt
1/2
ts
Pepper
3/4
c
Hot water
INSTRUCTIONS
Combine all ingredients into heavy cookware. Bake covered at 250 degrees F
for five hours, stirring occasionally. Serve with dumplings or boiled
potatoes or buttered noodles.
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