God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)
Gossip leaves a wide trail of devastation wherever and however it goes – word of mouth, email, blogging, YouTube. It erodes trust and destroys morale. It creates a social environment of suspicion where everyone must wonder what is being said behind their backs and whether appearances of friendship are sincere. It ruins hard-won reputations with cowardly but effective weapons of misrepresentation. It manipulates people into taking sides when no such action is necessary or beneficial. It unleashes the dark powers of psychological transference, doing violence to the gossiper, to the one receiving the gossip and to the person being spoken against. It makes the Body of Christ look like the Body of Antichrist – destroyers rather than healers. It exhausts the energies we would otherwise devote to positive witness. It robs our Lord of the Church he deserves. It exposes the hostility in our hearts and discredits the gospel in the eyes of the world. Then we wonder why we don’t see more conversions, why “the ground is so hard.”
It is right for the Church to be in the world; it is wrong for the world to be in the Church. A boat in water is good; that is what boats are for. However, water inside the boat causes it to sink.
In a large, deep bowl, beat the lemon juice and flour together with a
whisk or spoon, add the water and beat to a smooth thin paste. Set aside.
With a small, sharp knife, trim 1/8 inch off the stem end of each
artichoke and peel the tough outer skin from the remaining stem. Snap off
the small bottom leaves and any bruised or discolored outer leaves. Lay
each artichoke on its side, grip it firmly, and with a large knife slice
about 1 inch off the top. Spread the top leaves apart gently and pull out
the inner core of thistle like yellow leaves. With a long handled spoon,
scrape out the hair choke inside. Drop the artichokes into the lemon juice
mixture, turning them about to coat them evenly and let them soak while you
make the sauce.
Heat the olive oil over moderate heat in a shallow enameled or stainless
steel casserole large enough to hold the artichokes comfortably. Add the
onions and cook for 5 minutes, or until they are soft and transparent but
not brown. Drain the artichoke soaking liquid into the casserole, add the
dill and salt and, stirring constantly, bring to a boil over high heat.
Lay the artichokes side by side in the sauce and baste them thoroughly.
Reduce the heat to low, cover tightly, and simmer for 20 minutes. Then turn
the artichokes over and, basting occasionally, simmer 25 minutes longer, or
until their bases show no resistance when pierced with the pint of a small
knife. Remove from the heat and let the artichokes cool to room
temperature. To serve, arrange on a platter and spoon the sauce over them.
Source: Time Life Series: Middle Eastern Cooking "crica 69"
MMed by: earl.cravens@salata.com
Posted to recipelu-digest by GramWag <GramWag@aol.com> on Mar 18, 1998
A Message from our Provider:
“Perhaps it takes a purer faith to praise God for unrealized blessings than for those we once enjoyed or those we enjoy now. #A.W. Tozer”
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