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The following principles of leadership emerge from biblical teaching: 1. Christian leaders should be certain that their goal is to serve God and others, not to receive the title or honor that comes with leadership. 2. Leaders should not use their position for their own advantage or comfort. No task should be “beneath” them – although some tasks may be delegated. They should not ask others to do what they are unwilling to do themselves. 3. Leaders will seek to distinguish their own preferences from the will and welfare of the group as a whole. 4. Normally the position should seek the leader. There may be some situations in which persons may apply or volunteer. Nevertheless, when someone strongly desires a particular responsibility, his or her motivation should be carefully examined. 5. We must learn to see each other as valuable to the Lord and basically equal in his sight.
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The strength of temptation also comes from a tendency to push virtues to such an extreme that they become vices. For example, it is all too easy for the joy of eating to become gluttony, or for the blessing of rest to become sloth, or for the peace of quietness to become non-communication, or for industriousness to become greed, or for liberty to be turned into an excuse for licentiousness. We all know what it’s like for pleasure to become sensuality, or for self-care to become selfishness, or for self-respect to become conceit, or for wise caution to become cynicism and unbelief, or for righteous anger to become unrighteous rage, or for the joy of sex to become immorality, or for conscientiousness to become perfectionism. The list could go on endlessly…
Sam Storms

Brisket

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats Jewish Jewish, Beef 6 Servings

INGREDIENTS

2 Onions
3 Cloves Garlic; minced
2 cn Beef bouillon
2 cn Water; (use the soup can)
2 Bay leaves
2 tb Lemon juice
1 tb Brown sugar
2 tb Ketchup

INSTRUCTIONS

FREY FBBJ73C
1. Trim the fat from the meat 2. Brown the meat in just enough oil to keep
it from sticking to the dutch oven 3. Remove the meat and brown the onion
and garlic 4. Drain the oil keeping the onion and garlic in the pan 5. Add
the browned meat; soup, water and bay leaves (you need enough liquid to
cover the meat during the long cooking time) COOK FOR 1 HOUR 6. Add lemon
and sugar and simmer another 1 hour 7. Add ketchup and raisins and cook 1/2
~ 1 hour Now, what I do is 1 hour before it's finished cooking ( when I add
the ketchup) I also add fresh mushrooms, carrots, potatoes, and green beans
~- or any combination! The potatoes are a must -- they taste sooooo good
cooked in this "gravy". Slice the meat thin and serve it with the "gravy"
which is thin, but delicious. I also make Kasha with this meal. The best
part is that there're always leftovers!! Enjoy!! Linda/Tampa Formatted by
Elaine Radis; BGMB90B
Posted to JEWISH-FOOD digest V97 #329 by Nancy Berry <nlberry@prodigy.net>
on Dec 19, 1997

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