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

We learn throughout the years that God is faithful. You know when God gave new exhortations to the Israelites; often He reminded them of His faithfulness during the Exodus. He wanted the Jews to realize that He could be trusted in the present because of His faithfulness in the past. The same principle applies to our lives as well. The more we see His faithful hand shaping the events of our lives in the past, the more we realize that He can be trusted in the present. In hindsight, we can recall the situations when God either removed a trial or gave us sufficient grace to endure the trial. We can recall the good ways He has shepherded us along life’s journey. He has never disappointed us. Through experience, we learn that God keeps His Word and never fails on His promises. We learn that He is good. We learn that God can be trusted.
Randy Smith

Regard the Mosaic endorsement of capital punishment. Can this be justified on New Covenant grounds? Yes, in two ways. First, in Romans 13:4, Paul speaks of our governmental leaders who do not “bear the sword in vain.” Obviously the sword is not used for correction but for execution, and Paul acknowledges this right. Paul does not bother to provide an extensive list of what crimes are rightly punishable by death, but the right itself is assumed. Also, there is the pre-Mosaic stipulation that murder is an attack on God’s image and, therefore, worthy of death (Gen. 9:6). Murder as a personal attack on God is a notion that is not confined to the Old Covenant alone; it remain a capital offense in every age.
Fred Zaspel

Chinese Pork

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats Chinese Sainsbury1, Sainsbury’s 4 servings

INGREDIENTS

1 Pork fillet; weighing
; approximately 1lb
; (450g)
1 Medium-size onion; peeled and
; quartered
2 ts Sunflower oil; (2x5ml spoon)
8 oz Fresh or frozen mangetout peas; (225g)
1 Inch; (2.5cm) piece of
; root ginger, peeled
; and chopped finely
2 Cloves garlic; crushed
1 tb Soy sauce; (15ml spoon)
1 tb Dry sherry; (15ml spoon)
1/4 pt Beef stock; (150ml)
2 ts Cornflour; (2x5ml spoon)
2 Spring onions; trimmed and sliced

INSTRUCTIONS

1. Trim the pork of any visible fat, and cut across the grain into
very thin slices.
2. Separate the ''leaves'' of the onion.
3. Heat the oil in a non-stick frying pan and add the onion. Stir-fry
for 2-3 minutes.
4. Add the mangetout peas, topped and tailed if fresh, and stir-fry
for a further 5 minutes.
5. Remove the onion and peas with a slotted spoon, add the ginger and
garlic to the pan and cook for 1 minute, then increase the heat and
add the pork slices.
6. Stir-fry until the pork changes colour then toss in the vegetables.
Blend the liquids with the cornflour and add them to the pan, stirring
until thickened.
7. Serve sprinkled with sliced spring onions.
Converted by MC_Buster.
NOTES : In this dish, the thin pork slices are stir-fried until they
change colour, leaving them tender and succulent. The vegetables
should still be crisp. Serve this with a mixture of green and yellow
noodles.
Converted by MM_Buster v2.0l.

A Message from our Provider:

“Our hopelessness and our helplessness are no barrier to (God’s) work. Indeed our utter incapacity is often the prop He delights to use for His next act… We are facing one of the principles of Yahweh’s modus operandi. When His people are without strength, without resources, without hope, without human gimmicks – then He loves to stretch forth His hand from heaven. Once we see where God often begins we will understand how we may be encouraged. #Ralph Davis”

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