God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)
But it is far more common for the evangelical preacher to edit God’s Word: 1. By removing the text from its context, and using it to say what-ever the preacher likes, 2. By moralizing the text, so that it is reduced to an ethical maxim that fits any religion, 3. By using the text to promote hobby-horses, and 4. By dogmatic insistence that the text says things it does not truly say. This homiletical hocus-pocus has subtle roots such as the desire to be clever and popular or synthetically relevant or intellectually respectable or to make the gospel more acceptable. But most often God’s Word gets watered down by the preacher’s laziness. He simply will not do the hard work to engage and preach a text in its context.
Kent Hughes
Copycat Poppy Seed Dressing
0
(0)
CATEGORY
CUISINE
TAG
YIELD
Grains
Make, Your, Own
1
Servings
INGREDIENTS
3/4
c
Sugar
1
ts
Dry mustard
1
ts
Salt
1
ts
Poppy seed
1/3
c
Vinegar
1 1/2
tb
Fresh onion juice*
1
c
Corn oil
INSTRUCTIONS
In small bowl with electric mixer at low speed, mix together sugar,
mustard, salt and poppy seed. Add vinegar and onion juice, beat on medium
speed for 3 minutes. Gradually beat in oil in a thin steady stream until
thick. Store in a tightly covered container in refrigerator. A pint jar
with lid is a very good container for it. Serve over salads, tossed raw
vegetables, your favorite potato salad instead of mayonnaise (leaving out
the onions), chicken, avocados or fresh fruit. *To make fresh onion juice,
cut a large onion in half, leaving skin on. Use a hand juicer to extract
onion juice.
NOTES : Notes
Posted to recipelu-digest Volume 01 Number 241 by "Diane Geary"
<diane@keyway.net> on Nov 10, 1997
A Message from our Provider:
“Christian ARE better BECAUSE they are forgiven.”
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