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In the exercise of His common grace, God displays patience and forbearance with the world. But patience and forbearance ought to lead men and women to repentance. Instead, it emboldens the unbeliever in his sinful rebellion and mocking of God, and the patience of God is then turned into a rationale to rebel further against God. This does nothing more than store up greater judgment because of their ungodly response to His kind patience (Rom. 2:4-5).
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The man or woman who does not know God demands an infinite satisfaction from other human beings which they cannot give, and in the case of the man, he becomes tyrannical and cruel. It springs from this one thing, the human heart must have satisfaction, but there is only one Being who can satisfy the last abyss of the human heart, and that is the Lord Jesus Christ.
Oswald Chambers

Corn and Potato Chowder

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Grains Vegetarian Digest, Dec., Fatfree 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

2 c Coarsely chopped onions
(preferably red)
4 c Boiling veg. stock (or
More)
1 lb Thin-skinned potatoes,
Peeled and cut into 1/2"
Dice
1 lg Red bell pepper, seeded and
Diced
4 c Fresh or frozen (defrosted)
Corn kernels
2 ts Fresh or 1/2 t dried thyme

INSTRUCTIONS

Heat some stock in the cooker.  Cook the onions over medium-high heat,
stirring frequently, for 1 minute. Add the rest of the stock, potatoes, red
bell pepper, 1 C of corn, and thyme. (She notes here that if you are using
fresh corn, add the cobs too for more sweetness.)
Lock the lid in place.  Over high heat, bring to high pressure. Lower the
heat just enough to maintain high pressure ad cook for 4 minutes. (!!! I
was impressed !!!) Reduce the pressure with a quick-release method. Remove
the lid, tilting it away from you to allow any excess steam to escape.
Remove the corn cobs (if used).  With a slotted spoon, put about 2 C cooked
veggies into a food processor and puree them w/2 more C of the corn. (I
just dumped the 2C corn into the cooker and used one of those hand-held
blenders right in there to puree things together until it looked nice.)
Stir the puree back into the soup together with the remaining C of uncooked
corn.  Add salt and pepper and simmer until the just-added corn is tender,
2-3 minutes.
Posted by Cindy_Bloch@transarc.com to the Fatfree Digest [Volume 13 Issue
30] Dec. 30, 1994. (Adapted from Great Vegetarian Cooking Under Pressure's
Celery, Corn, and Potato Chowder):
FATFREE Recipe collections copyrighted by Michelle Dick 1994. Used with
permission. Formatted by Sue Smith, S.Smith34, TXFT40A@Prodigy.com using
MMCONV.
1.80á
File ftp://ftp.idiscover.co.uk/pub/food/mealmaster/recipes/fatfreex.zip

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“Don’t confuse God’s patience with his final response”

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