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

What does it mean when we read of Christians needing to “all agree” (1 Cor. 1:10) and be “of the same mind” (Phil. 2:2)? On the lowest level, all of us have personal interests with no spiritual significance. I like to call these “preferences.” Your favorite ice cream flavor. Where you choose to vacation. What you think makes a person attractive. Unless you are an egotistical moron, you respect the phrase, “to each their own.” On the middle level are non-salvific spiritual conclusions on how to live your life. These are the issues where Christians must decide, but often (even within the same church) have different perspectives. I call these “convictions,” or we could say “non-essentials.” Watching movies. How to school your children. Women’s clothing. What to do with Halloween. In these things, we respect another’s freedom (or liberty) in Christ. Then at the top level are the essentials for salvation and church unity. The doctrine of justification by faith. Obeying the Bible. Sharing Christ with others. These are the essentials and it’s in these things and these things alone we have unity – total agreement.
Randy Smith

How do you know whether a man is a Christian? The answer is that his mouth is “shut”. I like this forthrightness of the Gospel. People need to have their mouths shut, “stopped”. They are forever talking about God, and criticizing God, and pontificating about what God should or should not do, and asking, “Why does God allow this and that?” You do not begin to be a Christian until your mouth is shut, is stopped, and you are speechless and have nothing to say.
Martyn Lloyd-Jones

Country Ham And Hominy Bread X Two

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Vegetables, Eggs Breads, Sample 2 Loaf

INGREDIENTS

1 1/3 c Warm Water, 110/115F degree
4 T Honey
4 Active Dry Yeast
8 c Bread Flour, or less
1 c Cornmeal, not cornmeal mix
1 1/3 c Whole Wheat Flour
1/2 c Country ham, minced and
fried until crisp
1 Onion, White 1/4" dice
1/3 c Chile Pulp, Anaheim seenote
6 T Molasses
1/4 c Vegetable Oil
1 1/2 t Salt
1 Egg, lightly beaten
1 14oz can of Yellow Hominy
2 T Oat Bran, dust on top

INSTRUCTIONS

seenote: Dried Chiles, reconstitute 6 to 8 Anaheim or Numex Peppers,
scrape the flesh from the inside of the skin, discard the skin. using
a sturdy fork mash the pulp until smooth. Use any other method for
mashing chiles. NOTE,NOTE,    Use only recipe amount of this mixture.
seenote: Hominy, drain 14 oz. can of hominy, rinse slightly and chop  a
little. Until the hominy is in 1/3 hominy size..... Lightly grease  a
baking sheet. Sprinkle with 1 tb cornmeal. Set aside. Chop the Ham  and
Onion separately, into small dice or large mince, fry the ham in  a dry
hot pan to crisp the edges of the ham. Remove ham from pan. Add  onions
to the same pan, stir over medium heat for 8 to 10 minutes.  Cook the
Onions until golden brown, DO NOT brown until crisp.  Mikenote: Pay
attention to stirring at this step. NO crisping.  Combine onions, ham,
and hominy and stir to mix well, let this cool.  In a 4 cup measuring
cup, stir the honey into the water and sprinkle  the yeast on top, stir
until dissolved. Set aside. Use the dough hook  for this project. In
the mixing bowl of a heavy duty stand mixer,  combine bread flour, 1
cup of cornmeal, whole wheat flour, molasses,  vegetable oil, salt and
egg. mix on low speed for 1 minute. Add the  water/honey/yeast mix,
Onion, chopped Hominy, Ham, Chili Pulp, and  enough of the remaining
flour to form a soft dough. Mix on low speed  for 2 minutes. Knead on
low speed, adding additional flour as needed,  for 8-10 minutes or
until the dough is smooth and elastic and no  longer sticky. Cover the
mixing bowl and let rise until doubled, 1 to  2 hours. I usually freeze
half of this dough for a later loaf. Divide  dough into two balls,
freeze in a non stick sprayed, gallon plastic  bag. Continue this
recipe with remaining dough. Punch down the dough  on a lightly floured
surface. Roll the dough into a 14" circle, fold  it in half,
overlapping, slightly off center, so the top layer is set  back about
1" from the bottom edge. With a sharp knife,or dough  scraper, make 4
or 5 equally spaced cuts from curved edge to folded  edge, about 2/3
the way across the loaf (cutting through both  layers). Separate the
cuts slightly so the loaf opens up and is  crescent shaped. Place on
the prepared baking sheet and let rise  until doubled in volume, about
45 minutes...............Preheat the  oven to 375F degrees. Let rise in
warm room for 45 minutes, place in  375F degree oven for 45 minutes, or
until it is nicely brown on top  and the interior temperature is 200+F
degrees. Remember this bread is  fairly wet, and it will go against
some of the rules of breadmaking.  Use a flour sifter/duster to lightly
flour the dough on the board if  it seems too sticky to handle. Brush
the loaf with the melted butter  and sprinkle the remaining 1 tb of Oat
bran over the loaf. Bake for  40 minutes or until done. Remove to a
wire rack and let cool  completely.  From Gemini's MASSIVE MealMaster
collection at www.synapse.com/~gemini

A Message from our Provider:

“God grades on the cross, not the curve.”

Nutrition (calculated from recipe ingredients)
----------------------------------------------
Calories: 882
Calories From Fat: 270
Total Fat: 30.5g
Cholesterol: 93mg
Sodium: 1805.2mg
Potassium: 1024.3mg
Carbohydrates: 143.2g
Fiber: 2.3g
Sugar: 79.6g
Protein: 11.9g


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