There is nothing unique about this recipe. It's just your basic, simple Chicken Cordon Bleu. For some reason, I had myself convinced this was a complex and challenging dish, but it's not. And, it's delicious. Set your oven to 400. Keep a toothpick on hand. Enjoy!
Ingredients:
-One chicken breast.
-One thin slice of ham.
-Two slices of cheese, pick your poison.
-Butter, melted. Season if you like.
-Bread crumbs, seasoned are best.
Directions:
1. Pound a chicken breast until it is thin. Half an inch thick is great.
2. Layer a slice of ham and cheese on the chicken.
3. Roll it all up, pinching it together with your fingers.
4. Dip into butter, still pinching it all together.
5. Roll around in bread crumbs. The chicken, not you. Keep pinching.
6. Poke a toothpick through it to replace your pinching fingers.
7. Bake on a greased cookie sheet for 20 minutes or until cooked through.
Notes:
-Excellent served with a mild gravy or alfredo sauce!
-Yummy with pasta, potatoes, or rice.
-Deli ham works, but it's better to thinly slice a ham steak. More juice.
Thoughts on Being Profound
I've
almost written this post three times. Ironically, I chicken out when I find
that it just doesn't sound...sufficient, impressive, eloquent, or relevant. I
even deleted my notes. But I think it is an important concept to consider in
light of the truth of the Lord, so I'm going to try.
People don't seem to like to be considered
shallow. We don't really enjoy thinking of ourselves as valuing unimportant
things, or wasting our time on trivial tasks. Feelings of emptiness, of doubt,
or of meaninglessness creep in enough as it is. We find we don't need to
validate these feelings by doing things that seem mundane or sound.
So, we push and dig to get to the very
depths of our souls and burrow into the trenches of relationship with Christ.
We push and dig through conversations trying to find purpose in them. In the
things that we do, we seek out meaning and justification. And to make these
things more secure in our souls, we seek recognition of our purposes and depth.
Our lives, as we then live them, are made to be one of two things: meaningless
or profound.
But we miss the point. To live meekly in
Christ is incredibly difficult because we have to give up dreams and
expectations of spiritual grandeur, like being known for how righteous we are.
We have to live like Christ lived, with our eyes ever fixed on God and not on
the steps we think we must take to "get to Him."
As Oswald Chambers pointed out in his
November 22nd "My Utmost for His Highest" devotion, Jesus came to us
as a baby. A baby! He lived as a carpenter's son. He traveled and ate and drank
with companions like other people did. The miracles and signs he performed he
often followed with a request of secrecy ("go and tell no one" -Luke
8, Matthew 16, Mark 9, etc.) When he died, it was between two criminals who
suffered crucifixion as well. Then, when He rose again, Jesus didn't run
around telling all the haters how wrong they were and striking them dead in
vengeance. He went to those He loved and spent His days among them, teaching
them truth.
Christ's life was not rich, it was not
attractive, he was hated by many, and he had all the needs we did....that's how
He was fully man and able to tempted as we are tempted.
What was different, then? What made His
life profound and eternally significant when he never made a big deal out of
Himself? What kept Him from being shallow when He lived so simply?
That Jesus was the Lord. That
Jesus humbly obeyed, even in what He ate and drank and who He spent time with.
Nothing human about life on earth was below the Lord. And the only
"thing" above Him was the Father.
Consider Matthew 6. Notice the number of
instances in which Christ reminds us not to do things in the sight of this
world for the rewards of this world. Being profound and earning a reputation of
depth, when done to appease a sense of meaninglessness in ourselves -as is the
case when we seek to find purpose in how others see us- is seeking
wrongly.
While usually the verse is quoted about
worrying, I think perhaps Christ said it in relation to the rest of what He was
saying, especially in Matthew 6, not just worrying....
"For the pagans run after all these
things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. But seek first his
kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as
well."
-Matthew 6:32+33
It's a simple point. It isn't deep or
incredibly shocking or profound or anything new and cool. We must fix our eyes
on the Lord and seek Him only....and that includes not seeking meaning and
purpose and depth to appease that which only He can fill.
No comments:
Post a Comment