My wife loves cooking.
When we take road trips she passes the time by reading cookbooks. When
browsing the TV, she usually settles on a cooking show. Any cooking show, it seems to me. When we watch jeopardy and they introduce a
food category, she usually knows the answer.
When I get stumped on a crossword clue that includes spices or food, she
helps me fill it in. I am pretty well
limited to breakfast: bacon, eggs and
biscuits, or grilling steak, hamburger or salmon on the gill out back.
It all seems to come down to the spices. How you use them: which spices you put in, at
what time, in what amount. She has a
pantry full of spices. When it gets
beyond salt, pepper, and a little garlic, I am pretty well lost.
Last year we visited the Dr. Pepper museum in Waco,
Texas. In 1885, at a corner drug store
in Waco, Texas, a young pharmacist named Charles Alderton was experimenting
with various flavors for a new soda he could serve. He came up with a blend of 23 flavors people
loved. Customers called it the “Waco”
until the owner of the drug store came up with the name Dr Pepper, after his good
friend. They had trouble making enough to meet demand. Today Dr Pepper is
distributed in the U.S., Canada, Asia, Europe, Mexico, South America, Japan,
Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. They still use the same 23 flavors
that remain a secret.
Harland Sanders learned
to cook from his mother when he was 7.
In 1934 he started selling fried chicken from his roadside filling
station in Corbin, Kentucky. It took a
few years to perfect his secret 11 herbs and spices. But when he did, people
liked it. They liked it so much that the governor made him an honorary colonel.
Today KFC is served in 119 countries and territories worldwide. When we were in Prague and I got hungry for a
taste of home I walked to a nearby KFC.
They seem to be everywhere.
It is amazing what the right blend of flavors and spices can
accomplish. What is true for food is also true for the way we live and the way
we speak. Life is more fun, satisfying
and meaningful when we find the right “spices.”
Jesus recognized this when he told his disciples, “You are
the salt of the earth. But if the salt
has lost its taste, it is good for nothing but to be thrown out and trampled
underfoot.” (Matthew 5:13).
The Apostle Paul wrote, “Let your speech always be with
grace, as though seasoned with salt, so that you will know how you should
respond to each person.” (Colossians 4:6).
Unlike Dr Pepper and KFC, the ingredients are no
secret. The spices and flavors that make
every Christian life desirable are listed in Galatians. “But the fruit of the
spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,
gentleness, self-control.” (Galatians
5:22-23). When these “spices” are cooked
into our souls, it changes our families, friendships, communities and the world.
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