Rebecca Stark is the author of The Good Portion: Godthe second title in The Good Portion series.

The Good Portion: God explores what Scripture teaches about God in hopes that readers will see his perfection, worth, magnificence, and beauty as they study his triune nature, infinite attributes, and wondrous works. 

                     

Wednesday
Jul042007

Popular Posts from the Past: Cloth Napkins

I’m taking the sun lover’s summertime approach to blogging. Yep, I’m going to occasionally post popular posts from the past. This post, originally posted on the old blog, is probably the single most popular post of my blogging career. It was linked right away by a couple of high traffic web sites—About.com, I think, and a page with environmentally friendly projects that I can’t find anymore.  Every once in a while, it will be linked again, found—I guess—by searches for “cloth napkins.”
 
This same basket of cloth napkins, by the way, still sits on my kitchen table, almost as bright and new looking as they are in the photo.
 
P4113052.jpg
 
Perhaps you call them serviettes. Whatever you call them, I spent part of the afternoon making us a new assortment. Some of the fabric I used was given to me by a friend when she cleared out all her fabric scraps before she moved; some of the fabric was from an almost new curtain I picked up at the Salvation Army Thrift Store for twenty-five cents; and I also cheated—at least by my tightwad rules—and picked up 1/2 meter pieces of a couple cute springy prints in the bargain bin at the fabric store.

We always use cloth napkins. It’s been 20 years since I’ve purchased any paper ones. Cloth napkins work better, cost less, are probably more environmentally friendly, and they look a whole lot prettier, to boot. The ones we were using were at least 10 years old and starting to look faded and warn, and besides, I’ve gone to a more retro pastel cottage look in the kitchen, so it was time for a fresh set of the right colored napkins.

You might be wondering if cloth napkins are worth the work. I certainly think so. After all, a set that I can stitch up in an hour or so will last for 10 years. It took longer to photograph them and compose this post than it took to make them! They do have to be washed, but that’s hardly enough work to even notice. I just throw the dirty napkins in with other laundry—I figure 10 napkins are equivalent to one T-shirt weight-wise—and then quickly fold them as they come out of the dryer. In the summer I hang them on the line, and even then they need no ironing to look good.

P4113061.jpgSo how did I make them? First I ripped pieces of 100% cotton fabric into 15 1/2 inch squares. (All-cotton fabric is much better than a polyester/cotton blend. Polyester fibres are stain magnets, and nothing looks worse than dirty looking napkins.) Sixteen or 16 1/2 inches square might have been a better size, but that extra inch would have meant I could only get two napkins crosswise instead of three, and for a tightwad, that’s too much of a sacrifice to make.

Next I turned the edges under 1/4 inch and then 1/4 inch again and hemmed. I hemmed a first side and then the side directly opposite before moving on to the edges perpendicular to it. Hemming in this order gives a nice little square stitching detail on the corners. Each napkin took only a few minutes from start to finish.

When I’d hemmed them all, I gave them a quick once-over with an iron so the hems would lie flat. Then I folded them up, collected them together, and insisted that everyone in the family admire them, especially if they wanted supper.
Wednesday
Jul042007

What is justifying faith?

Justifying faith is a saving grace,[1] wrought in the heart of a sinner by the Spirit [2] and word of God,[3] whereby he, being convinced of his sin and misery, and of the disability in himself and all other creatures to recover him out of his lost condition,[4] not only assenteth to the truth of the promise of the gospel,[5] but receiveth and resteth upon Christ and his righteousness, therein held forth, for pardon of sin,[6] and for the accepting and accounting of his person righteous in the sight of God for salvation.[7]

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Monday
Jul022007

Book Review: By Faith Alone

1581348401.jpgAnswering the Challenges to the Doctrine of Justification, edited by Gary L. W. Johnson and Guy P. Waters.

This is a book of essays—nine in all (ten, if you count the introduction by Guy Waters)—answering recent challenges to the historic Reformed understanding of the doctrine of justification by faith alone, concentrating on the New Perspective on Paul and the Federal Vision, but also engaging the classic Arminian position and Mormonism. Individual essay authors include

  • Cornelis P. Venema
  • T. David Gordon
  • Richard D. Phillips
  • C. FitzSimons Allison
  • David VanDrunen
  • R. Fowler White and E. Calvin Beisner
  • John Bolt
  • Gary L. W. Johnsons
As might be expected from a book that consists of essays by various authors, the book is a little uneven. Some essays seem to be written with the interested lay person in mind, and others assumed much more prior knowledge on the part of the reader. In addition, since the essays were originally intended to stand alone, there is a fair bit of repetition of ideas and arguments.
 

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