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. 

                     

Thursday
Feb032011

Round the Sphere Again: Bible

For the Kids
John Bird reviews Thomas Nelson’s Beginning Reader Bible, which he recommends, with one small criticism.

Here’s a books of the Old Testament mental_floss quiz that you might want to let your kids do. I’m pretty sure you’d get them all right, and maybe your kids will, too. I’ve gone through the pages a few times and don’t see ads or anything that would be inappropriate.

For the Student
Defining and explaining chiasms. (National Association of Scholars)

Dr. Ed Gravely answers the question “Aren’t there 400,000 Variants or Errors in the New Testament? (Part 1) (Part 2)” (The Ehrman Project).

Thursday
Feb032011

Thankful Thursday

I’m thankful that I can trust God in everything. I’m thankful that when things things go wrong, nothing is really out of place in his plan, and he is working in everything to conform me to the image of his Son. I’m thankful that certain annoying circumstances have given me a glimpe of my sin of pride, which is a type of idolatry, isn’t it?

I’m thankful for my cell phone, and for how much simpler it makes things when the car breaks down on the way to town.

I’m thankful for some unscheduled time that I can use to catch up on projects around the house.

Throughout this year I’m planning to post a few thoughts of thanksgiving each Thursday along with Kim at the Upward Call and others.

Wednesday
Feb022011

Hot Stuff

…or what I made this afternoon.

What is it? We call it a Bodum cozy. It wraps around a French press coffee maker (like this) to keep the coffee hot. I got one for Christmas, and it works surprisingly well, so I decided make one for a gift using the cozy I got for Christmas as a pattern.

Here’s the reverse side. I could, I think, sell it as reversible and no one would complain. (I’m not sure why the topstitching looks so crooked and bunchy in that photo. It’s neither crooked nor bunchy in real life.)

I used scraps of leftover cotton fabric and a double layer scrap of polyester quilt batting. It took less than an hour to make, including the 10 minutes it took for me to find the package of velcro in my stash of sewing stuff. The next one, of course, will take half as long, because I’ll know what I’m doing. And I’ll know where the velcro is.

Some French press coffee cozy patterns and intructions: