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. 

                     

Monday
Aug162010

Round the Sphere Again: ESV Bible Study Resources

Available for Pre-order
Logos Bible Software is releasing a digital edition of the ESV Study Bible in a few weeks. It is currently available for a pre-order discount (see details at the above link) and will be released on September 15, 2010.

The MacArthur Study Bible English Standard Version is also available for pre-order at a discount and should be available in a few weeks. Phil Johnson describes the preview copy he’s seen:

It’s beautiful. Crossway printed two-color pages—black text and blue highlights. The maps, the layout, the paper, and the Smyth-sewn binding are all first class, making this the most durable and best-looking MacArthur Study Bible yet. The typefaces are especially easy on the eyes. I’m very pleased with it. I’ve been using the ESV for a couple of years, and I’m thrilled finally to have a copy with the MSB notes built in.

Update: David Elliot reminds me that Grace to You is going to be mailing free copies of the hardcover edition to people on the mailing list. It’s too late for you to sign up now to get a free MSB ESV, but you might want to sign up anyway, since they offer free resources every month.

Available Right Now
Crossway’s ESV Bible Atlas by John D. Currid and David P. Barrett.  Derek Thomas says:

A good atlas needs to have magnificent and accurate maps, a comprehensive timeline sensitive to the nuances of historical geography and geospatial changes, and (these days) digital accessibility. The ESV Bible Atlas scores fully on all counts.

Read his whole review.

Sunday
Aug152010

Sunday's Hymn

God Will Take Care of You

Be not dismayed whate’er betide,
God will take care of you;
Beneath His wings of love abide,
God will take care of you.

Refrain

God will take care of you,
Through every day, over all the way;
He will take care of you,
God will take care of you.

Through days of toil when heart doth fail,
God will take care of you;
When dangers fierce your path assail,
God will take care of you.

All you may need He will provide,
God will take care of you;
Nothing you ask will be denied,
God will take care of you.

No matter what may be the test,
God will take care of you;
Lean, weary one, upon His breast,
God will take care of you.

—Civilla D. Martin

(Skip through to 1:30 to get straight to the singing.)

Other hymns, worship songs, sermons etc. posted today:

Have you posted a hymn (or sermon, sermon notes, prayer, etc.) today and I missed it? Let me know by leaving a link in the comments or by contacting me using the contact form linked above, and I’ll add your post to the list.

Friday
Aug132010

Lefties of the World Unite!

Did you know today is (Woohoo!) Left-handers’ Day? Here’s a repost of a piece I posted for Left-hander’s Day a couple of years ago. If you insist on new material, try A Salute to Southpaws for Left-Handers’ Day (mental_floss Blog).

Are you a southpaw? I am. Today, August 13th, is Left-Handers’ Day, our day to celebrate our right to be left-handed.

If you’re like me, you’re happy to be left-handed. It’s just one distinction among many, but I’m glad it’s there.

Although, to be truthful, I go through life not thinking much about my left-handedness except when someone hands me a pen across a desk so I can sign something. Reaching out to grab hold with my left hand always makes for an awkward second or two. And then there’s the bank. My bank has little pen stands fastened on the right, which means I have to reach across and bring the pen over to the left, and then write with the pesky pen cord running across my paper. It’s little annoyances like this that remind me that being left-handed does occasionally make a bit of a difference.

Things Lefties Might Find Difficult

From the Left-Handers’ Day page, here’s a list of things that left-handers can find difficult. I’m going to go through the list and comment on whether I have trouble with each item. If you’re left-handed, why don’t you do this, too?

  1. Crossing other peoples paths/position on pavement. I don’t think I have more trouble with this than everyone else does, but I’m not sure that I’d know if I did.

  2. Hugging. Hmmm…I will have to admit that I’m an awkward social hugger, but I think that’s more because I’m not much into social hugging in the first place. Stand-offishness would describe my usual attitude to touchy things in public. I’d really rather not, but I am making an effort to become better at these kinds of physical displays of affections because they seem to matter a whole lot to some people I like.

  3. Taking neighbours drink/bread roll at dining table. This is one mistake I do not make. Hooray for me.

  4. Direction of work, decorating/painting rooms. Yep, I do everything from left to right. Painting a room, loading a dishwasher, washing counters or walls. Starting on the right would seem oh-so very wrong.

  5. Being helped to put on a jacket. My husband was left-handed, too, so we were perfectly in-sync when it came to these things. That’s why I married him. Being left-handed meant I was the perfect helper (left-hand woman, perhaps?) on his many projects. I knew instinctively which hand would take the tool I was handing, and he used different hands for different tools in a way that would make sense only to another left-hander. Scissors, for instance, force you to use them right-handed or they don’t cut well. And the guards on many power tools are placed for use with the right hand. When my husband and I worked in the kitchen together, we never got in each other’s way, something I can’t say for the times my daughters and I work together in the kitchen.

  6. Receiving change. It does confuse people when you hold out your left hand for the coins.

  7. Putting children’s socks and shoes on. My kids got used to their parents’ backward ways.

  8. Using your left-hand as a point of reference when giving directions. Well yes, always. Does this make a difference?

  9. Feeling more comfortable sitting on the left hand side of things. If I can, I always sit on the left side. Being on the right of an auditorium or theatre or church discombobulates me. Is this just a left-handed thing, or do righties feel a sense of unease when they sit on the left side of things?

  10. Putting belts on upside down. Huh? There’s a right side up on belts?

  11. Visualise things the opposite way around. I’m not sure. What does this mean, exactly?

  12. Trouble opening/locking locks. Not that I’ve noticed.

  13. Work stations flow the opposite way around. Oooh yes! Since both my husband and I were left-handed, the family computers were always set up tilted for a lefty and with the mouse on the left. It’s another one of those parental quirks the children had to get used to. Right now, on my desk computer, the mouse is on the left and I’ve changed the configuration so that the two sides of the mouse are opposite what they were originally. None of my children has ever grown accustomed to that. (Updated Aug 13, 2010 to add that I’ve reconfigured my laptop mousepad as well.)

  14. Organising files “back to front”. I’m pretty sure I don’t do this, because if I did, I’d probably know what this means.

Lefties and Hair Whorl Direction

Did you know that one of the things associated with left-handedness is the direction of the hair whorl on the back of your head? Right-handers tend to have clock-wise whorls and left-handers’ whorls tend to turn counter clock-wise. This is not always the case, mind you, but it occurs frequently enough that the correlation has been noted by researchers into left-handedness.

My whorl turns counter-clockwise. And I’ve noticed that I part my hair on the right side, while most side parters part their hair on the left. The right side is where my hair parts naturally and I assume that’s related to my backwards whorl direction. What about you? Do you fit the pattern or not?

Writing Left-Handed

Being left-handed can make writing more complicated. Lefties often write in an awkward (and painfully slow) over-handed way, or make a mess of things by smearing the ink with their hand. Being taught correct left-handed writing technique can prevent some of the leftie problems, but many teachers don’t know how to help little leftie learners. I am thankful that my mother and my first grade teacher both took the time to learn how to teach me to write as a left-hander should.

If you have a left-handed child, here’s a video that will explain some of the problems your left-handed writer might have and show how you can make writing easier for them.

If you’re a leftie, leave a comment to let me know. If you have lefties in your family, I want to know that, too.