Tag Archives: titus 2

Sage’s Sewing Space – Bounty of Buttons

I suppose most homemakers don’t have the amount of buttons I have – accumulated through inheritance and every other avenue possible.  For quite some time, my buttons were kept in the giant glass salad dressing jar that held my mother’s buttons.  It held a respectable amount of buttons – all akimbo! 

buttons

My mother felt this was a good system, even though it required a tedious hunting and pecking effort to locate a single button, let alone several matching buttons.  I, however, am not my mother.  And I confess to being a tad, OK, a LOT more needy of organization than she was.  While I won’t go so far as to say my “buttons were being pushed”  – I admit to feeling anxious about them. 

I was compelled to troll Pinterest in search of ideas.  Alas, nothing was presented that would organize the gigantic amount and variety of buttons I had.  The ideas ranged from spice racks to customized shelving.  My penury nature resisted the idea of spending any money whatsoever. 

buttons 1
buttons 2
buttons 3

Garage sales had yielded a bonanza of canning jars the previous summer – and I had my answer.  By sorting the buttons into cute 4 oz. “quilted” jelly jars, I had my favorite things all at once.  Organization – and  thrift.  For someone like me – this is organizing ecstasy.  And since I have a large amount of white and off white buttons, those are divided by size as well.  This solved all at once the huge amount of buttons, which was even greater than my mother’s had been.  And they are easy to locate by color – without labeling.  I love labeling as much as the next “organ-ista” but if I can avoid labels,  I do, because to my way of thinking  –  it’s one less thing to spend money on.    And – these jelly jars are readily available – should I need more (yikes!) or if one should break.  I realize not everyone has this amount of buttons – but this will also work well with large beads and sequins!  I do some sequin work when I make a costume or an evening gown – and they are difficult to store.  They are so light in weight – and easily scatter all over the place.  With the sequins in the jelly jars, I can just dip my beading needle into the jar, and come out with a sequin.  Very smooth!

sequins

In this image you can only see the multi-colored sequins, but in other jars are iridescent, solid  black,  and solid white sequins, as well as specialty sequins shaped like stars and snowflakes.  I do not however – use these jars to store beads – that is another topic entirely. 

basket 1

The next question was – where to put the twenty jelly jars so they would be largely out of the way, but still easily accessible?  A trip to the attic revealed a dusty, black wire, two tiered fruit basket.  I already have a combination wrought iron banana hangar with a fruit basket underneath – so the one from the attic was just taking up space.  Viola!  While the proportions in the picture are deceptive in size, I assure you that there are twenty jelly jars in that fruit basket.  The height of the total basket is 17.5″ and the diameter of the large and deep bottom basket is 13.5.”  More than enough space and easy to see.  This whole thing is set on top of my grandmother’s extremely heavy wrought iron plant stand – which at this time I do not use for plants.  Since buttons are not looked at as often as my other sewing notions – this arrangement keeps them out of they way in my work area, and makes a decorative display for the sewing space.  The faceted “quilting” on the jelly jars makes beautiful buttons even more lovely.  Dusting is easily accomplished with some kind of duster with a handle on it – like a Swiffer or one with lamb’s wool.  

basket 2

It is evident to me, from nature, that our God, is a God of order.  He makes things beautiful and orderly.  What a nice way to emulate our Creator!  Living with order can create harmony and a sense of calmness in our homes.  He is never careless with His creation – we should never be careless with what  He has given us. 

Psalm 40:5

Many, O Lord my God, are Thy wonderful works which Thou hast done, and Thy thoughts which are to us-ward: they cannot be reckoned up in order unto Thee: if I would declare and speak of them, they are more than can be numbered.

Crock Pot Coveting

How, you say.  How could anyone covet something as mundane as a Crock Pot?  Well, when you already own several working Crocks you don’t need another one.  Or do you?  This new Crock takes crockery cooking to the sublime level – and I don’t mind sharing with our readers, that I have already let the interested parties know what they can gift me with should they so desire. . .

smart technology cooker

Oh my – this is right up there with my new sewing machine that I saved and saved for.  You program in what kind of food you are cooking, and when you want it done,  it does the rest.  Gives me goosebumps!

This description comes from the Crock Pot website:

Details & Features

The Crock-Pot® Slow Cooker featuring Smart Cook™ Technology is the ultimate in convenience and style. No longer feel restricted to what days you use your slow cooker or what cook times fit your lifestyle. The Smart Cook™ Technology allows you to select your “Ready At” time and your protein type and then it does all the thinking for you. Food will cook to the optimal temperature to be ready when you want it to be. Recipes that normally call for 6-8 hours can be extended for up to 12 hours, while recipes with 10-12 hour recommendations can be shortened to 6 hours. This slow cooker’s modern design is evident with a polished, stainless steel exterior and stylish metal handles with a silicone wrap. Manual controls include Low, High, and Warm cook settings to adapt to more delicate recipes that require shorter cooking times. When the “Ready At” time has arrived, this slow cooker automatically shifts over to a convenient keep-warm mode. The cooking indicator and keep warm indicator lights offer at-a-glance convenience. Serving your dish is effortless. The 6.5-quart, removable stoneware provides a smooth transition from countertop to tabletop; no other dishes necessary. Plus, the stoneware and glass lid are dishwasher-safe, making clean up quick and easy.

Features:

  • Smart Cook™ Technology allows you to select your “Ready At” time and your protein type allowing the slow cooker to do the rest of the work for you
  • 6-8 hour recipes can be extended for up to 12 hours & 10-12 hour recipes can be shortened to 6 hours
  • Slow cooker automatically shifts to convenient keep-warm mode when cooking is complete
  • 6.5 quart capacity, serves 7+ people
  • At-a-glance cooking and keep warm indicator lights included
  • BONUS: Cookbook with over 25 delicious recipes specific for this slow cooker.
  • Polished stainless steel exterior
  • Stylish metal handles with silicone wrap
  • Removable oval stoneware
  • Dishwasher-safe stoneware and glass lid

Please don’t think we get any kind of remuneration for featuring this – I just try however I can to help home school moms in their challenging mission to do it all and not crumble under the stress.  Crockery cooking is one of the best ways to accomplish everything, save money, and reduce stress all around.  The newer crocks have a “keep warm” feature, that stops the cooking process, but will enable any late arrivals at your house for dinner (like husbands that work overtime, or teens that have part-time jobs) to have a really great, hot meal,  rather than microwaved leftovers.  And lets face it – sometimes we are too tired to cook up a fabulous dinner in the late afternoon or early evening after a full day of home schooling and home keeping.  If dinner is already made – you’ve got it made! 

EASY CROCK POT PORK CHOPS

I frequently buy huge packages of pork chops on sale at SAM’s Club.  I repackage it when I get home, putting about 7 chops in each package.  Very often, the packages of chops are so huge – that I can make each of these recipes twice from the one huge purchase.  Uber thrifty!

One of the packs gets breaded and pan fried with this coating:

  • 1/3 cup cornmeal
  • 1/3 cup rye flour
  • 1/3 cup raw wheat germ
  • 1 teaspoon kosher or sea salt

Mix a couple of eggs with a small amount of milk, dipping each chop into batter and then into wheat germ breading mixture.  Fry until no longer pink inside. 

With one of the packs of chops, I remove any bones, and cook the chops on low in crock pot for about 10 hours with onions and barbecue sauce.  The chops shred effortlessly after this, and are piled onto buns for pulled pork sandwiches.  So easy and good! 

With another of the packs of chops, I place one sliced onion in the bottom of crock, top with chops, and then top with two undiluted cans of tomato soup.  Bake on high for 4-6 hours, or low for 8-10 hours.  Everyone loves this – even people who don’t like pork chops. 

baby birds

PROVERBS 25:24    

 It is better to dwell in the corner of the housetop, than with a brawling woman and in a wide house. . .

Hints for Homeschoolers – Divide and Conquer!

Your housework that is!  

The method I use, will not work for everyone.  The reason being, that everyone has a different home, different family, and even different kinds of dirt.  For example – only some of you need to think about water softeners or septic systems.  My house is on the large size (we are downsizing in the next two years.)  We also have well water, which makes things a little more challenging despite a high-tech water treatment set-up in the basement.  But I digress – here is the daily outline:

  • Sunday is for church.  After church, in general, Sundays are pets and plants day.  The houseplants get undivided attention for one hour per week, including watering, re-potting, pruning, rotating, and fertilizing. I find this activity very relaxing and soothing, even restful.  I can usually take a great nap after the indoor gardening session.   This was also the day I used to clean ears and teeth, and trim nails on my dog – but she left us this past summer. . .
  • Monday is clean the kitchen day because Tuesday is when trash and recycling is picked up.  It’s a good day for me to rummage the fridge for anything that needs to go in the garbage since it will be gone the next morning.  Living in the woods prevents me from putting anything that might interest animals into the outside trash until the last possible moment.  Twenty minutes are spent de-cluttering and organizing, twenty minutes are spent dusting, and twenty minutes are spent on the floor.  I set a timer for each twenty minute block of time.  I also clean the downstairs half bath on Monday.
  • Tuesday is a light cleaning day – just the family room.  There are a lot of book shelves in there, which get swiped  each week with a Swiffer duster.  It’s great for the tops of books – which can be ruined by embedded dust.  A lot of dusting here – twenty minutes dusting, twenty minutes straightening and organizing, and twenty minutes on the floor.  It’s the same amount of time I spend in the kitchen – but not nearly as strenuous.  Tuesday is also the day I take care of any ironing.  The upstairs small bath gets cleaned today too since it is the easiest bath to clean. 
  • Wednesday is devoted to the basement laundry room.  It is huge, because the house was built long before the electric dryer was available.  I also have a recumbent exercise bike, a large wooden potting bench, and two cat trees in the laundry room.  This room can get horribly filthy, because it opens to the wooded back yard, and is on grade level.  Once again, twenty minutes of organizing and de-cluttering, twenty minutes of dusting and scrubbing (there are five windows in just this area!) and twenty minutes on the floor.  If I don’t time myself – I could get carried away here – because the vacuuming is endless.  Especially around the ceiling cobwebs.  There is also a room down here with a fireplace that we used as a bedroom.  It gets tackled along with the laundry room. 
  • Thursday is another light cleaning day, involving only the formal dining room and parlor.  Lots of attention to detail, but it’s never too cluttered or dirty, because it is off limits most of the time.  In general, I am the only one in the parlor on a daily basis because of the piano.  Some people would say that is trending towards fussy and the ridiculous, but as any mom knows, it is nice to have a portion of the house that is always clean and presentable.  This area also holds antiques, which take some attention.  The large cupboard in the dining room gets a good work over inside, (something always needs rearranging in there!) then twenty minutes dusting, and twenty minutes on the floors.  The downstairs half bath gets cleaned again because it gets the most use, and is the bath used by guests.  Since this cleaning is so light – Thursdays are designated for errands like grocery shopping, etc. 
  • Fridays are devoted to the upstairs, which includes three bedrooms, the sewing room, and the family bath.  I change the sheets in the master, and clean the family bath. (This house does not have a master bath.)  The other member of the family are required to change their own linens and clean their own rooms.  Twenty minutes are spent organizing the master bedroom, twenty minutes are spent dusting that room and the hall, and twenty minutes are spent on the floors including the stairs going down.  The sewing room gets a little attention every day.  But that’s for another post! 
  • Saturdays are the most changeable, because of DH.  His office dwells in half of the lower level.  If he is working in there on Saturday – I do not clean it.  It has a full bath, which I also may have to skip because of his schedule.  On those days – I go all the way up, up, up, and work on the attic.  This is a full blown, old fashioned attic that you can walk around in.  Spiders love it.  I could spend hours in here – but once again, I time the twenty minutes organizing, twenty minutes dusting, and twenty minutes on the floor, and staircase leading down.  Saturdays are also my day for baking – usually in the afternoon.  If the weather is nice, (not often) I will go outside instead of the attic, and work on the garage and storage shed. 
ants

I don’t mind telling you, that this monstrous house was much easier to take care of when all of my helpers were available.  But, like I told DH – it’s good exercise, and I feel wonderful after it’s done.  The key to all this clean comfort is not trying to do too much at once – and not procrastinating. 

One technique I’ve adapted is “overlap” vacuuming.  I attach an appliance grade extension cord to my vacuum cleaner’s regular cord.  It gets plugged into an outlet near the entry of the particular area I’m working on that day.  After doing the thorough vacuum of the focus area – I continue vacuuming out as far as I can go with the extension cord.  Not going into corners or anything – just getting the general area done.  This makes everything easier, and prevents tracking into the room that has just been cleaned.  This system allows for the kitchen floor to get a once over three times a week!  And I don’t know about yours – but mine needs that!

cottage in snow

Some day, hopefully sooner rather than later, we will be moving onto our retirement program, but until then, it is my responsibility to keep this home to the best of my ability.  I  know some young moms who think they would be happier if they only had more room – but let me assure you – your kids grow up and leave – and you are then left in a huge, empty house!  But I also know – that if I can keep this place in order – you can do it in your home too. 

Titus 2:3-5

King James Version (KJV)

home keeping

The aged women likewise, that they be in behaviour as becometh holiness, not false accusers, not given to much wine, teachers of good things;

That they may teach the young women to be sober, to love their husbands, to love their children,

To be discreet, chaste, keepers at home, good, obedient to their own husbands, that the Word of God be not blasphemed.

Hints for Home Schoolers – Being a Keeper at Home

Men should stop treating feminists like ladies, and instead treat them like the men they say they want to be. [Phyllis Schlafly]

3 The aged women likewise, that they be in behaviour as becometh holiness, not false accusers, not given to much wine, teachers of good things;   4 That they may teach the young women to be sober, to love their husbands, to love their children,  5 To be discreet, chaste, keepers at home, good, obedient to their own husbands, that the Word of God be not blasphemed.

Titus 2: 3-5

Let’s examine the phrase “keeper at home.” Some of what could be termed – New Age Bible Versions – have corrupted this passage to say something entirely different. Merely keeping a clean house – is not being a keeper at home. The keeper at home is something far greater than is commonly understood.

FROM THE GREEK, “KEEPER” IN TITUS 2 IS TRANSLATED FROM THIS WORD –

οὖρος

a watcher, warder, guardian

The same directive was given to Adam in the Garden of Eden – he was to“keep” the garden. It means something a great deal more than pruning! The Cheribum was to “keep” the way of the Tree of Life.  With a flaming sword, no less! The same charge is given to women for their homes. It has ever been the desire of Satan to destroy the family – and one of the ways he does this is by changing God’s Words. The NIV version changes “keepers at home” to

to be busy at home

Think I am making too big of an issue over a few words? The change in context here is of gigantic proportion! That simple change, in the NIV, as well as others, has influenced Christians for the past generation, to abandon their children to the pagan shrines masquerading as schools, and thrust women into the unnatural role of competing with men. Even our seniors are being shuffled off to assisted living, because the “keeper at home” is not there to care for the elderly members of the family.

castle

As the keeper at home – you are the guardian of your family. You are to be ever watchful for the welfare of your home, and its occupants. There simply is no more important job in the entire world. No where, and I mean no where, in the Holy Bible, the inspired Word of God, is this incredible responsibility given to men. Not in thousands of years of recorded history.

When you begin each day, have this thought in mind. You are the watcher, warder, guardian of your home. Not a mere housewife! You are the chatelaine of your castle, with all the commensurate responsibilities. Don’t let the media, politicians, or someone close to you diminish you and your desire to be obedient to the Lord. Your home is a fortress against the outside world, and you are its keeper! And the world, under the influence of the evil one, will attack with as much vengeance as an invading army. He will try to break down your door, infiltrate through a weak spot, smoke you out, and catapult destruction over the wall. The war machines you see in the above illustration are nothing compared to what he has in his arsenal.

Put on the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil.

Ephesians 6: 11

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Ultimate Banana Bread!

banana-bread1

1 3/4 cups white whole wheat flour

1 3/4 cups unbleached all purpose flour

1 1/2 cups sugar

2 teaspoons baking powder

1/2 teaspoon kosher or sea salt

1 1/2 cups mashed, ripe bananas (usually three)

2 eggs

1/2 cup light olive oil

1/2 cup milk

1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

1 cup chopped walnuts (optional)

Spray 12 cup bundt pan with cooking spray. Combine all ingredients in large bowl. Stir just until blended. Pour into pan and bake at 350 degrees for 50 to 55 minutes. Cool in the pan for 15 minutes! (very important) Turn out onto rack to finish cooling.

Now that’s what I call “instant breakfast!”