On my Nightstand

The Christmas holidays  is not the time to read a book and review it.  What with decorating, baking, cleaning, hosting out-of-state company, shopping, visiting  and all the church events to attend, not much time is left for reading.  However, I ordered it and it came. Not til mid-January was I able to start on it.

To Light A Fire On the Earth is a book I had heard about on Facebook.  After reading other of Bishop Barron’s books, I knew I wanted to have my own copy.  This is not a book that you can read at one sitting, and then go lightly on one's way.  Then when I started reading it wasn’t what I expected.

With a subtitle of Proclaiming the Gospel in a Secular Age, I imagined the book would be about evangelizing God word in today’s world, and it is, but in a different  way.  As I began to read, even in the introduction, it read more like a biography of the Bishop than anything else.  Then in answer, or more as an explanation of the Bishop’s method of evangelizing, it became autobiographical with excerpts of answers to Barron by questions asked by John Allen, Jr., a collaborator in this work. This is a new type of format for me, yet it worked in getting the reader to know Bishop Barron and proclaiming the Gospel.

Throughout the book and at the end, what I digested is that here  is a man passionate about evangelizing people to get them to know the beauty, truth and good of the Catholic faith. He wants to reach them with the positive, find ways more inviting, point to the good in the culture, experience the lyrical in Catholicism.


I received this book (published by Image Books/NY) from Blogging for Books for this review. It has found a place on my nightstand where at night, like saying the Psalms or the evening Office, I can reread a few pages, think about what I’ve read, and delve into their richness as I sleep, so I can perhaps in a tiny way live them the next day.

Jan UFO

More than half way!
Judy of Patchworktimes.com has pick #1 as our February challenge and since I was so close to finishing this one, I went ahead and put it on my 2018 list as #1.  Well after I posted the list, I snuck in some sewing time and finished all the blocks, then forgot to take it off my list.

I am done with that one for now.  I'm saving them for July when I have my Christmas in July sewing month.  Here's what I wrote:   

1.  Finish making the blocks of this scrap log cabin. Twelve to go if I have enough fabric.  If not, then I'll have to think of a new layout.

I had enough fabric. 

I think I'll continue with the January UFO which got sandwiched and more than half way quilted.  
I even figured out what I'm going to do for a binding. I'm bound and determined to finish this one in Feb.

Life is good!
Blessings,

6 & 6 in 2018

I was going to make A Small World as my new project for this month's 6&6in2018, however I changed my mind after the first week in January as I started to seriously work on Sweet Land of Liberty.  This one is a real challenge for me. First, it has a unit a month while Small World is more just make at your own speed. Second, while there is a pattern for this quilt, one is encouraged to design your own for this primitive quilt.  I like that - makes it more of a challenge. Thirdly, this is a bit of a stretch (fabric wise) for my stash as I have very few plaids, homespuns, and muted solids in my collection. So here is my first month's unit.
The top row is not sewn on - they will be in a border later on.  I've learned new things already with this project.  Learned a new way to make economy blocks; practiced embroidery and also paper piecing - neither of which are near my strengths.  I look forward to the next month.  I'll be linking with Lori at Humble Quilts and Meredithe and Anne's 6&6in2018

Progrees is Made

Progress is made, at least some.  More blocks were added to the baby quilt I was working on (see previous post). More scraps were used. I...