by Roseanna White | Oct 2, 2013 | Ancient World, Remember When Wednesdays
As I’ve mentioned on here before, I’m in the midst of doing the Bible-in-a-year schedule…which I started in July. So I’m still in Kings and Chronicles (it’s the chronological Bible, so things are mixed up.)
I’ve read the Old Testament several times in my life, but it’s been a while since I read all the way through it, and this being me, I usually read a story and think, “But what about…?” which leads me to wondering. About things like the unnamed, unmentioned characters obviously present.
 |
| Samuel Blesses Saul – from Doré’s English Bible, 1866 |
Like when Samuel was a young man, not yet a prophet, a “righteous man of Israel” came and prophesied against Eli and his sons. Insert Roseanna going, “What, no name? Come on! Who was it?? Do we ever see him again? Had he been wronged by those evil sons? How?”
Then many chapters later, after Samuel is grown, we read that his sons weren’t so righteous either. At which point Roseanna goes, “So…when did Samuel get married? To whom??”
I know, I know–those little details aren’t often important in the Old Testament. But still, they make me ask questions. And sometimes surprise me with what information they do offer. (Like how many wives Gideon had–yowza! So didn’t remember that part from my previous reads…)
And since these are the kids of things that inspire me to write, we’ll just keep the questions coming. 😉
Are there any biblical stories that made you pause to wonder about the people missing in the account, but who were obviously there?
by Roseanna White | Sep 30, 2013 | Word of the Week
I’m back! All settled in (mostly) at the new house, with internet up and running–if you heard the “Hallelujah Chorus” ringing through the air last night, that was just me when my angel of a husband got it all set up. 😉
My search for a word of the week started with the last one I posted, “cool.” I kept scrolling down through the listings at www.etymonline.com, and soon I learned something!
Cucumber is from the Latin cucumerem, and may even predate Latin, believe it or not–this is one ancient veggie! 😉 In the 17th and 18th centuries, English speakers often spelled it cowcumber, and that pronunciation apparently lingered well into the 19th century, though the spelling had, by then, changed.
But of course, what convinced me that this vegetable is worthy of a Word of the Week is the phrase “cool as a cucumber.” That idiom came about around 1732. Ever wonder why? Well apparently folk knowledge said that cucumber fields were cooler than the air around them. Which would earn nothing but an “interesting…okay” except that in the 1970s scientists thought to question this old phrase. And what did they learn? That, indeed, the temperature in a cucumber patch is 20 degrees below the surrounding areas!
I had no idea. Honestly, I didn’t even know where the phrase came from. Pretty neat, eh?
Oh, and ATTENTION WRITERS!
For an upcoming article in the ACFW Journal, a friend of mine is running a survey at The Character Therapist on whether writers feel supported or unsupported by their spouses. The survey will be live at 6 a.m. CST today and will remain up for a month. If you’re a writer (with a spouse, I suppose, LOL), do go take the survey, and pass along the link to your writing friends!
https://www.roseannamwhite.com/2013/09/writers-quiz-is-your-partner-supportive.html
by Roseanna White | Sep 19, 2013 | Uncategorized
Over the next week, I’m going to be moving. Today is step one (kinda funny to call it so, given how busy we’ve been getting to this point, LOL)–we’re moving my hubby’s grandfather into the apartment my hubby and his parents built for him. Then we’re tearing up the carpet in his house, which we’ll be moving into. The result–we’ll be there on his family’s land, which we’re all looking forward to.
Of course, it kinda cuts into blogging time. 😉 So if I’m quiet for the next week or so, you know why. This isn’t a move-in-one-day deal, we’re going to take it slow. Which is great on the one hand, but it does prolong the process. So I beg you to bear with me.
And in the meantime, enjoy the coming of autumn! It feels very autumnal here, with increasingly-colder nights but warm days, and I’m looking forward to the changing colors on the trees. =) Definitely one of my favorite times of year (if only it didn’t end in winter, LOL).
Have a great one!
by Roseanna White | Sep 18, 2013 | Ancient World, Remember When Wednesdays
Posting late this morning because, er, I totally spaced that it was Wednesday, LOL. We’re in the middle of a move, and my schedule is all weird. So as I dried my hair and realized I’d completely neglected my blog, I scoured my mind for a topic. Any topic.
So this is what you’re getting today. 😉
Back in New Testament times, houses in Israel usually featured some traditional chambers like you might expect. Windows were few, and those there were, were often covered in lattice. Many homes abutted courtyards, or had one all to themselves. But another key feature of the home was the roof.
 |
Herod’s Temple – not exactly your typical Israelite house, but it at least shows the flat top, LOL. |
When I first wrote
A Stray Drop of Blood, I had no clue about how important rooftops were in the day-to-day life of an average family. But when I rewrote it back in 2009, I figured it out. Which, you know, made sense with Jesus’s warning about the end days and, “Those who are on the rooftops…”
These roofs were flat, with a small ledge for protection. They had no stairs to them from inside the house–the only staircase would be built against an exterior wall, so you’d have to go outside to get up there. Hence why Jesus’s warning about those on the rooftops is that they won’t take the time to go back inside.
Now, sometimes folks would start with the usual rooftop, but would then build up walls and put on a secondary roof. This, as you may already know, is what they would term an “upper room.” Sound familiar? 😉 These upper rooms would therefore be completely separate apartments, so if someone needed to take in a boarder to make ends meet, it would provide the perfect setup. Tradition holds that the upper room Jesus and the disciples met in for the Last Supper was in the house of John Mark, who wrote the gospel of Mark.
As I’m working on
A Soft Breath of Wind, I just included one of these rooms in Jerusalem. =) Not the same one Jesus was in, LOL, but I
do also have John Mark in my story, given that his Gospel was written for the church of Rome during the same period my book takes place in. I haven’t yet found anything telling me
where he wrote the book, so I’m at the moment taking the liberty of putting him
in Rome during its creation, which works well with my plot. He’s reading the stories of Jesus’s life to my characters as he writes them. =)
Meanwhile, my heroes are in Jerusalem, in that upper room, about to unwittingly bring calamity upon them all… (dun dun duuuuuuuuuuu.)
by Roseanna White | Sep 16, 2013 | Word of the Week
Thank you, Rachel Koppendrayer, for the inspiration for this week’s word in your comment last week. 😉
So cool has quite a fun history! Its primary meaning of “not warm” has been around since Old English days. No surprise there. And has also been applied to people who are unperturbed or not given to emotional demonstration for just as long.
But of course, we’re more interested in the slang uses. 😉 I had no idea that it’s been around since 1728 in its application to large sums of money to give emphasis–i.e. “a cool million.” And it’s also meant “calmly audacious” since 1825–had no clue about that one!
It’s modern meaning of “fashionable” is older than you might think, too, from 1933. It originated in black jazz circles but was in the common vernacular by 1940. Pretty cool, eh? 😉
But not as cool as this–check it out! Whispers from the Shadows was apparently one of the freebies given away at lunch yesterday at ACFW! Big thanks to all my friends who sent me texts and pictures of its appearances at conference, from the placard on the Harvest House table to this:
Makes me feel like I was there!