[email protected]

Kathryn Baptista presented the sermon at her church today, and used Thinking
Sticks to help make her point and to make it more interactive, and to help
it last into the coffee-after session. Cool idea, and she found a great
quote which led to the idea too:

The Greek philosopher Heraclitus wrote, "A wonderful harmony arises from
joining together the seemingly unconnected."

The intro is here:
_http://sandradodd.com/thinkingstickscomments_
(http://sandradodd.com/thinkingstickscomments)

and that has a link to the sermon itself
_http://sandradodd.com/kathrynsermon_ (http://sandradodd.com/kathrynsermon)

If it goes onto the church's website, I'll probably just change the link to
that, but this is quite 'get it while it's hot' for sermon presentation.

I got up this morning, looked at the clock in the kitchen and said my
thinking sticks were being discussed in a church near Boston "right about now," and
here on the very same day I can send the text of the sermon. Cool!!

(apologies to those who might get this twice, and thanks to Kathryn for
thinking of me and sharing this)

Sandra


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

[email protected]

In a message dated 4/3/2005 6:10:22 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,
SandraDodd@... writes:

Kathryn Baptista presented the sermon at her church today, and used
Thinking
Sticks to help make her point and to make it more interactive, and to help
it last into the coffee-after session. Cool idea, and she found a great
quote which led to the idea too:



This is so cool!!! We just recently started going to a UU church and I
can't wait to share this with some of the people we have met. I printed it out
and then found our thinking sticks.
Kathryn, you rock. :-)

Gail




[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]