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NHNE
News Stories
Here's
a quick list of articles that were sent out to NHNE's
Wavemaker List over the last couple of weeks.
To have these articles delivered directly to your inbox
as soon as they are available, sign
up here. To read all of the articles listed below,
visit NHNE's
News Page.
•
EPA Chief Ignores Staff; Schwarzenegger To Sue
• 'Be the Change! Share The
Story!' School Video Contest
• Severe Decline Of Europe's Common Birds
• Man Nails Santa To Cross To Protest Commercialism
• Perspective: Nightmare Before Christmas
• Barbara Marx Hubbard & Michael Dowd
• Perspective: Man & The Machine
• Wise Swarming On Evolution's Edge?
• Asteroid May Hit Mars In Next Month
• Pelosi Leads The House To Go Organic In Its Cafeterias
• Ken Wilber On Oprah & Friends XM Radio Show
• Perspective: White House Confirms Fire Destroyed Records
• Lakota Indians Break Away From U.S.
• Katie Queries U.S. Presidential Candidates On Infidelity
• Petition: Say 'NO' To The Irradiation Of Supplements
• 100,000 Respond To Wexler's Call For Impeachment
• Words Without Borders
• Slave Labor That Shames America
• Inside A GOP Effort To Rig The 2002 New Hampshire Elections
• Six States Defy Law Requiring ID Cards
• Ohio Elections Official: All Five Voting Systems Have 'Critical
Flaws'
• Eating Beef More Destructive Than Driving A Car
• UN Warns On Soaring Food Prices
• Monkeys Surprisingly Proficient At Mental Arithmetic
• Pope's Inter-Religious Dialogue Makes al Qaeda Nervous
• Oceans' Growing Acidity Alarms Scientists
• The Presidential Climate Action Plan
• TAI: Economic Disruption: Weathering The Storm
• The Collapse Of The Modern Day Banking System
• Synthetic DNA On The Brink Of Yielding New Life Forms
• Climate Change 'Hard Man' Breaks Down At Summit
• Google To Tackle Wikipedia With New Knowledge Service
• Bill Moyers Talks With MSNBC Host Keith Olbermann
• Who Won & Lost At Bali
• Putin Rival Held In Psychiatric Ward
• Inside The CIA's Notorious 'Black Sites'
• Skitboot, "The
World's Smartest Dog"
• 150 Years Of Disastrous Advice On Children's Health
• Gore Completes Home Renovations
• Wexler Calls For Cheney Impeachment Hearings
• Followup: The Secret Language of Babies
• Tom Jepperson Interviews Ann Eller
• Gore Urges UN To Ignore Washington, If Necessary
• The Secret Language Of Babies
• Mayfield Contradicts Democrats' Political Pressure Claims
• Toshiba Introduces New Super Battery
• We're Beyond The Point Of No Return
• Sunfellow Photography Blog
• Study Finds White House Manipulation On Climate Science
• Pope's Global Warming Comments Misconstrued
• Too Much Sugar May Increase Alzheimer's Risk
• Huckabee Refuses To Release Old Sermons
• Movie: Star Trek XI
• Greenland Ice Sheet Melting At Record Rate
• Pope Condemns Climate Change Prophets Of Doom
• Romney Says Attacks On Religion Go Too Far
• Morgan Stanley Issues Full U.S. Recession Alert
• Video Of Al Gore's Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech
• Movie: 'I Am Legend' (Interview With Will Smith & Others)
• Ex-CIA Officer Goes Public: Waterboarding Recounted
• Interest Rate 'Freeze' - The Real Story Is Fraud
• Suicide Link To Acne Drug Officially Established
• Honda Robots Now Work In Pairs
• Gang-Rape Cover-Up By U.S., Halliburton/KBR
• Former Air Traffic Controller Say 9/11 An Inside Job
• Gore Gets Nobel, Warns Of Ominous Threat (Includes Transcript
Of Speech)
• Israeli Study: Regular Cell Phone Use Increases Tumor Risk
• Quest To Make Cattle Fart Like Kangaroos
• Trouble In Local Government Investment Pools
• CIA Destroyed Videos Showing Interrogations
• Men: Hidden Victims of Domestic Violence
• Researchers Use New Stem Cell Method To Treat Mice
• The Healing Power Of Moonbeams?
• Top 10 Abusers Of Tribal Peoples' Rights
• Ken Wilber On 'Guru Yoga' In Modern Times
• Human Evolution Is Speeding Up
• World's Leading Scientists Issue Urgent Declaration
• The Story Of Stuff
• Toyota's New Robot Can Play The Violin, Help Elderly
• Romney's 'Faith In America' Speech
• NHNE
Music Video & Holiday Booster Shot
• Reverend Billy On Nightline
• The Dorothy Izatt Phenomenon (DVD)
• Ions Opens Archive For 21 Days
• Ken
Wilber Discusses His "Leading Edge"
• Huckabee Bristles At Creationism Query
• Ex-Italian President: Intel Agencies Know 9/11 An Inside
Job
• Obama Seeks Consumer Credit Guards
• Catholic Coloring Book Warns U.S. Kids Of Pedophile Priests
• Honey May Relieve Children’s Cough
• U.S. Seeks Alliance With China & India To Block Climate
Protection
• Some Christian Pastors Embrace Scientology
• Romney Explains Reasons For Mormon Faith Speech
• Air Car To Call Melbourne Home
• Young Chimp Beats College Students
• PureGreenCars
• Footprints Seen Around Mt. Everest Stoke Yeti Mystery
• Video
Describes Hijacked Straw Polls & Personal
Intimidation
• Nonstop Theft & Bribery Are Staggering Iraq
• Bill Moyers: The Secret Government
• Durham May Face Water Crisis First
• The Secret Rules Of Sex: The Strange World Of Animal Passions
• A Molecular Map For Aging In Mice
• Followup: Fortune Forum Summit 2007
• Skin Ageing 'Reversed' In Mice
• The Longevity Pill?
• Nightline On Lucid Dreams
• Energy Breakthrough To Be Introduced To Rich & Famous
• Prostitute Auctions Sex For Charity
• World Faces 'Cyber Cold War' Threat
• Study Says 2002 Drought Worsened Carbon Buildup
• Hurricane Predictions Miss The Mark
• Documentary: 'Everest: A Climb for Peace'
• Hidden Dangers In Visiting Porn Sites
• Fraud, Intimidation & Bribery As Putin Prepares For
Victory
• Latest Data On Melting Ice Caps
• Biden: Impeachment If Bush Bombs Iran
• Kucinich: 'A Dialogue For Democracy' Forum
• Loose
Weight By Standing & "Puttering"
• Supermouse Bred That Can't Get Cancer
• Breakthrough Map Of Antarctica Lays Ground For New Discoveries
• Parasomnias: The Science Of Unsound Sleep
• Tape Shows How Physicist Predicted Parallel Worlds
• Google Expands Into Alternative Energy
............
NHNE
Community Videos
Here's
a quick list of recent videos posted on NHNE's
Community Website. To watch all of these videos, go
here.
•
Thank God For Evolution
• Holiday Weight Loss Secrets With Alli Medication
• Lion Hugs Woman Who Saved Him
• Pedal-Car Gets Pulled Over By Toronto Cops
• Alex Jones Interviews Aaron Russo
• Skidboot, "The
Smartest Dog In The World"
• The Secret Language Of Babies
• Al Gore Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech
• NHNE
Music Video: "Go Tell The Wind"
• Ken Wilber On Using Pharmaceuticals
• Ken
Wilber On "Guru Yoga" In Modern
Times
• Ken
Wilber Discusses His "Leading
Edge"
• Challenge Day
• The REAL Reasons You Want to Avoid Genetically Modified
Foods
• Carl Sagan "We Are One Planet"
• Video Describes Hijacked Straw Polls & Personal
Intimidation
• The Secret Government
............
Featured
Article
PASTOR'S CHALLENGE SHOCKS CONGREGATION
By Helen O'Neill
Associated Press
December 20, 2007
Original Link
CHAGRIN FALLS, OHIO - The Rev. Hamilton Coe Throckmorton
shivered with anticipation as he gazed at the loot - wads
of $50 bills piled high beside boxes of crayons in a Sunday
school classroom.
Cautiously, he locked the door. Then he started counting.
It was a balmy Friday evening in September. From several
floors below faint melodies drifted up - the choir practicing
for Sunday service.
Throckmorton was oblivious. For hours, perched awkwardly
on child-sized wooden stools surrounded by biblical murals
and children's drawings, the pastor and a handful of coconspirators
concentrated on the count.
Forty-thousand dollars. Throckmorton smiled in satisfaction
as he stashed the money in a safe.
That Sunday, the 52-year-old minister donned his creamy
white robes, swept to the pulpit and delivered one of the
most extraordinary sermons of his life.
First he read from the Gospel of Matthew.
"And unto one he gave five talents, to another two,
and to another one; to every man according to his ability."
Then he explained the parable of the talents, which tells
of the rich master who entrusts three servants with a sum
of money - "talents" - and instructs them to go
forth and do good. The master lavishes praise on the two
servants who double their money. But he casts into the wilderness
the one so afraid to take a risk that he buries his share.
Throckmorton spends up to 20 hours working on his weekly
homily, and his clear diction, contemplative message and
ringing voice command the church. Gazing down from the pulpit
that Sunday, Throckmorton dropped his bombshell.
Like the master, he would entrust each adult with a sum
of money - in this case, $50. Church members had seven weeks
to find ways to double their money, the proceeds to go toward
church missions.
"Live the parable of the talents!" Throckmorton
exhorted, as assistants handed out hundreds of red envelops
stuffed with crisp $50 bills and stunned church members did
quick mental calculations, wondering where all the money
had come from. There are about 1,700 in the congregation,
though not everyone attends each week.
The cash, Throckmorton explained, was loaned by several
anonymous donors.
In her regular pew at the back of the church, where she
has listened to sermons for 40 years, 73-year-old Barbara
Gates gasped. What kind of kooky nonsense is this, she thought.
"Sheer madness," sniffed retired accountant Wayne
Albers, 85, to his wife, Marnie, who hushed him as he whispered
loudly. "Why can't the church just collect money the
old-fashioned way?"
In a center pew, Ann Nagy's eyes moistened as she considered
her ailing, beloved father, his suffering, and the song she
had written to comfort him near death. She nudged her husband
Scott. "Give me your $50," she whispered. Nagy
knew exactly what she would do.
Throckmorton wrapped up his two morning services by saying
that children would get $10. And he assured the congregation
that anyone who didn't feel comfortable could simply return
the money. No consignment to outer darkness for those who
didn't participate.
Throckmorton is warm and engaging and approachable, as comfortable
talking about the Cleveland Indians baseball team as he is
discussing scripture. At the Federated Church, he is known
simply as Hamilton.
But as church members spilled into the late summer sunshine
that morning to ponder their skills and their souls, there
were many who thought: Hamilton is really pushing us this
time.
"There was definitely this tension, this pressure to
live up to something," said Hal Maskiell, a 62-year-old
retired Navy pilot who spent days trying to figure out how
to meet the challenge.
Maskiell's passion is flying a four-seater Cessna 172 Skyhawk
over the Cuyahoga County hills. He decided to use his $50
to rent air time from Portage County airport and charge $30
for half-hour rides. Church members eagerly signed up. Maskiell
was thrilled to get hours of flying time, and he raised $700.
His girlfriend, Kathy Marous, 55, was far less confident.
What talents do I have, she thought dejectedly. She was tempted
to give the money back.
And then Marous found an old family recipe for tomato soup,
one she hadn't made in 19 years. She remembered how much
she had enjoyed the chopping and the cooking and the canning
and the smells. With Hal's encouragement Marous dug out her
pots. She bought three pecks of tomatoes. Suddenly she was
chopping and cooking and canning again. At $5 a jar, she
made $180.
"I just never imagined people would pay money for the
things I made," Marous exclaimed.
Others felt the same way. Barbara Gates raised $450 crafting
pendants from beads and sea glass - pieces she had casually
made for her grandchildren over the years. Kathie Biggin
created fanciful little red-nosed Rudolph pins and sold them
for $2.50. Twelve-year-old Amanda Horner pooled her money
with friends, stocked up at JoAnn's fabric store, and made
dozens of colorful fleece baby blankets, which were purchased
by church members and then donated to a local hospital.
And 87-year-old Bob Burrows rediscovered old carpentry skills
and began selling wooden bird-feeders.
But it wasn't the money; everyone said so. It was something
else, something far less tangible but yet so very real. For
seven weeks an almost magical sense of excitement and energy
and camaraderie infused the elegant red-brick church on Bell
Street, spilling over into homes and hearts as the parable
of the talents came alive.
In her sun-filled studio on Strawberry Lane, Shirley Culbertson
felt it - a joyful sense of purpose that she had rarely experienced
since her husband passed two years ago. Culbertson, 81, is
a gifted painter and watercolors fill her house. But she
discovered another talent during this time - knitting whimsical
eight-inch stuffed dolls with button noses and floppy hats.
She raised $90.
Zooming down country roads clinging to the back of a leather-clad
biker, Florence Cross felt it too. For the challenge, Barry
Biggin had parked his 2006 Harley Davidson Road King outside
the church, offering 12-mile rides for $30. Cross was the
first to sign up. Never mind that she is in her mid-80s,
had never been on a bike, or that her husband of 60 years
had to hoist her up.
"Oh, it was such a thrill!" said Cross, her face
glowing at the memory. Her friends now call her "Harley
Girl."
Martine Scheuermann lived the parable in her Elm Street
kitchen, transforming it into an "applesauce factory" for
several weeks. The 49-year-old human resources director would
rise at 6 a.m. on Sundays in order to have warm batches ready
for sampling at church services.
In his origami-filled bedroom on Bradley Street, Paul Cantlay
lived the parable too. Surrounded by sheets of colored construction
paper, the 9-year-old crafted paper dragons and stars and
sailboats. He set up an origami stand at the end of his street,
charged 50 cents to $5 depending on the piece, and raised
$68.
Talents began multiplying at such a rate that the church
held a bazaar after services on two consecutive Sundays for
people to display - and sell - their wares.
The pretty little village on the Chagrin River falls had
never seen anything quite like it. Everyone seemed to be
talking about the talent challenge: over the clatter of coffee
cups at Dink's restaurant, at the Fireside bookshop on the
green, sipping drinks at the Gamekeeper's Taverne. Even members
of other churches weighed in: Have you heard what's happening
at Federated?
"Anyone can open their wallet and give cash," Kris
Tesar said. "This was just an extraordinary process
of exploration and discovery and of challenging ourselves.
It became bigger than any one of us or than any individual
talent."
Tesar, a 58-year-old retired nurse, discovered her talent
in buckets of flip-flops for sale at Old Navy. She stocked
up on yarn and beads and made dozens of funky, fluffy decorative
footwear that were a huge hit with teens. Tesar raised $550
for the church, is still taking orders and is thinking of
starting a business. Now even her children call her the "flip-flop
lady."
People also got to know the "hen lady" - Gabrielle
Quintin, who took to raising chickens on a whim 23 years
ago when she moved into a 180-year-old house with a barn.
Her "ladies," as Quintin calls her backyard flock,
provide a welcome distraction from her nursing job in a cancer
center. Quintin decided to put her brood to work for the
church. For $10 church members could "hire-a-hen" and
get three dozen fresh eggs complete with a photograph of
the "lady" who laid them.
"It wasn't exactly spiritual, but I had a lot of fun," said
Quintin, whose husband, Mike, made glass birdfeeders. "And
it was just this great way of bringing everyone together
and connecting with the church."
Kathy Wellman quilted. Mary Hobbs knit shawls and penciled
portraits. Cathy Hatfield auctioned a ride in her hot-air
balloon. Norma and Trent Bobbitt pooled their money with
another church member to hire a harpist from the Cleveland
orchestra and host an elegant evening dinner party. Folks
paid $50 each to attend and the Bobbitts made over $1,200.
And physician Peter Yang took over shifts from other doctors
in his partnership (he used his $50 for gas to get to the
hospital) and raised $3,000.
The deadline to return the money was Sunday, Oct. 28. Nervously,
some church council members suggested posting plain clothes
security guards at services that day. But Throckmorton would
have none of it. He insisted that the spirit of the challenge,
which had already inspired so much goodwill, would carry
them safely through. And it did.
Organ music filled the church as people silently filed down
the aisle, dropped their proceeds into baskets, and offered
testimonials about what living the parable had meant to them.
Throckmorton thanked everyone for their generosity. Then
he started counting.
A week later he delivered the joyful news: They had more
than doubled the amount distributed.
The initial take was $38,195 over the loan, but the amount
is still growing. Some people didn't make the deadline, or
extended it in order to finish their projects.
The final sum will be divided equally between three charities:
One-third will go to a school library in South Africa where
the church is involved in an AIDS mission; one-third will
go to micro-loan organizations that provide seed money for
small businesses in developing countries; one-third will
help the Interfaith Hospitality Network in Cleveland, specifically
programs for homeless women.
Throckmorton is asked all the time if the talent challenge
will become an annual event, but he is doubtful. It was a
special time and a special idea, he says, and he is not sure
it could be re-created or relived.
Yet in a very real sense, it lives on. Church members who
never knew each other have become friends. And orders for
applesauce, flip-flops and Rudolph pins are still rolling
in for Christmas.
There are other, more poignant reminders. Like Ann Nagy's
haunting tribute to her father, who died of brain cancer
on Oct. 11.
Nagy, 44, has always been a singer with a clear lovely voice.
It wasn't until her father grew ill and moved into a hospice
that she started writing songs. She found solace in the music
and a way of communicating that was sometimes easier than
spoken words.
At hospice, patients are taught five simple truths to tell
their loved ones before they die: I'll miss you. I love you.
I forgive you. I'm sorry. Goodbye.
Borrowing from that theme, Nagy wrote a farewell song for
her Dad. She pooled her $50 talent money with her husband's
share and cut a CD to sell to church members. Ironically
it was finished just an hour before her father passed, on
Oct. 11. Nagy stood by his bed and sang it for him anyway.
On Nov. 11 - her father's 72nd birthday - Throckmorton preached
a sermon about dying. He invited Nagy to the altar. There,
accompanied by a cellist and a pianist she sang "Before
You Go."
Her voice soared. The congregation wept. The parable of
the talents had never seemed so alive.
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For NHNE's full coverage,
including complete articles, as soon as they are published,
source links, reference materials, and background information
from NHNE's editor and publisher, David Sunfellow, click
here. To subscribe to NHNE's News Brief, click
here.
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