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Specs of Glitter - The Rev. Melanie W. J. Slane

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Manage episode 375479459 series 1533950
Content provided by Episcopal Church of the Redeemer and The Episcopal Church of the Redeemer. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Episcopal Church of the Redeemer and The Episcopal Church of the Redeemer or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
This week, my boys collectively convened at the kitchen table to discuss a lesson that they had both had in their first and third grade classes. And my ears perked up as I heard little Arlo say, And that's how the world was made. My parental anxieties leapt from my skin. We do live in Ohio, after all. What are you guys talking about in here? Oh, we're just talking about how the world was made. Intrigued, I pleaded, tell me more. Well, our teacher took a great big balloon and she shook it up and she passed it around and we all got to hold it and squish it and then she took it back and she popped it and glitter went flying everywhere. And all the particles and atoms and stuff, well they're all over our classroom. And we'll be finding glitter for years. Did I mention I love school? Because they play with glitter there and not at my house. I love that my children get to wonder and explore and expand their minds, their world views in this diverse environment of thought and experience. I really do love that the two creation narratives we find in the book of Genesis are not the only way that they will understand God's marvelous work in making this world. I love that science and faith are not mutually exclusive in their minds. And I love that they get to see glitter everywhere. Now, I don't know exactly what the opposite of glitter is, but I think I saw it this week, too.
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100 episodes

Artwork
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Manage episode 375479459 series 1533950
Content provided by Episcopal Church of the Redeemer and The Episcopal Church of the Redeemer. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Episcopal Church of the Redeemer and The Episcopal Church of the Redeemer or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
This week, my boys collectively convened at the kitchen table to discuss a lesson that they had both had in their first and third grade classes. And my ears perked up as I heard little Arlo say, And that's how the world was made. My parental anxieties leapt from my skin. We do live in Ohio, after all. What are you guys talking about in here? Oh, we're just talking about how the world was made. Intrigued, I pleaded, tell me more. Well, our teacher took a great big balloon and she shook it up and she passed it around and we all got to hold it and squish it and then she took it back and she popped it and glitter went flying everywhere. And all the particles and atoms and stuff, well they're all over our classroom. And we'll be finding glitter for years. Did I mention I love school? Because they play with glitter there and not at my house. I love that my children get to wonder and explore and expand their minds, their world views in this diverse environment of thought and experience. I really do love that the two creation narratives we find in the book of Genesis are not the only way that they will understand God's marvelous work in making this world. I love that science and faith are not mutually exclusive in their minds. And I love that they get to see glitter everywhere. Now, I don't know exactly what the opposite of glitter is, but I think I saw it this week, too.
  continue reading

100 episodes

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