Posted elsewhere on the web, but sent to me today by my Mom and I  liked it. Your character and your actions stand out more than anything.
Sermon    Walking
In 1953 reporters gathered at a Chicago railway  station waiting to meet the   1952 Nobel Peace Prize winner.
He was a big man, well over six feet tall, with bushy hair and a  large   mustache.
Reporters were excited to see him and expressed what an honor it  was to meet   him. Cameras were flashing, compliments were being  expressed when, looking   beyond the adulation, the visitor saw an  elderly black woman struggling to   carry her two large suitcases.
"Excuse me," he said as he went to the aid of this woman. Picking    up her cases, he escorted her to a bus and then apologized to the  reporters   for keeping them waiting.
The man was Dr. Albert Schweitzer, the famous missionary-doctor  who had   invested his life helping poor and sick people in Africa.
A member of the reception committee remarked to one of the  reporters,   "That's the first time I ever saw a sermon walking." The  measure of   any man or woman is not their name, nor their fame, nor  what they say, but   what they do.
Thursday, December 30, 2010
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