WE HAVE TWO LIBRARIES AT ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
C. Weber
Secretary
Come visit our libraries! There are many good books, video tapes, and audio tapes available.
St. Paul Lutheran Church -
Have you and your family been to our church libraries recently? Did you even know that we had two libraries at St. Paul Lutheran? Well, we do!
There is a wonderful Children’s Library on the lower level of the education wing of the church. There are many, many good books and videos that our children can check out to take home to read or watch. If you and your children have not visited this library, we encourage you to stop by and check it out. If you have used the library in the past, we encourage you to continue to do so. It has a lot to offer!
We also have an adult library, which is located in the upstairs hallway of the education wing of the church. There are many books available here for pleasure reading, but also many resource and educational books, magazines, audio tapes and video tapes available for you to take home. There is also a table and chairs in the adult library, so if you just wish to sit and read or research something, you can do that, also.
Both libraries are accessible at any time that the church is open (Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.; evenings when meetings are going on, and also on Sunday mornings). We hope you will stop in and check out what our libraries have to offer.
Judy Clausen recently submitted this “book report” of a book she read from our adult library. If you and/or your child have read a book from one of our libraries and would like to share a book report, please bring it to the church office and we will see that it gets published. Here is what Judy says about the book she read: “I recently finished reading a wonderful book. I found it very interesting and wanted to share it with others. The book is “Tuesdays with Morrie” by Mitch Albom. I am sure many of you have read it already. For me it was very touching and thought provoking about my life and dealing with others in my life. It is about an old man, a young man, and life’s greatest lesson. Teenager to adult could learn much from this book.”