The Terribly Tiny God of MAGA Christians

From John Pavlovitz:

I feel sorry for professed Christians who support this President.

They have a profound and fundamental spiritual problem: their God is too small.

They passionately worship a deity made in their own image: white, American, Republican, male—and perpetually terrified of just about everything: Muslims, immigrants, gay children, Special Counsel reports, mandalas, Harry Potter, Starbuck holiday cups, yoga, wind turbines, Science—everything.

Their God is so laughably minuscule, so fully neutered of power, so completely devoid of functioning vertebrae that "He" cannot protect them from the encroaching monsters they are certain lurk around every corner to overwhelm them.

MAGA Christians sure put up a brave face, I'll give them that. They shower this God with effusive praise on Sunday mornings, they sing with reckless abandon in church services about Him, they brazenly pump out their chests on social media regarding His infinite wisdom, they defiantly declare this God's staggering might at every opportunity—but their lives tell the truth: They believe He is impotent and scared and ineffectual. You can tell this because they insist on doing all the things that a God-sized God would simply do as part of the gig.

They need to be armed to the teeth at all times because they don't really believe God will come through to defend them in a pinch—and will always be outgunned.

They want to change gay couples and transgender teenagers themselves, because they don't trust God to work within people as He desires. (Apparently God keeps making LGBTQ people, which really pisses them off.)

They want to stockpile and horde wealth, health insurance, and opportunity—because this is a zero sum game; because the God they claim turned water into wine, and fed thousands with a few fish and some leftover bread—can't make enough for everyone.

They are obsessed with building a wall and defending a border and turning way refugees—because their God isn't generous or smart or creative enough to help them figure out how to welcome and care for everyone who requires it.

They want no other religious traditions to have a voice, because their insecure and terribly tiny God is mortally threatened by such things.

MAGA Christians' daily existence testifies that their God is a microscopic, myopic coward, who has appointed them to morally police a world He cannot handle or is not equipped to direct and renovate. That's pretty sad.

In short, their God isn't a God worth believing in or worshiping—which is why they have to play God while they're alive. It's why they are furrowed-browed and white-nuckling their journey here—not content to let Jesus take the wheel for fear he'd drive them outside their gated community and into the hood and ask them to get out and care for the people they're so used to condemning.

If you're going to have a God, it may as well be right-sized. The world deserves this.

People deserve a God who is bigger than Franklin Graham's God and Mike Pence's God and Sarah Huckabee's God. Their God is small and terrified—and it suspicioulsy resembles them.

People deserve a God who so loves the world, not a God who believes in America First; whose creation begin without divides and borders and walls, because there is only a single, interdependent community.

People deserve a God who touched the leper and healed the sick and fed the starving and parted the seas and raised the dead—not a quivering idol who drafts bathroom bills and social media crusades against migrant families.

People deserve a God who is neither white nor male nor cisgender-heterosexual, nor Republican—because any other God isn't big enough to bear the title or merit any reverence.

MAGA Christians believe in God earnestly, pray to God passionately, serve God with unflinching fervor. The problem is their God is too small, and as long as they are oriented toward such a tiny, useless deity—they will continue to be compelled to do for God what they believe God should be doing, but can't or won't.

I feel sorry for them and for the world that has to be subjected to their pocket-sized theology when there is an expansive space waiting.

I hope and pray that these people soon find a God who is big enough so that they stop living so small.

For their sake—and for ours.

Not Feeling Very Positive These Days

I keep thinking that good, rational people are going to exert their control as the responsible adults in the room and wrest control of our country back from the evil, psychotic, racist, child-monsters currently occupying the echelons of government. But with each passing day and each thumbing-of-their-noses to the Rule of Law, I'm coming to the sad, sackcloth-rending realization that this is never going to happen. We are witnesses to the decline and fall of the United States of America—and truth be told, probably all of western civilization. "All this has happened before and will happen again."

We have a demonstrably insane man occupying the White House, one tiny hand hovering over the big red civilization reset button, while methodically dismantling everything this country has built over the past 240 years with the other. What surprises me the most is the rapidity with which this destruction has been allowed to occur.

I had hopes that the newly elected Democratic Congress—hobbled as they are by having to deal with a solidly Republican Senate—would effect at least some change; that they would be able to at least lightly apply the brakes to this out of control administration and yet, except for a very few notable exceptions, all they're doing is politely asking that the Orange Menace stop steamrolling over anything and everything that made this country the envy of the world for so long.

Let's face it: the Russian Wig Stand is old. If he wasn't in such close proximity to the nuclear football I'd rest a little easier knowing that the vast majority of us would outlive him and survive long enough to start putting the pieces back together of what used to be our country. But I'm not so sure any more.

The 70% of the country who are not racist and certifiably insane are counting on the hope that 2020 will take care of the profound mistake that was made in 2016. I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but I think they're putting way too much faith in the belief that there will be an election next year. Trump is a sociopath, a malignant narcissist. Even if there isn't some manufactured crisis where he can issue an Executive Order to suspend elections, do you honesly think he'll voluntarily give up the Presidency even if he loses? And considering the Russians—or whoever is responsible for him occupying that office in the first place—have had four additional years to hone their psyop and hacking skills, who's to say he won't "win" again, no matter who actually receives the greatest number of votes?

The only thing that gives me the tiniest glimmer of hope is the knowledge that no dictator—or wannabe dictator—ever holds onto power forever. Even the mythic AntiChrist was prophesied to maintain control for only a few short years, so it's guaranteed that both Trump and his puppet master will end up worm food. That doesn't mean they can't wreak havoc; they can and will, but even that will come to an end.

And while the Bloviating Orange Anus is trying his best to fill every position of government with people as vile as he is, damn few of them actually last in those positions. Who knew working for the monster could be so universally disagreeable?

Be thankful it is. And be thankful the vast majority of them are incompetent fools. While things are bad and have the potential for getting much worse, imagine how truly awful it would be if Trump or his minions were actually competent at what they did?

That's not to say that a great deal of damage cannot be wrought by incompetency and enabled by the other wholly owned subsidiaries of the Russian government and those they have enough dirt on to maintain control of (I'm looking at you, Mitch McConnell and you, Miss Lindseybelle Graham).

If we are indeed more than just flesh and blood, if we are—to paraphrase Yoda's famous admonition—"luminous beings, not this crude matter," then it's a little easier to step outside this madness and simply embrace the philosophy that we all incarnated in this place and time to witness humanity vomit up thousands of generations worth of hate and ultimately self-immolate. And with more stars in the heavens than gains of sand on all the beaches of earth, it's not like there aren't other worlds and other civilizations we can't move on to when we're done here—hopefully not repeating the same mistakes me made in this here and now.

I'm a little too young to be a part of the generation of school children who grew up with "duck and cover." I was a toddler during the Cuban Missile Crisis, but thanks to popular culture, the fear of nuclear annihilation remains firmly planted in my consciousness, although it wasn't until November 2016—suspecting Trump to be completely batshit insane even then—that worries of dying in an atomic conflagration returned to the forefront of my awareness.

When I was in high school, I had a nightmare that remains with me to this day. I was standing on the front porch of a house I'd never lived in, talking with my mother. The subject of the end of the world (and the Second Coming of Christ—I was pretty traditionally religious in those days) came up. And almost the moment we started talking about it an incredible boom was heard and the sky cracked. I've thought about that for years, and have been keenly aware to not move anywhere that had the type of front porch present in my dream…until we moved into this place. While Mom is now gone ten years, I am living in a house with a front porch similar to that dream, and while the view wasn't as expansive (there's a huge tree in the yard not an open field across the street as was in the dream), there are now lots of women who could easily stand in metaphorically as a mother-figure in my life that I could find myself talking to out there.  I'm now convinced the sky didn't actually crack; it was just the last thing I saw before dying: the pattern of ocular blood vessels seared into my retinas as a nuclear bomb detonated nearby.

I warned you I wasn't feeling very positive…

This Strikes Very Close to Home

10 Ways Administration Can Help Keep Teachers Happy

Teachers simply want to feel seen and supported by their administration. But how can administration do that? What steps can they actively take to truly nurture their faculty? Below are ten ways that administration can keep teachers happy.

1. Be present and available.

We love it when you leave your door open so we can pop on in if a problem arises. Teachers understand that principals have their plates full, but we do too. We love to have your undivided attention if we need to speak to you for a hot second.

2. Listen to your faculty and their feedback.

We are on the front lines every day and we see EVERYTHING. We don't bring up problems for no reason. We bring up problems so we can find solutions. We love to feel like part of a team by giving feedback and making our programs/school better.

3. Give teachers the gift of time.

You don't have to schedule meetings every free second we get. Please trust us as professionals to do school-related things during unscheduled amounts of time. You can rest assured that we are using that time to collaborate, grade, and plan.

4. Support teachers and their ever-evolving needs (whatever that may be).

If you see a teacher having an incredibly rough day, offer to step in and watch their class. If a teacher tells you he or she needs you to take on an incredibly aggressive parent, step in, no questions asked.

5. Be empathetic to both personal and professional woes.

It's important that administration view their faculty as more than just the worker bees they are at school. We love our job, but we also love our families and home lives. A simple "How are you doing?" during a tough personal time or a "How was Ethan's soccer game?" will let us know that you care about our families and our well-being outside of just being a teacher.

6. Encourage growth for all teachers (newbies and veterans alike).

Professional growth looks a lot different in education than in other careers. There is not much room for "climbing the ladder" – you are either a teacher or you make the jump into administration. Administration should do their best to meet teachers where they are at. Got several new teachers? Don't just throw them in the deep end! They will need lots of guidance and reassurance within the first couple of years. Have a veteran teacher? Make them a mentor teacher or carve out a leadership position that aligns best with their strengths. We all want to grow in this career. We'd love for administration to help in any way they can!

7. Lend a hand when need be.

If we are setting up for an event or if you see someone need help, chip in! We appreciate administration who like to get their hands dirty every once in a while.

8. Don't pile on unnecessary work (especially at the end of the year).

"Admin has decided that they need a curriculum map from scratch for every discipline, minimum of six pages in ten-point font by tomorrow". We all have enough paperwork and grading to do besides, you know, teaching all day. Adding on data-accumulation assignments is just a giant pain in our butts.

9. Know when to intervene with parents.

We are happy to go back and forth with an irate parent for a few emails, but we have lots of other students to attend to. If a problem escalates and we reach out to you for some assistance, please know that we really need your help. We wouldn't ask if we didn't think your experience in dealing with situations like this was necessary.

10. Provide professional development opportunities that are useful.

A teacher's time is precious. Of course, we understand the need for improving ourselves and continuing to learn new ways to become better educators. But if we're going to spend any time outside of our very busy schedules, it needs to be spent efficiently and be effective. Don't organize ice-breakers and team-building activities just to fill the time slot. We should be taking advantage of every precious second of every precious minute we get together to truly improve ourselves. Otherwise, leave us the time for self-care so we don't burn out.

Source.

Monday

But at least it's a short week for me. I'm taking Friday off. We splurged on hiring professionals to do some work in the front yard and I need to be here to make sure it's done as we'd discussed (taking the hedges down 12", not down to 12" as an example).

That Was Unexpected (Obviously NSFW)



I believe Ben's reaction when seeing this scene in Now Apocalypse was, "Wow!"

My reaction was the same, immediately followed by, "STARZ allowed this?!"

It was as much of a shock as the first time I saw fully exposed breasts on cable (Galaxina,  sometime in 1981).

Shower Thoughts

If we changed the word "sunburn" to "radiation exposure" and "tan" to "radiation damage," people would probably take them a lot more seriously.

In the late 80s, I spent years on the San Francisco beaches wearing at most SPF4 if I bothered with anything at all. It's a wonder my skin is in as good a shape as it is and people regularly peg me at 10 years younger than I actually am.

Wut?!?

I will be the first to admit that over the years I've lost track of the Marvel cinematic universe, but that was my reaction after finally seeing Infinity War on HBO last week.

I've never read a single comic, and of the nineteen (!) films released so far (don't worry – there are at least a half dozen more in the pipeline), I've seen only 8—and even fewer in an actual theater. It's not that I don't enjoy them; I'm just not a big enough fan to justify putting the time or effort into the following the franchise.

While I understand Infinity War left wet spots in fanboy panties, it left me scratching my head—maybe because I'm not really up to speed on what's been happening? Keeping that in mind, my take away was that it seemed like little more an excuse to bring pretty much all of the characters together in a single film and then kill half of them off—for what purpose? (And quite frankly, I found bringing the humorous Guardians of the Galaxy aesthetic into the much more serious environment of the rest of the Marvelverse was more than a bit incongruous.)

Just call me a heretic and burn me at the stake.

And questions…so. many. questions!

Did Thanos' magic gauntlet wipe out half of all life everywhere or was it just half of sentient species? Is half the biosphere of every planet everywhere now just gone? Instead of restoring balance (as was his intent?), if that's the case isn't that likely to make an even bigger mess of things?

Just askin'

That being said, of course now I have to see Endgame just to see how all this is rectified—because you know all those superheroes aren't just gonna stay dead. Keeping in mind my obviously limited knowledge of the franchise, I predict a deus ex machina. Or time travel. Or magic. Or all of the above. Maybe tacos.

(Feel free to post spoilers and save me $15 that might be better spent on tacos.)