As I am writing this week, there are a few things I wanted to talk about. However, first, this week is the final week before Spring break, which means next week is Holy Week as well. This is a good thing, as it shows that the school year is starting to wrap up soon and we are in that season where things are going to accelerate somewhat going forward. However, I am feeling it too, as the toxic political environment of Baltimore is visibly draining me, and I am not sure what is going to happen as far as new opportunities - hopefully God loves me enough to have some mercy to open other doors soon, because I am at this point where I have to get the hell out of this place. It sort of came to a head yesterday with my students in one class, who were extremely disruptive - I had to kick one of them out of class, and the rest found themselves on the receiving end of a brutal tongue-lashing about their futures. Essentially, I told them that if they persisted in that type of conduct, no college would have them, no job will hire them, and they will end up wrapped in a blanket taking shelter under the Gay Street bridge a few blocks north of here. If you are not familiar with Baltimore, North Gay Street has a weird intersection that looks like a spiderweb, and traversing it is a light rail/train track that creates a bridge over the intersection. At that intersection, almost every morning, there are heaps of matter laying there which essentially are sleeping homeless people. Some days there is maybe one out there, but on others I have witnessed as many as 10. It encapsulates the general condition of this city - it has been governed for generations now by a corrupt mayor and city council - mostly Democrats, go figure! - who seem to have the goal of enriching their bank accounts rather than revitalizing the city. It is also the reason why you can see so many abandoned and boarded-up rowhouses, garbage strewn all over the place, and there is an epidemic of porch piracy in many neighborhoods. My goal at this point is to get out of here as soon as possible, and I plan to do so by looking into other opportunities for work. I have started that process already, and am just waiting for the right opportunity to bite. Please keep me in your prayers for this.
Now, let's talk about things at work. I was a bit disturbed yesterday by our campus minister at school here - a frumpy, unkempt, obese man who looks like a stereotypical sex offender (although to his credit that is not one of his vices) and is indoctrinated totally with heretical "liberation theology." The man has spent some time in El Salvador, where he met his wife supposedly, and he has crafted a narrative which to one who doesn't know better sounds so compelling yet is so full of BS that I can smell it a mile away. Any rate, yesterday, he sponsored an anti-ICE rally here at the school, and I personally chose not to attend it because I could not do so in good conscience. To recap this issue from last week, it has two basic flaws. For one, ICE is not like a predatory hawk ready to swoop down on the first person who says "buenos dias," and by perpetuating that narrative, this campus minister is actually trying to stoke unrest in the student community here. Secondly, because ICE does not operate like that, this campus minister basically just painted a huge bulls-eye on the backs of many students and their families because he will be drawing attention to them now. That is dangerous, irresponsible, and also immoral. As was my premise last week, if this ding-dong who calls himself a campus minister really wanted to help these students and their families, what he would be doing instead is trying to help them get their papers in order so they can be legal. Also, if he was more consistent - I never heard a peep out of this man about Cuban refugees, or what my Assyrian and Armenian friends experienced at the hands of ISIS - he would also be advocating for homeless citizens (like the aforementioned people who camp out under the Gay Street Bridge every night) who need attention too, and he would be seeking to clean up this city a little. But, he is a leftist, and leftists are noted for one thing - gross inconsistency because they are fundamentally stupid (as moderate Muslim cleric Muhammad Tawhidi points out many times). Therefore, don't expect people like this to be the saviors of civilization - they would quickly destroy it in the name of the false "justice" they preach. Anyway, enough about this clown, as I am feeling nauseous just talking about him and I can see his office just outside mine here at the school anyway. I have a few other things to discuss I wanted to get into.
As rough as this school year is getting for me, I still have a number of students I am genuinely fond of, and they make this job worth it. One of them, a short Black girl who for her protection we'll call Tammy here, has been fun to have in class. She is extremely intelligent, and she has a sense of humor that is refreshing some days. A couple of days ago, she really made me smile and chuckle when in class she brought up this one question - if someone is in hell and they have excessive gas, will they explode if they fart? After almost losing my composure laughing at the hilarity of that question, my response to her was "well, I don't plan on going there to find out." This story is now part of my personal legend, and I probably will be recounting it to friends for years to come. It is moments like that though that remind me that this is not just another job, but is a vocation. And, while I desperately want to get out of here, I will in all honesty miss many of these kids when I do go, because some of them have been real joys to have in class.
And, that leads me into the other big piece of news for the week. I have begun a bucket list project I have been waiting a while to get started, and that is turning my 38-lesson Genesis study into a book. While it has been over a decade since I last put that together, I feel it is a good resource that many people could benefit from. However, the challenge is incorporating a lot of new information into it as well as I revise it and get it ready to go to press, and that will take some time. I am anticipating about two months to make the revisions and do the editing and formatting, and then it can be published. I then want to put into print two other books I have been compiling, one being of my old sermons and the other my long-awaited cookbook. Once I get those in print, then my next writing project will be from the other direction - a more eschatological book that deals with my work with Assyrians, Armenians, Maronites, and others over the decades. I have to acquire a lot of books I lost to make that happen again, and I am starting that process now as well. This will be a project that will be somewhat different but is essential - it will combine some eschatology with things such as just-war theory, monarchism, the minorities of the Middle East, and also the growing Hebrew Catholic movement as well. I feel these are all connected, and that is why I want to get a book out there which deals with the topic from a very comprehensive view. I have friends who have published similar books - notably my good friend Stephen Missick, as well as Ron Susek and some others - but mine will be somewhat unique from those as I am doing this from a Catholic perspective rather than Evangelical Protestant. It is a way of getting the message across in a way that gets people's attention, and now that my formal schooling is completed and I have the doctorate I waited long to get, I can begin to focus more on writing projects like this. And, that means a new focus for blogging as well.
Over the years, I have made the point of putting into printed form every blog article I have written, as I want a set of complete volumes available for when I finally decide to close my blogs for good, which I want to do at my 60th year. I feel my writing is entering a new level at this phase, and it is time to make my various observations and insights into something more focused and organized. At the present time, counting my dissertation I have 5 books I have authored, and those have not been made mass-marketable yet - some I am frankly afraid to put on the market because the first time I did that I caught flak from people who wanted to tell me how to write my own material - not criticism, but actual threats and even condemnation of my work. I know criticism comes with the territory when you present your perspective out there, but in all honesty sometimes it is as if the "critic" who is attacking you doesn't just want to offer constructive advice, but they want to muscle you off the face of the earth because they want you to write their perspectives rather than your own. I have come up with a good way to handle idiots like that - if you don't like what I say, write your own damn book. I make it a point not to criticize other writers like that - I am mature enough to know I am not going to necessarily agree with every word they write, but at the same time I have the grace to understand that it is their perspective, and their hard work, that went into that endeavor and not mine. The most I will do in that case is maybe note some grammatical or cosmetic error I see, which in no way affects their content, and often they are grateful for me seeing it because in the course of editing hundreds of pages of script, it is easy to overlook something (I do it all the time in all honesty). Which is why I want to offer some advice for choosing editors and proofreaders if you are planning on writing a manuscript.
Editing and proofing a manuscript is crucial to writing, especially if publication is a goal. You want your work to be readable and organized, and therefore you go through it again and again. Some writers have reached out and gotten outside help for this, such as professional editors and proofreaders, and in doing so there are a few things to keep in mind. First, make sure you can trust the person who undertakes the task - you don't want someone plagiarizing or stealing your work. Secondly, choose wisely the person who you want to help edit your work, because you want an editor and not someone who wants to just rewrite everything because they don't like your perspective. A good editor is not evaluating your opinion or perspective, but rather the way you communicate it - they are there to suggest some improvements to the way it is written maybe, as a sentence may not be clear in what the author wants to communicate and an editor can be valuable to tighten it up a little. In that case, it makes you sound better, and I think anyone who has written a lot can appreciate that. Furthermore, grammatical rules change over time, and as an example, I recall that when I was writing papers in high school and even in my undergrad days, it was considered the rule to make two spaces between sentences. Now, it is one, and that is still a habit I am trying to work on is the spacing after a period. In all honesty, the one space rule does make it look better than the old two-space rule did. However, editors are not cheap, and if you go with a professional editor for your manuscript, make sure to do your homework, as you will be investing hundreds of dollars into their services if you decide to retain them. And, even after the editing, you still have to check over the published manuscript with alignment, etc. So, publishing a book is not easy, and it takes a lot of work overall.
At any rate, the Genesis book is in process now, and hopefully by mid-May I will have it up and going to the publisher. This discussion today was a bit longer than I anticipated, but overall I think it was also more practical too. Thanks for joining me, and will see you next time.