Whether it’s about a blog post, a problem with the website, or just a general inquiry, I’d love to hear it. This is a side thing for me, and life has its demands. I usually do get back within a few days, and I will definitely try. Sometimes things fall through the cracks (if you have more than two emails and over 40, you get it). Please, don’t hesitate to keep bugging me. I ask for serious and honest submissions with the basic relevant information I might need to respond adequately. Send your random and mundane: What’s the worst thing that could happen?
If you’re submitting a guest post, please head over to the Guest Post page.
Email: paule@drunkpastor.com
Location: Missoula, MT
Looking for help with spiritual deconstructing (or reconstructing), getting over ego within leadership, or substance disorders?
Or maybe you’re requesting a written piece, collaboration, or speaking?
Still feel free to reach out about anything like that, and I’ll respond. Know also that I am offering such services, from ongoing spiritual coaching and consulting to curriculum development and speaking.
The Services page needs a massive update, so stay tuned, but you can explore what I was thinking about over a year ago here:
Some Random Posts
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Agapology: The Theological Absence of Love
Over a decade ago, while serving as a youth pastor in Eastern Montana, I read Greg Boyd’s The Myth of A Christian Nation. Boyd pointed out a striking irony: despite…
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Trying Writing Right This Time
What’s changed is me, finally. I’m not done yet, but there’s been an embarrassing amount of issues, from minor to deep hidden, that just aren’t the same anymore. When I finally learn something, I tend to learn it. It’s all or nothing with me often. The writing was held back before by too many insecurities and dysfunctions. I am ready for something different. It’s arrived, and now I feel like I’ve bitten off more than I can chew.
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A Widow’s Two Mites on Perspective & End Times
We may be tempted to embellish the story or to assume we know how it ends. Neither Mark nor Luke lets us have the pleasure. Once Jesus talks about her, she doesn’t show up again. Jesus doesn’t say that her rent will be provided, will have food the next day, or that her unspoken health condition will be healed. There is no promise. A poor widow, in that time and society, gave the last coins she had and left with no answers.
