@Zulu55 Sure. It stands to logic that those who teach but are not trained as teachers are somewhat at a loss as to best practices along with working in an ever-increasing climate of ranking and competition over meaningful learning.
1/25/2020 - Sprints @ Bristol Mt. #flickr https://t.co/F2sK8LCok4
Great shots here of Saturday's Sprint races at Bristol, courtesy of Steve Ransom Photography.
@XanderTheMeh You are coming across as excessively defensive and argumentative. I’m not interested in conversations like this because they go nowhere. Thanks for the pushback.
@XanderTheMeh Because you said it was a commonly used term - one that my Christian community never uses. But you are correct that it may be more inclusive… something that I hadn’t considered. By the way, when some1 disagrees with u, accusing them of bad faith doesn’t lend well 2 conversation
@XanderTheMeh I have no doubt that you can find instances of it being used somewhere, I just don’t think it is the best choice of terminology… at least from my perspective. However, as @tapley_kate mentions, not all worshippers may be Christians.
@XanderTheMeh Interesting. I did a google search from 2010-2018 of the term “easter worshippers” and found some, but not one instance of a Christian organization referring to it as such on the first 5 or 6 results pages. I’m not offended at all, but if words do matter, then they matter here, 2
@jonbecker@ParkerMolloy It’s not that I’m terribly bothered by it at all, but I have NEVER heard of the term, “Easter worshipper” before. I’d just be curious to actually ask them why they didn’t say Christians celebrating Easter or something to that effect.