
I am sure God knew what God was doing when God created editors.
Surely. Right?
I mean, we canโt live in a world where people sit down and write sentences on a piece of paper (or a screen, as I am doing now) willy-nilly, with no apparent regard for syntax, grammar, redundancy, relevance, or style.
Can we?
It is often a hard, thankless, and unappreciated job, but someone has to boldly stand up and be willing to say, โAre you really sure you want to use that verb tense there?โ
I mean, without editors to point them out, how would any of us keep track of our mistakes?
To clarify; I never submit these blog posts to a second person to check over before hitting the โPUBLISHโ button. But that doesnโt mean they are unedited. After carefully crafting that final sentence, I remove the hat with the word, โWRITERโ there on the hatband and exchange it for the one marked โEDITOR.โ
And then I go to townโฆ red pencil in hand, hacking, slashing, and burning without remorse. (โAHEM, sir? Have you ever noticed that you almost always tend to create a list of THREE verbs, adjectives, or adverbs when youโre trying to make a point? Why not mix things up a little sometimes and use either more or fewer modifiers?โ)
Editing is a discipline every writer I know submits themselves to. Some of you are even brave enough to send your darling children (i.e., the words on the page) to a total stranger for tutelage and correction.
No matter what form it takes, I think we can all agree that EDITING is an essential part of the practice of writing.
The challenge I have been dealing with lately is the challenge of knowing when (and where) to take the EDITOR hat off and just relax a bit.
This โrogue editingโ practice of mine starts innocently enough. Watching the news at night, I catch a typo on the caption beneath the murder suspectโs mug shot. Gleefully I grab the TV remote, hit โPAUSE,โ and point out the error to Joan.
โLook at this, sweetie!โ I triumphantly cry. โDoesnโt anyone proofread these things before they go on air?โ
Score one for the bright boy.
But then it quickly starts to get out of hand.
I try to be as polite as possible when I correct my sonโs โthereโ (when he should have used โtheirโ) on his text. I ask Joan if she maybe meant โcontinualโ instead of โcontinuousโ in that last sentence.
Soon I find I am picking every grammar nit I can find, feeling every bit like a crusader on a holy mission.
I am embarrassed to confess that this editing illness doesnโt end with language critiques. It starts creeping into every element of existence until I become The Most Annoying Man in the World! And to anyone who chooses to point out this character flaw to me, my answer is the same: โOK, I know itโs annoying, but what am I supposed to DO? Just stand back and let people be WRONG?โ
Which is the exact moment when Jesus steps up and says, โYep.โ And then follows that up with, โFor the judgment you give will be the judgment you get, and the measure you give will be the measure you get. Why do you see the speck in your neighborโs eye but do not notice the log in your own eye?โ (Matthew 7:2-3, NRSVU).
It isnโt as if we live in a world of monotone gray where โrightโ and โwrongโ donโt exist. As Jesus himself so adeptly points out, judging โ referring now to the judging of people, not their grammar โ is ultimately not our job. It is Godโs job and Godโs alone.
OK. There is a lot more that could be said here, but that is probably a good place to stop.
Got to leave enough time to go back and edit thisโฆ
Abundant blessings;
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