“Open your arms. Open them for the worst — the worst sinner. I don’t care what he’s been doing. Let him in.”
— Snoop Dog
Amen brother.
If you’ve ever quietly thought, “That’s me” — then you already understand why I feel drawn to write Snoop this letter. I see myself in that vision he named: the ones who know exactly how far they’ve fallen, how much they’ve broken, how dark it’s gotten. If you carry that same awareness of your own mess, your own record, then you know why this matters. This isn’t about defending an image; it’s about opening the doors wide to the people who think they don’t belong in the building at all. What I’m offering Snoop is a small sign of that welcome—a reminder that the ones who feel like the “worst” are exactly the ones Christ is still calling by name. Details below.
Genuine Moss Agate Chunky Barrel Beads (18mm)
Bronze Antique Replica Miraculous Medal Center & Crucifix
St. Benedict Medal Rosary Box
Moss agate is a stone associated with grounding, clarity, and returning to what’s real. It looks like earth, smoke, and sky all trapped in one bead — the exact palette of a man who’s lived in the haze, survived it, and still talks about wanting the church to welcome “the worst of sinners.” These beads carry that energy: not polished perfection, but raw, living, breathing stone. They feel like someone who’s walked through decades of noise and still has a quiet root system underneath.
Bronze has that weathered, lived‑in look — not shiny gold, not ornamental, but worked, handled, tested. It mirrors the way Snoop talks about faith: not as a performance, but as something for people who’ve been through it. The Miraculous Medal is traditionally associated with protection and unexpected grace — exactly the kind of grace he says the church should extend to the ones who think they don’t belong. The crucifix in bronze feels like Christ in the trenches, not Christ on a pedestal.
St. Benedict is the saint of deliverance, discernment, and spiritual warfare. His medal is used by people who know they’ve wrestled with darkness — not metaphorically, but for real. Snoop’s own words about the church needing to welcome the ones who’ve “done the most dirt” make this box almost prophetic. It’s not a decorative container; it’s a sign that the fight is acknowledged, not ignored. It says: your story isn’t too much for God. Please join me in prayer.
