Tag Archives: Covid-19

Accepting Truth

Covid-19 is like the alarm that wakes us in the morning. We fight against its call, trying to turn over again to sleep. But work or other duty calls us, and we grudgingly get up.

Last year when we began closures of every venue of social gathering, we kept asking if this were real. It was like those first pictures of the airplanes crashing into the towers on September 11, 2001. Surely not. It had never happened before, and we had no precedent for judging it. However, for 9/ll, we had videos and personal testimony and physical damage.

With Covid-19, we see people dying, but in much quieter ways. Certainly, the pathogen is not visible to ordinary people without the proper equipment. It allows more room for hearsay and myths and outright lies.

It seems part of human folly to advance falsehood when disaster strikes, rather than accepting truth. Even around the disasters of September 11, 2001, falsehoods appeared. How much more should we expect myths to entice us in dealing with a Covid-19 disaster.

Mask-wearing, social distancing, closure of public events—they are painful to us. We’d like to think they’re unnecessary, even when Covid-19 increases as they are ignored.

God willing, the vaccines, may help us blunt this plague. However, the world will go on, and other challenges (epidemics, terrorism, famines) will tempt us at other times to ignore truths.

Jesus told his disciples that they would know the truth and the truth would set them free. Yet, even with Jesus in their midst, some refused to see the truths he offered. Truth requires change, discipline, and sometimes even pain.

No wonder we are tempted to believe myths that require no change on our part.

Advent by Zoom

A long time ago, last Easter, in fact, we could watch the Easter service streamed live from Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris. Indeed, many of our Easter services last spring came to us via our screens.

Places of worship were reacting to the spread of a new sickness, Covid-19. Many closed their physical spaces of worship, as other gathering places did, to prevent contagion.

Back then, this new disturbance seemed more innocent, softened by kindness. Surely, the virus would go away as other viruses had, without causing widespread harm.

But it didn’t. Simple acts to protect oneself and others, like mask wearing, became political statements. Public health took a back seat to a presidential campaign.

And so the virus spread, far more than it should have. And now many Christians are celebrating Advent by Zoom.

Our church has advanced from listening to Sunday services via a link taped earlier by a few, socially distanced individuals to an improved group experience with newer software.

Not the real thing, no, when we held our first Zoom worship, but we could talk and respond in real time. No matter that we still hadn’t worked out all the bugs of congregational response.

It was for some of us a weepy moment.

I can’t imagine what it might be when, God willing, we are again able to meet in person.

Making the Most of This Time

Families, schools, worship services, work places—-these and other communal gatherings have been upended by Covid-19.

In some cases, the results are disastrous—death and sickness, overloaded hospitals, domestic violence, closed businesses, and silent music halls.

Yet despite all the trauma, a few serendipitous sprouts have poked their heads above the misery.

A few families are dealing with closed schools and remote learning for their offspring by banding together to share teaching and child care in small joinings, more easily controlled for the virus.

The number of multi generational households has grown. Not all households profit by coming together—some families have deeply-rooted problems. Nevertheless, more than a few have found unexpected joys as they embrace what was the norm until the past century or so.

New ways of worship emerge from lock downs. No longer tied to services at a particular place and a particular time, some have found they enjoy tuning in to a prerecorded service at a time of their choosing and in whatever casual dress they prefer. Zoom meetings, while not ideal, do allow small groups to share as well, again from the comfort of their homes.

Surveys find a significant number of those able to keep their jobs by working remotely would prefer not to return full time to an office when the pandemic passes. Most say they’d like to spend at least part of the week working at home. Less days at the office might mean less child care problems, not to mention less commuting costs and possibly less pollution.

As so often happens, a crisis is can be an opportunity for creative change. Maybe we’ll discover ways to heal a society whose members have become all too remote from each other.

Viral Awakening

We might consider Covid-19 as a wake up call. Or as a another kind of New Years Day. An opportunity for change.

The virus suggests a different set of values than we’re used to living by. What’s important now?

Family and friends, of course.

A safe place to shelter, not housing as investment.

Food and grocery stores.

Care givers for the sick and the elderly and the young. Those who rescue and protect.

The workers who perform tasks that must go on if civilized society is to continue: sanitation workers, farmers, grocery store clerks, janitors.

A reshuffling of our values might prod us toward a society which better rewards care givers and child care workers. Perhaps we might revisit our penchant for seeing housing as investment and instead see it as a universal need.

We could, in addition, build places of refuge and growth for the mentally ill and for those crushed by addiction.

We could revisit the ways we use our country’s wealth. Higher wages for the ordinary worker? Housing they can afford to live in? Affordable medical care? Education and job training?

Happy New Year!