Thursday 2 April 2020

Prophet of the plague

This morning I was reading about that universal human tendency to blame someone else. It's as old as the story of Adam and Eve. Below is something I wrote exactly a month ago. How fast life has changed since then! But I should make clear that, unlike Donald Trump and his entourage who should be ashamed of themselves, I was in no way blaming China for COVID-19 itself or for its spread. The virus happened, and once it happened it was bound to spread, as the whole world has discovered. Modern life is like that.

"Last month I wrote : 'It’s easy to write people off. God never does. He sees beauty - and hope.' Which, I admit, was easy to say. However then you look around and wonder what’s gone wrong because, yes, there may be glimmers of beauty and sparks of hope. But the world’s hardly full of them, to be honest, is it? Think of how poisonous people can be on-line. Think of how much plastic we’ve dumped in the oceans. Think of the horrible destruction our weapons cause all over the world. Think of how many children go hungry and even starve to death. If he’s there, couldn’t have God done a better job of not writing people off? Well, personally, I think he did all he could. It was a sort of two-pronged plan.

Li Wenliang was an eye doctor working in a hospital in central China, who noticed there was a new type of virus among patients there. At end of last year in an online chat he warned some colleagues to tell their families and friends to take precautions. It wasn’t long before he was told to stop blowing the whistle. He went on working and caught the virus. He died in February aged 33. 

Possibly if his warning had been acted on sooner, the coronavirus COVID-19 might have been contained and not become pandemic. Dr Wenliang was like a prophet, not foretelling the future, but warning about the problem. He’s a bit like David Attenborough - or John the Baptist in the Bible giving the diagnosis of the world’s endemic problem, which you might sum up as selfishness. John didn’t have the cure any more than Dr Wenliang had for COVID-19, except ‘Be kind’. The cure was going to come in a couple of years.  

The second strand of God’s revolutionary strategy came at this time of year. It wasn’t a miraculous vaccine but a series of unbelievable events. First the kindest man who ever lived was executed at the age of 33; then he returned to life after a couple of days; best of all, as he’d promised, his Spirit suddenly filled his followers so that they became a community known for their kindness. 

The selfish virus began to be replaced by an infectious love. Being God, however, he didn’t vaccinate everyone like or not, because love can’t be forced. It has to be chosen - like on “Love Island”. I suppose that’s the weak point of God’s plan. If you’re not willing to give up your own interests and embrace the Spirit of Jesus, who brings love, there’s no way he’s going to force it on you. And it’s hard being kind on your own. Sadly, it wasn’t that long before many of his followers seemed to lose the Spirit and that infectious love faded. But he’s still alive and inviting us to choose his way. Love won at Easter."
(First published in Grove Community News, April 2020

[Interestingly in the last month we have seen both the grip of selfishness (only moderated by government dictats and laws), as people strip supermarket shelves and ignore social distancing, and the Spirit of selflessness, which is love, as communities started caring for those in need.] 

Wednesday 1 April 2020

Poems in the plague

Once upon a time, I used to be an English teacher (among other subjects), and I look back on that incarnation with affection. My enjoyment of poetry probably dates back to the time when I was given a hardback copy of A Child's Garden of Verses, with full-page gloss pictures. Something I've been looking forward to in these months of enforced isolation is returning to my poetry books and even buying some new ones. Sadly I've not yet made time for that, but I've come across two which I enjoyed.

Sometimes you come across people who seem to be called for a moment of history. One such person is Catherine (or Kitty) O'Meara. She is deeply spiritual person, and ironically the calling she received was when a poem she wrote went viral. (As is the way of the internet, it's been variously and mistakenly attributed.)
 
IN THE TIME OF PANDEMIC
And the people stayed home.
And they read books, and listened, and rested, and exercised, and made art, and played games, and learned new ways of being, and were still.
And they listened more deeply. Some meditated, some prayed, some danced. Some met their shadows. And the people began to think differently.
And the people healed.
And, in the absence of people living in ignorant, dangerous, mindless, and heartless ways, the earth began to heal.
And when the danger passed, and the people joined together again, they grieved their losses, and made new choices, and dreamed new images, and created new ways to live and heal the earth fully, as they had been healed.
© Copyright of all visual and written materials on The Daily Round belongs solely to Catherine M. O’Meara

It's not hard to see why this was so instantly popular. It reveals a heart which combines realism, compassion and hope. For me the best line of the poem is, "Some met their shadows," and that is no bad thing. Her blog (The Daily Round) of the last few weeks in my view is worth reading regularly. I often feel that the feature that is most lacking in contemporary Christian worship is that of lament. That's not necessarily "Woe is me!" sackcloth and ashes, but facing reality head on and not pretending it doesn't hurt or that it's going to be all right for me. On 25th March she wrote a post with the refrain running through it,
"I will die; you will die; everyone you love will die. Every living thing will die."

Another poem, based on a well-loved hymn sung to the Londonderry Air, I heard on Sunday 22nd March. It was written by the Rev Dr Sam Wells of St Martin-in-the-Field where I have recently been worshipping, virtually.

BUT THIS I KNOW
I cannot tell why grief and sadness linger
Why jobs are lost, and people face despair;
When this will end, if vaccines come and rescue,
Why isolation stalks the earth again.
But this I know, Christ feels the hurt upon the cross;
The Spirit weaves our lives together still.
And some glad day, through Providence, the Father
May turn this wave of loss to glory by his will.

I cannot tell how we can be together
When all our ways of doing so are lost;
How we can be one body in communion
If every form of touch comes at a cost.
But this I know, we’re sealed upon the heart of God
The Spirit dwells within our fearful souls.
And Christ finds ways to show his face to all of us
To lift our hopes and meet us in our mortal fears.

I cannot tell how long this time of fear will last
If there’ll be months, or years of damaged lives;
When once again we’ll gladly throng together,
To sit and laugh, to dance and play and kiss.
But this I know, we’re finding things both good and true
About our God, each other and ourselves.
So after this we’ll know we’ve met our darkest hour
And now there’s nothing we will have to face alone. 
© Sam Wells, by kind permission of the author

The thing about lament is that one believes the light because the poet has faced the darkness; because the poet has been honest about the negative, you can believe the positive.