Interfaith Insight - 2020
Permanent link for "Creating the new normal - can we be better for each other?" by Kevin McIntosh on May 5, 2020
We welcome back to this column Kevin McIntosh, as we continue
introducing you to some of the Kaufman Interfaith Institute staff.
Kevin joined GVSU in 2017 as the coordinator
for interfaith resources at Grand Valley. He works with the Kaufman
Institute to coordinate the interfaith interns at other colleges
including Calvin University and Hope College. Kevin also works
closely with the Interfaith Youth Core on various projects including
an annual training session for interfaith leaders from various
Michigan campuses. He received his Master of Theological Studies
degree from Harvard Divinity School.
We have been in quarantine for over 40 days. This makes sense
because the word quarantine comes from the Italian words quaranta
giorni which means forty days. It has been a difficult time for many
of us. And while there have been disruptions everywhere, for those of
us in higher education, it has completely transformed our campuses.
In just a couple of days, universities around the country
transitioned to remote learning, residence halls normally filled with
students lay dormant, and graduation, the hallmark of the academic
year, was delayed and/or went virtual. Outside of academia, these past
40 days have caused more disruptions in our routines and have made
many of us wonder when this will end and when we will go back to normal.
The Rev. Dr. Susan Henry-Crowe, the general secretary of the
United Methodist Church’s Board of Church and Society, remarked that
“COVID-19 has upended our routines and exposed the horrible injustices
in our world today. We are called to build a new normal where everyone
is protected and safe and healthy and has an opportunity to flourish.”
I have gravitated toward this call for a new normal and have been
thinking about how we will change when we end our social distancing
and return to the restaurants, colleges, work places, gyms, and other
places that make up the fabric of our society. Now you might ask, why
do we need a new normal? Some might be yearning for a return to March
22, right before the stay-at-home order took place. For me, COVID-19
has shone a light on many of our injustices in society. Issues such as
homelessness, food insecurity, and health care have risen to the
forefront of our minds.
In the past month, a glance at social media can show you the
horrors and the wonders of society as we think about the new normal.
We have seen people brawl over toilet paper, get angry at cashiers
because supplies are out of stock, and hoard essentials like hand sanitizer.
But at the same time, we have seen the generosity of our
neighbors: chalk messages outside Spectrum Health and other displays
thanking our health care providers; restaurants like Garage Bar and
Grill giving out free food to folks who have been laid off or
furloughed; and our local houses of worship and congregations creating
new ways for us to build community while socially distancing. I hope
that we are more like the latter examples than the former, and that we
continue to do innovative things so that we can be better together.
In my tradition, Jesus has always called us to create a new
normal. As a first-century Palestinian Jew, Jesus radically called for
the inclusion of all people to make sure that we were tending to the
“least of these.” Jesus broke norms and sat with the powerless, the
outcasts, and the outsiders. This radical figure pushed back against
those in power and those abusing their privileges. He questioned those
who didn’t want to help the other and was willing to be there with his
friends during their grief.
How will you answer this call to help the least of these? How
will you lend a hand during these times? It could be donating food to
a local pantry, giving funds to domestic violence shelters, or just by
calling someone you haven’t talked to for a while.
Kaufman Interfaith Institute has numerous ways people can give back
locally, as described on the front page of our website, www.InterfaithUnderstanding.org.
I pray that this pandemic ends soon, but I also hope we don’t
return to the status quo. The world has changed and shifted. Just like
the work of Jacob A. Riis, a photojournalist who first revealed the
life of the poor in New York in the 1880s, allowing the way for social
reforms, this virus has shown the injustices that have always been
around us.
Philomena V. Mantella, president of Grand Valley State
University, recently wrote, “Every massive upheaval in our society has
brought learning, wisdom, and invention. This will be no different.
There will be a ‘new normal’ for sure, but it will be an amplification
of much of what we already knew was our work ahead.”
What will we learn, invent, and inspire to be after this?
Laura Kelly Fanucci, a Christian author, wrote a viral social
media poem looking at what happens next. She writes:
When this is over,
may we never again
take for granted
A handshake with a stranger
Full shelves at the store
Conversations with neighbors
A crowded theatre
Friday night out
A taste of communion
A routine checkup
The school rush each morning
Coffee with a friend
The stadium roaring
Each deep breath
A boring Tuesday
Life itself.
When this ends,
may we find
that we have become
more like the people
we wanted to be
we were called to be
we hoped to be
and may we stay
that way – better
for each other
because of the worst.
I echo her prayer; I hope that when this is over, we have become
better people. I hope we have deepened our relationship with our
neighbors, and remembered that how we treat “the least of these” shows
how we treat everyone.