Interfaith Insight - 2020
Permanent link for "Can a world crisis make us better people?" by Doug Kindschi on March 31, 2020
Religions and nations have often faced crises, but never before have
we faced them all at the same time. Never before have we come together
as a world community to fight a common, but invisible enemy.
Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, former Chief Rabbi of Great Britain, in a
recent interview on BBC said that bad events like the coronavirus can
bring out the worst in people, but can also bring out the best. He
pointed to communities throughout the world coming together as a “we.”
They are asking “How can I help?” The medical and health community is
on the front lines but also supermarkets and pharmacies are gearing up
to make basic supplies and medicines available. Media, especially
social media, are playing a critical role in keeping
people informed and connected.
Sacks, who has often been critical of social media, observed,
“The split attention with everyone looking at something different that
has so disaggregated our culture is going to change. Because we’re all
pretty much watching the same news, reacting in pretty much the same
way, so although we’re physically not together, mentally and
emotionally we will be.”
We all have circles of interaction from families and communities
to nations and even families of nations. He continued, “But right now
I don’t know when we’ve been more embraced, every one of us in a vital
and personal way, with this huge circle of humanity. ... Just a few
weeks ago we could say this is happening to someone else, somewhere
else, a half a world away. All of a sudden, it’s now affecting every
one of us, so I think that the physical isolation is nonetheless going
to go hand in hand with emotional and even moral sense of solidarity.”
A simple but powerful example of the crisis bringing people
together is illustrated by the picture that went viral (in the good
sense) on Instagram. It was taken in Jerusalem by a co-worker of two
paramedics working for an emergency response service. One of the men
was Jewish, the other a Muslim. When it was time for the late
afternoon prayer, they had a break that allowed them to step out of
their vehicle to carry out their respective prayers. As described in a
CNN (Jerusalem) article, “Mintz, a religious Jew, stood facing
Jerusalem, his white and black prayer shawl hanging off his shoulders.
Abu Jama, an observant Muslim, knelt facing Mecca, his maroon and
white prayer rug unfurled underneath him.”
Let this image inspire each of us to reach out, not only to
family and friends, but to the broader circle of humanity.
Religious leaders from all faiths are also responding to the
crisis with calls for solidarity, and according to the Council on
Foreign Relations, making appeals to their followers “to not only take
safety precautions but also to embrace their spirituality to help
confront the health, social, and economic challenges ahead.”
Locally, various religious traditions are making accommodations
during this challenging time. Last week, the local news and media
website, The Rapidian, posted an article summarizing some of the
approaches being taken in the area’s faith communities.
Online streaming services have been used in many congregations
and are being expanded. St. Mark’s Episcopal Church reports that this
is likely the first time since the church was built in 1848 that the
church complex has been locked down. They are expanding their use of
Facebook, YouTube and Zoom conferencing.
Similar approaches are being taken by the Grand Rapids Buddhist
Temple and Westminster Presbyterian Church, both of which are using
the Zoom app for meetings with students and youth. Other
congregations, from Congregation Ahavas Israel and the Masjid
At-Tawheed, to the Diocese of Grand Rapids and St. George’s Orthodox
Church, have also adjusted to more online interaction. The Sikh
Society of West Michigan, Temple Emanuel, and the West Michigan Hindu
Temple have done so as well.
The Kent County Health Department participated in a conference
call with over 140 church and religious leaders, which led to the
formation of a county-wide Church Response Task Force. The group is
led by pastors from Ada Bible Church, Brown-Hutcherson Ministries and
Iglesia de Cristo Misionera. (Read the full article at: www.bit.ly/Religious-responses.)
The Kaufman Interfaith Institute has also been involved in
assisting faith groups from many different traditions to cooperate in
this new environment. One of the institute’s book groups has moved to
an online medium and a second group is starting this week. If you are
interested in a weekly online interfaith discussion, contact our email
address at the end of the Insight for details.
“Now more than ever, the Kaufman Interfaith Institute is
committed to fostering respect and cooperation in order to augment
that necessary work,” said Kyle Kooyers, associate director at the
KII. “Even with all the craziness unfolding around us, I am confident
that together we will witness and inspire the best of human compassion
and kindness in our community.”
Rabbi Sacks is not surprised about the positive response being
made throughout the world. In his interview he said, “We are social
animals and it makes us feel better when we are altruistic, when we
help others, when we make someone else’s life better. … We will come
through this with a much stronger identification with others, a much
stronger commitment to helping others who need help. This, in a tragic
way, is probably the lesson we needed as a nation and as a world.”
He also found hope in the way that “one tiny microscopic virus
has brought the whole of humanity to its knees. We cannot be
indifferent to nature anymore, so this is going to make us more
sensitive to issues like climate change.”
Sacks described our situation as the nearest thing to a modern
revelation in that, “We suddenly see our vulnerability. We’ve been
coasting along for more than half a century in unprecedented
affluence, unprecedented freedom, unprecedented optimism, and all of a
sudden, we are facing the fragility and vulnerability of the human
situation. At the end of the day, even without a faith in God, we have
to say either we work together and survive or we work separately and perish.”
Sacks was convinced this would change every one of us, and as
hard as it seems today, we will emerge better people as a result. As
we do all we can to stay safe and healthy, let us also take hope, with
Rabbi Sacks, that we will emerge better people, more caring, and more
aware of our common humanity.
Posted on Permanent link for "Can a world crisis make us better people?" by Doug Kindschi on March 31, 2020.