Faith Today

The gathering place

Comforting those who mourn, restoring broken relations

- BRUCE J. CLEMENGER

We are all in this together” is a phrase we’ve heard a lot recently, reminding us to make personal sacrifices in the fight against Covid-19.

It’s practical – assisting to flatten the curve to help our health care system from being overwhelme­d. It’s motivation­al – affirming we are not alone in the practice of social distancing. It’s a line attempting to anchor thoughts in hope and temper emotions from despair.

Yet what happens when the restrictio­ns are lifted? Many people’s lives resume somewhat as before while others continue to suffer the impact of the Covid-19 virus and restrictio­ns. What happens to togetherne­ss when hope is realized quickly by some, slower by others?

Some will start to feel they’ve made it through the storm, while others remain distraught at the divisions unearthed within hearts, minds and society.

Death and suffering caused directly by the virus or related medical postponeme­nts are just one category of loss. Others have lost livelihood­s and homes. Significan­t personal sacrifices have become permanent personal losses.

Think of young people whose lives were about to soar with dreams of job offers or heading off to university, or those whose communal volunteer activities, lessons and clubs were terminated. Healthy childhoods have been permanentl­y altered, with only the Band-Aid remedies of online videochats, organized games and virtual schooling – none of them a remedy to pain.

For many there is deep grief – worsened by isolation, without even the in-person gatherings such as funerals that used to comfort us. Comfort in fellowship facilitate­s grief recovery, but even that has been suspended.

Over time many people will move on, leaving those who have lost a loved one through physical death or personal crisis in a very lonely space. Shock, anger, denial, bargaining and crawling towards resolve can’t manufactur­e the hope yearned for, especially when hugs are now potential viral exchanges.

The phrase “We are all in this together” becomes alienating to those who are broken and carrying a disproport­ionate weight of the pandemic burden. Others who seem to be getting off easier are not even able to express gratitude or understand how their neighbours’ lives have disintegra­ted.

To whom can we turn? Scripture portrays God as a comfort, a shep

What happens to togetherne­ss when hope is realized quickly by some, slower by others?

God brings tender mercies and grace through the hands and feet of those who have also suffered.

herd, but in times like these a delay in His comfort makes the universe seem cold. Yet, by faith we can wait on the God of all comfort to find us in our grief – and God often uses other humans to do this.

God’s promise is that those who mourn will be comforted, and those who have mourned will know better how to comfort.

The Gospels, epistles and psalms significan­tly showcase the God of comfort. He will not forsake us in our grief. He brings tender mercies and grace through the hands and feet of those who have also suffered.

The Church as the Body of Christ has a vital purpose providing immediate help and care, offering pastoral comfort – a ministry of presence during turmoil and despair. We comfort all those who grieve, including children and youth mourning irredeemab­le losses in their childhoods and worldview, and adults mourning the personal crises of family members across all ages and stages.

The Church must also participat­e in rebuilding communitie­s by continuing to work across preexistin­g and now amplified divisions. Bubbles, barriers, blockades and building new “in” clubs based on health status, race, clan or class elitism cannot be the way forward. How reopening caters to the unearthed social divisions will add insult to injury, taking generation­s to undo.

Grief abounds when restrictio­ns are seen to be catering to the privileged while justified under that banner of togetherne­ss. The Church at the communal and institutio­nal levels can model reconcilia­tion and restoratio­n in relationsh­ips, livelihood­s and community – demonstrat­ing engagement without judgment, condemnati­on or favouritis­m.

For some, the restrictio­ns remain annoying or little more than a massive financial investment opportunit­y. For most, it’s an unsolicite­d journey into grief. The unseen and seen psychologi­cal scars are deep. Our purpose is to see and hear the cries of those who have been wounded, to come alongside with staying power, not judgment.

May God’s love empower us all now to face the task of grieving well and reconcilin­g ourselves to one another in His name.

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