Dear Inner Circle,
“When
you’re wearing a mask, don’t spit!” This was a piece of wisdom given to
me today by a wise old fella who I think learned his lesson the hard
way.
Yesterday
I was taken to lunch. I didn’t have time for a socialising lunch, and
worse, I wasn’t in the mood when juggling some heavy burdens that
demanded my attention. So reluctantly, with a sense of suffering I met
up for lunch. I didn’t choose the cafe and in the first few moments,
felt some regret that the bill for lunch would not be cheap. A bit like
waking from a deep sleep, I realised that the purpose of the lunch was
to tell me
about his passion for life now that he had secured stable housing and
paid work for the first time in years. His joy was so full-on and I
realised that he only wished to express his absolute thanks for the
staff and volunteers at Wayside who were part of his story. Lunch ended
and my once homeless friend paid the bill. “I can’t hug you Jon because
of this bloody virus, but I can pay this bill and wish I could do more.”
I remembered what Wayside is about. I realised that I’d forgotten all
the “important things” that had burdened me before the lunch began, and I
felt much lighter after it.
Hope
was born in me at the start of this COVID crisis, when I began seeing
our politicians cast aside their divisions to work together for the sake
of the collective health and people of
Australia. With a National Cabinet and other signs of leaders working together across the various states and parties, I saw true collaboration for the greater good and hope continued to grow, for me anyway. Lately I’ve glimpsed a
return to the bullying tactics of wasting time and looking to blame.
Let’s recognise that compared to the rest of the world we have done an
outstanding job so far by working together through extremely difficult
circumstances. I urge our politicians and some of the media, for whom
ideology trumps facts and the best interest of the people of this
country – let’s not return to ‘old normal’ as we are all so much better
than that.
Plagues
have been a feature of our history forever. When the Black Plague was at
its height in 1349, the priests went out on the streets and preached
that it was a sign of God’s anger against sin. The message worked until
the priests and even the bishops began to die in great numbers. The more
you study history, the more you discover side notes that plagues had
visited and revisited constantly. The year before the great fire of
London, a plague took out a third of the population. The Black Plague
came to Sydney in 1900 and by then we understood that it spread from
fleas on rats. Sydney Council offered threepence per dead rat, but no
headway was made until they offered sixpence per dead rat. You can find
photos of piles of dead rats on Sydney’s streets higher than the heads
of the men who were making sixpence per rodent. Talk to anyone in their
eighties about the fear that polio struck
into the hearts of Australian families. Talk to anyone in their
seventies about the yearly “skin test” (a euphemism for whopping great
needle) administered to every kid, every year, in every Australian
school looking for kids who’d been exposed to tuberculosis.
This country had a 64% casualty rate in the First World War - think
about that for a moment. Our whole country was in trauma. The war took
about 22 million lives in total and then the Spanish Flu took another 55
million lives. We were still only making fair progress with the black
death in Sydney when the Spanish Flu hit us. In our capital cities, we
wore masks. A sign in front of a church recently said, “Thou shalt wear a
mask” HYGENISIS 20:20.
I
won’t pretend the
way forward is easy and I won’t say anything clever that minimizes our
pain. The health of each other is too important. Some wonder if it is
the end of our mission to ‘create community’ but the truth is that we
endure whatever we need to endure for the sake of one another. It is sad
to sit in our empty cafe at Wayside Chapel devoid of people in the
early to late afternoon in dead silence – which was not long ago was the
beating heart of our community. I miss the scores of voices and even
the raised voices that this space was designed to provide. Yet it gives
me comfort to know that our teams are out on the streets armed with care
packs, finding people wherever they’ve crashed for the night and doing
all we can to offer the comfort of community – with love that for now is
on wheels and on foot, instead of in our buildings.
Thanks for being part of our socially distanced, yet connected Inner Circle,
Jon
Jon Owen
Pastor & CEO
Wayside Chapel
Pastor & CEO
Wayside Chapel
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