Saturday, May 23, 2020

Beaches, Bars and Cemeteries



Beaches and Bars! Media show pictures of both crowded; we are concerned that people will not social distance, causing a rise in numbers of COVID-19 cases this long weekend. I have not heard that people are concerned about crowds at cemeteries. Today people mostly think of the final weekend in May as the unofficial beginning of the summer season, a time to have fun.
Memorial Day, originally known as Decoration Day, started after the Civil War to honor the Union and Confederate dead. In Charleston, S.C., 257 Union soldiers died in prison there and were buried in unmarked graves. The town’s black residents organized a day in May during which they landscaped a burial ground to properly honor the soldiers. For decades May 31 was a time to visit cemeteries and decorate the graves of deceased family members and a solemn day of remembrance for those having served in the armed forces.
In 1950 Congress passed a resolution requesting that the President issue a Proclamation calling for Americans to observe Memorial Day as a day of Prayer for Permanent Peace. In 1968 Memorial Day was established as the last Monday in May to create a three-day weekend. The day became an official federal holiday in 197l.
          And now, in 2020? With the movement to “open up” the country, gathering outside in large gatherings is very tempting. But what about the cemeteries?  I have seen images of new space for hundreds of graves being dug daily in Brazil for victims of the pandemic. They are unmarked graves crowded together. How do we commemorate—remember together—the millions who are dying globally? How do we with courage and compassion resolve to pray and work for national and world-wide health and peace?

Tuesday, May 19, 2020

"Unprecedented!" "Virtual," Yes, but Epidemics, No

Unprecedented! That word begins most newscasts these days. But yesterday I attended the virtual Commencement of 2020 Yale Divinity School graduates. (I’m class of 1976.) In the 319 years of its history, “virtual” was unprecedented.  However, the situation is not. Classes at YDS were suspended for six years during the Revolutionary War. During the global pandemic of 1917-18, over 700 citizens of New Haven died.
        Fevers and plagues seemed never unprecedented. Ezra Stiles, president of Yale University 1781-1795, wrote in his diary on Feb. 10, 1794, that “the town was alarmed by the danger of spreading Scarlet Fever.” On March 15 a student died. The next day: “four students sick with Scarletina fever.” On March 31 President Stiles wrote, “I myself and wife taken sick . . . released many scholars to go home. . .” On April 2 Stiles discontinued all college activities.
       Then, just 3 months later, Stiles diary: “The Yellow fever brought in by a vessel has been lurking about and proves dreadful. More mortal than small pox.” And Scarlet fever, “tho’ much abated” was “yet extant.” Only half the students returned for the next term. September 5th Stiles wrote about what we today call, “social distancing” and “contact tracing”: “Hitherto I have believed that by the care and vigilance of the Authy [Authorities] it might be guarded & its progress checked, as we could hitherto trace all instances. . .I begin to give up the possibility of preventing its spreadg [spreading].”
     About 5 months before he himself would die of a “bilious fever,” Stiles wrote a “Bill of Morty for New Haven the Year 1794,” based on his notebook of daily statistics on the epidemics. The data collected by Stiles and New Haven County physicians led to the founding of the city’s first board of health in 1795. The data were also used by Noah Webster (Yale 1778) in his pioneering 1799 work, “A Brief History of Epidemic and Pestilential Diseases” which became a standard text in early medical schools.” (from an article by Judith Ann Schiff, chief research archivist at the Yale University Library, published in Yale Alumni magazine, May/June 2020)

          Des Moines Register news release this afternoon, May 19, 2020: Officials report 15,296 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Iowa with 367 deaths statewide.  
    
          What a Christ-centered Yale Divinity School virtual commencement it was! Current Yale Divinity School dean, Gregory Sterling, quoted St. Paul in Romans and 2 Corinthians.  “The one who rescued us from so deadly a peril will continue to rescue us; on God we have set our hope. . .” (2 Cor. 1:10)

Tuesday, May 12, 2020

"Am I comfortable?" is Not the Question



“Am I comfortable with ______?” is not the question.  “Is my neighbor safe?” needs to shape our policies and decisions. Living with the global pandemic calls forth collaboration, both locally and most certainly globally. However, when a leader thinks “Me first,” at all costs, that reinforces our propensity to consider only my individual needs. Likewise, that reinforces The U.S. propensity to think only about this nation. 

Rather than compete, we are called to collaborate, work with, learn from, care for the nations of the world. This is a time to support the World Health Organization and the United Nations.  This is a time to ask, “How can we work together for the well-being of all?”