The ‘Church Closed’ sign on the local parish church was one
of the most striking and sobering things I’ve seen so far.
It’s not because you would find me at church tomorrow or on
any Sunday; I’m not religious and only go to church for a special occasion. It got me wondering if there has ever been a
time in British history when churches have been closed in this way. I’ve done some Googling, and it seems there
hasn’t. As far as I can tell, even
during previous great calamities – the Black Death, the English Civil War, the
Great Plague, and the two World Wars, for example – churches stayed open. The ‘Church Closed’ sign therefore emphasised
the magnitude of our emergency.
There was a time when a pandemic like ours would have been
seen as punishment by the Almighty.
During the Black Death of the 1340s, people turned to the Church for
forgiveness of their sins, solace, reassurance and answers. Ironically, the faith of many was rocked when
the church seemed impotent and the very priests they turned to succumbed to the
plague in large numbers. During the
Civil War, both Roundhead and Cavalier prayed in church for victory. Churches remained open in 1665 when plague
was once again attributed to divine retribution and the faithful sought God’s
protection and mercy. The start of the
First World War saw a surge in church attendance as people identified with the
justness of Britain’s cause and sought guidance from the Church, and the
immediate inter-war years saw it rise again.
Historically, in times of emergency, we went to church and
prayed for deliverance. The closure of
churches was unthinkable. Today,
relatively few will turn to God for solace, answers, protection or mercy and the
closure of churches goes largely unnoticed.
Instead of turning to priests for salvation, we turn to
science. Coronavirus is an invisible
enemy just as Yersinia pestis was in the fourteenth and seventeenth
centuries, yet we all know what it looks like.
It’s our doctors and nurses that we believe will save us and whom we’re
urged to protect. Virologists and
epidemiologists explain the spread of the virus to us. Science labs around the world are racing to
produce a vaccine – today’s holy grail.
For consolation, we turn to our smartphones and tablets and
to the Internet. We’re connected to each
through myriad apps and more become available every day. With a swipe of our thumb, we can message and
call each other, video-conference and Facetime; we post memes, jokes,
film-clips and photos to keep each other smiling; we stay up-to-date with the
news and keep informed; we continue to
work; and when we feel anxious or upset, we find support. Some of us even blog – like modern-day Samuel
Pepys’!
Undoubtedly, this pandemic will define the generations that
lived through it in the same way wars of the past defined our grandparents’ and
great-grandparents’ generations. More
than that though, while the already diminished church submits to the microbe,
Covid19 will help define our age as one of great scientific and technological discovery
and endeavour.
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