We have put together a series of reflections on the Church's response during the COVID19 crisis.
One of the key inclusions is a 30 chapter ebook edited by Prof Heidi Campbell, leading researcher in online/digital religion, who managed to invite articles from 30 practitioners and scholars, cajole them into writing quickly, and published the ebook within the first month or so of the Crisis. The Distanced Church: Reflections on Doing Church Online ebook is available for download by clicking the title. Peter Phillips has a chapter included in the ebook.
One of the Centre's posts, by Peter Phillips on Medium, reminds us that the Church went Online decades ago and the post reminds us of some of the key reflections on this long-term experiment in ecclesiology and the need to remember that for many who are housebound and otherly-abled, the Online Church is the norm not an enforced novelty.
This post provides some key reading for new colonists and a warning to say hello to those already native here!
My view is that we should not be trying to do the one thing we can't do during Lockdown (gather) but should rather 'cast our nets on the other side' and do what we can do during Lockdown and which, indeed, Lockdown gives the church a great opportunity to do: namely nurturing an engaging faith community.
Including...
Pete Phillips looks at the problem of COVID19 infections around church communities and argues the theological case for lockdown.
"Evil and sickness and suffering is a reality that we all need to face. In social isolation, when the dead are dying alone, when the dead are buried without their loved ones present, when care homes are forgotten places of sorrow, when NHS staff are fighting an illness often without adequate protection, when this illness hits the poor, the oppressed, the elderly and infirm more than any other groups, we need to take care of ourselves so that we can provide a barrier of love for others."
Emma Major has written a fantastic article in the Church Times reflecting on the impact of isolation on the disabled church, who have been excluded from physical church for a long time. Emma talks of isolation, loneliness and how the internet was already a place of community engagement for those isolated by being differently-abled.
Emma has also created a YouTube Video where she reads the article for those who prefer to receive her words in this way.