June Blog from the Rectory
Restrictions and Hardships

From the Rectory - Dear Friends, Well, we are certainly learning a thing or two about life. One recent lesson is that we are prepared to cope with restrictions and hardship provided it’s justified and fair. Part of the fairness is seeing that we are all in this together. It is very difficult to cope with limitations if we see that others are free. It is difficult to go without when others are seen to have plenty. We can cope much better when we know that we are all in it together. These are the things we have been thinking about recently, but there’s nothing new about them. Year after year we have been made aware of people suffering across the world. Whether it is abuse, discrimination, poverty or disease, we have seen the adverts and heard their stories. In all these awful situations people have had to face a diminishing of their experience of life – and that’s an understatement. How much worse it is when they look up and see others enjoying life oblivious of the needs of others. We can all cope with a great deal of suffering and deprivation provided we know that we are not overlooked and ignored. Empathy is so important. It is comforting when others say that they feel our pain, provided we believe them. And that believing comes when we not only hear their words but also see their actions. We know this to be true for us, and we are experiencing it to a certain extent during this pandemic. We can cope with a lot provided we know that we are all in this together. Maybe one of the good things coming out of this pandemic will be a greater awareness and understanding of the needs of others. In a world where crises can flare up from nowhere and suffering can strike indiscriminately, where people can be struck down by illness through no fault of their own, and a life of poverty and misery can be down to the luck of where you were born, in a world where so much seems unjust and unfair we can bring a sense of justice and fairness by recognising in others our brother and sister, to respect their right to dignity, and to share their burden through words and actions. Recently some of us believe we have tasted injustice, we have been tempted to shout out ‘Be fair’, we have felt the frustration of a world divided between ‘them and us’. And the importance of togetherness has been made very clear. Then let us rouse ourselves and champion the cause of so many in our world who might be too weary to even say ‘Remember me’. John Ganjavi From the Registers: We give thanks to God for the lives of Rita Hurst, John Breaker and John Langford. |








