Salvation is a global issue.
The Rector’s Blog - June 2021

Dear Friends,
I hope you are all well and managing to keep up to date with events. Between me writing this article and it being published all manner of things could change. So, today’s optimism or pessimism can change within the space of a day. Today our Prime Minister is expressing an optimistic note that on 21st June all restrictions will be lifted. There is also optimism that our vaccines will protect us from extreme reaction to the Indian variant of the COVID virus. People are rushing to book a break, and there is pressure on churches and schools to go against advice and lift restrictions now. Please, could someone from the future time travel back to us and tell us how things are going to pan out! Whilst the balance of views today tilts towards optimism, the news is broadcasting a devastating clip from a poor woman in India who lost her life to COVID. This lady was a dentist in her thirties. She, and her unborn child, became victims of this awful disease. Prior to her death, this lady recorded herself pleading with the world to not trivialise the dangers of this virus.
In June 2020 I wrote the following: “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 understandable that we want to celebrate the hope of better days to come, but let’s hope that we won’t forget the lessons we have learnt. Number one lesson could well be that the human race is one people, and the major issues we face affect us all and their solutions involve us all. At the time of Jesus people had a narrow view of life. Religion was there to advance the prospects of their corner of the world. Jesus challenged this parochial attitude to life, teaching that the person who lives beyond our sphere of interest is still our brother or sister. Jesus is often referred to as the Saviour of the World. Whatever we make of that claim, what is increasingly apparent is that Salvation is a global issue.







