14 April 2021

Life with the neighbours — giving, but with no sense of condescension

As Chesterton wrote : ‘We have to love our neighbour because he is there – a much more alarming reason for a much more serious operation.  He is the sample of humanity which is actually given us. Precisely because he may be anybody he is everybody. He is a symbol because he is an accident.’  G. K. Chesterton, 'Heresy' (House of Stratus, Thirsk, 2001)

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For only the second time, people who usually meet under the Unitarian umbrella in Ringwood (Hants, UK) met on Zoom on 11 April 2021.


We lit the candle in our chalice at the start of the gathering.











In the gathering there were prayer and blessing words from Rev David Usher, Rev Andy Pakula, Darren Canning.  We heard a suggestion from Marcus J. Borg on a relevant way to read the Bible, 'Reading the Bible Again for the First Time — taking the Bible seriously but not literally.'  The website  www.bibleodyssey.org had also been a help in preparation for the gathering.  There was music from www.smallchurchmusic.com and the Unitarian Musical Society.  There were two readings, and we were also given the space for private, personal prayer or meditation practice in the customary seven minute period of silence.



The first reading was from the Bible, taken from the book of Luke, chapter 10 verses 25-37, a story commonly referred to as 'The Good Samaritan', but which we now prefer to know as 'The priest, the Levite, and the Samaritan.'  The take home points were these:

  • Jesus presented the ethnic and religious outcast not only as the story’s hero but also as the moral exemplar and, because of the compassion he showed the person in need, the inheritor of eternal life — the one to imitate, should one be seeking to inherit eternal life.  The corollary implied by Jesus was that, on their showing that day, neither the ritually pure priest nor the Levite would inherit eternal life.
  • Jesus switched the question from, “Whom should I love?” which placed the recipient of the enquirer's love as an object to 'be done to', to “What must I do to show love — what am I prepared to risk to show love — what does it cost me to show love?”  In so doing, Jesus prompted the listeners to build in themselves the capacity for loving, independent of the identity of the recipient.  And to stop treating others as objects.
  • To label the Samaritan in the story “good” (a word never used in the text) is to participate in a racist assumption that being “good” is an unusual and noteworthy achievement for Samaritans.




The second reading was from 'Utopian Dreams: In Search of the Good Life' by Tobias Jones. 


Tobias and his wife Francesca took a sabbatical of a year from their usual lives and went away to find ‘the good life’ — something they could enjoy as an objective experience.  Yet while they were away their priorities changed; and they came back home to find instead a ‘good way to live’ — a way of actively being good neighbours.  So we heard again about the switch round of emphasis that Jesus had made.


When they got back home, Tobias and Francesca drew a circle of 1 km centred on where they lived, and searched out all the communities that were alive in that circle — which ones they could commit to being involved with.  We were invited to think about how their experience in localism relates to us and our lives today.  


We have all just experienced a great and shocking upheaval, and many people are re-thinking how they live and what their priorities now are.  We are discovering that there is such a thing as living much closer to home, literally.  That it is actually possible to do that, even if as yet we don’t necessarily find it the most enjoyable thing to do.  There have been some very big political issues in the past five years that have dominated the UK public sphere; but now that we may be nearing the end of the COVID pandemic we simply have to return to something much bigger, which is staring us in the face: the climate emergency.


There is much that only governments, commerce and industry can do to restructure, so as to put the brakes on carbon emissions; nonetheless, we all have a part to play.  We may not see the victims lying by the side of our road, beaten up and bleeding; but the climate emergency has victims.  So if we learn from Jesus the way to live a good life, we have to ask ourselves the cost and risk to ourselves — what we are going to have to change and give up in our own lives — of showing love to those victims.  (And, harking back to the discrimination against Samaritans by Jews of Jesus' time, we note that climate change, although something which will affect us all, is a deeply racialised phenomenon.  See the link to the Christian Aid website, below.)


Giving up our love of casual travel and the romance of the exotic may be part of the cost we have to pay, to secure the lives of those vulnerable to the effects of climate change. We may really all have to live right where we are, within a much smaller radius.  But like Tobias and Fran, we may actually find everything we need, right there.


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The Unitarian church in UK was (and remains) a founder member of the charity Christian Aid, and still has a stakeholder voice in the charity.  Find out here what Christian Aid has to say about the climate emergency: Our prophetic journey towards climate justice





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