2020
April
06
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 06, 2020
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

Today we look at a moment for telemedicine, the push for group prayer, Finland’s effective young leader, refugees helping refugees, and a sit-down with America’s poet laureate. First, a look beyond our current crisis. 

Medical science stays focused on the curve-flattening it maintains is needed to keep the coronavirus from running rampant before it can be crushed. 

Where might we focus next, while we act prudently in our present? By many accounts, on the choices that will shape the world when we’ve all come through this, however long that takes

In facing those choices, writes Yuval Noah Hariri in the Financial Times, “we should ask ourselves not only how to overcome the immediate threat, but also what kind of world we will inhabit once the storm passes.” Might we work our way to a better normal?

Some smart, hopeful takes: More stillness could nudge us to less frenzied lives, perhaps even in places where extreme overwork has been ritualized. To accept that “calamity is a great teacher” and to adopt behaviors that soften generational lines, and borders. 

Global imperatives may more likely be seen as demanding global collaboration. We might be better able to listen to the Earth and its other inhabitants. 

“We perfected systems for making an ‘us’ and an ‘other,’ writes Krista Tippett in Orion, and “we made of the natural world an ‘other.’ Now ... we are grasping new forms of agency. ... [F]or all our awakening to the power of digital technologies to divide and isolate us,” she writes, “this too is true: our technologies have given us the tools ... to begin to think and act as a species.

“We are strange creatures, hope reminds me: again and again we are made by what would break us.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Like much else about the current global crisis, sufficient distribution of medical workers was a long-running issue that suddenly loomed large. We wanted to look at an innovative field that could be both short-term stopgap and long-term solution.

Delcia Lopez/The Monitor/AP
Liza Garza and her children Faith, 8, Christian,10 and Joseph,11, sit on top of their vehicle while they pray during a 'drive-in' worship mass on Sunday, March 22, 2020, in McAllen, Texas.

This next piece goes to the intersection of rights and responsibility. Among the questions conservative religious groups are asking amid coronavirus restrictions: If liquor stores are considered “essential,” why not religious services?

Stepping Up

Profiles in Leadership
Christian Hartmann/Reuters
Finland's Prime Minister Sanna Marin arrives for the European Union leaders summit in Brussels, Belgium, Feb. 20, 2020. In the latest poll by Finland's leading newspaper, the Helsingin Sanomat, Ms. Marin earned an 85% approval rating for her handling of the coronavirus crisis.

Finland leads in superlatives for its levels of happiness, its education system, its social safety net. Now it's reinforcing that effective national leadership can come along with being young and female.

Difference-maker

Lindsey McGinnis/The Christian Science Monitor
Omar Bah and Teddi Jallow, both Gambian refugees, founded the Refugee Dream Center in 2015 to support people escaping violence and persecution.

This story looks at another strain of leadership: A U.S. organization founded by well-rooted refugees offers support and compassion – and a sense of family – to other refugees trying to get their bearings.

Books

Finally, why is poetry so important? Our writer sat down with America’s first Native American poet laureate. Part of her very timely answer: “We go to poetry to find a road to understanding.”


The Monitor's View

AP
A worshipper attends a Mass being broadcast at an empty Roman Catholic church in Vilnius, Lithuania, April 5.

For the three Abrahamic religions, physical distancing during the pandemic seems like a crisis in the wilderness. Adherents of each faith must forgo traditions of worshipping together in person. Yet the crisis could also turn out to be a welcome blessing.

For Jews, the celebration of Passover (April 8-16 this year) usually means among other things families gathering for a special meal and observances. A week later, Muslims will begin the month of Ramadan (April 23-May 23), which typically includes families gathering for a special evening meal (iftar) after daytime fasting, as well as the regular attendance at mosques, where those praying are often shoulder to shoulder. For most Christians, Easter falls on April 12 or 19, and would customarily include a special service followed by meals with loved ones.

For most of the world’s faithful, large in-person gatherings are on hold. The vast majority of religious leaders recognize that suspending their services inside buildings is an act of love for both their congregants and the public at large. A March survey of Protestant leaders by the Barna Group found that 73% reported their places of worship were not open to the public.

Many Christians have taken to heart a phrase often seen on the roadside boards of churches: “Be the church.” It seems to say, “How are you expressing godliness to others in your daily life?” The question carries extra meaning this year. The act of coming together as believers must not only be done from afar, the crisis itself demands a collective spirit of giving to others.

Using technology to practice one’s faith is hardly new. In the early 20th century, American preachers used radio and later television to spread the gospel, drawing large audiences of people at home. Today, congregations are able to stream services over the internet, allowing people to watch from anywhere. For Christians, this virtual togetherness can still help achieve one purpose: As the Gospel of Matthew puts it, “For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them.”

Nonetheless, religious leaders worry about an erosion in attendance or interest if the crisis persists for months. On the other hand, by focusing on digital services, churches can inspire new interest from those who are unable to attend a particular church or are uncomfortable with entering one.

“The church’s absence, its literal emptying, can function as a symbol of its trust in God’s ability to meet us regardless of the location,” writes Esau McCaulley, an assistant professor at Wheaton College, in The New York Times. “The church remains the church whether gathered or scattered.”

The comfort, camaraderie, and familiarity of meeting in person, praying and singing side by side, has been temporarily put aside. But this moment in history also offers opportunities to “be the church” in fresh ways, seeking to reach people at another level, even as believers still support each other through prayer and communion.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

Though staying informed about public health issues is important, the barrage of information about the coronavirus – and, in some cases, misinformation – can feel overwhelming. But opening our hearts to God’s love inspires wise and reasoned actions instead of panic-impelled reactions.


A message of love

Johanna Geron/Reuters
Pal, 41, does ballet with his daughter Marilou, 4, during a lockdown amid the coronavirus disease outbreak, in Brussels, Belgium, April 6, 2020.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Be well, and come back tomorrow. The sudden shift online has left many people out in the virtual cold. We’ll look at how that has given new life to the idea that the internet is an essential service.

More issues

2020
April
06
Monday

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