Sunday 26 July 2020

Back to Life. Back to Virtuality.


I was woken up at 4am last night, by a party outside our house. The relaxation of lockdown is bringing people out into the streets and parks. Recently, several beaches were crowded by hordes of holidaymakers, completely ignoring social distancing. And pubs overflow their seating on our pavements. That it is mainly the young doing this reflects the state of their hormones, and their innate desire to mix and mingle. It also instantiates Mikhail Bahktin’s concept of the “carnivalesue”: that people occasionally need to let rip.

Saturday 25 July 2020

The Dangers of Digital


Imagine if Covid had happened pre-internet. We have maintained relationships and connection through video calls and social media. Without them, the isolation could have been much worse. Church too has flourished through virtualisation. Small prayer groups and Bible studies occur via video calls. Church services are also shared through this clunky means, or through pre-recorded, heavily-edited productions, on social media, which demand intensive volunteer labour.

Sunday 19 July 2020

Assemblage Theory and the Virus


A few weeks ago, I had a bit of a meltdown (I am rather administratively and managerially challenged), as I was trying to work out our Church’s risk assessment, with a view to possibly returning to our church building in July, the date our government had declared safe for churches to reopen. Discovering the amount of detail needed to ensure safety for everyone made us delay any reoccupation until September. Reading the (justifiably) complex Baptist union Guidelines this month caused us to establish a task group to plan restarting services in the building, perhaps not until October.

Friday 10 July 2020

Dispatches from Lockdown


I thought I had an idea for a book. I would call it “Corona Theology: Dispatches from Lockdown”. It would examine my own personal and theological responses to the crisis, and draw out themes for reflection. It would be an example of Contextual Theology: a contextual theology of Covid-19 and also a model of how to do any contextual theology. As such it would be a blend of the theoretical and practical. Consequently, like Jacques Ellul’s work, the finished product would embody a dialectical oscillation, and draw on writings from my column, “Edgenotes”, for The Prisma (an online multicultural newspaper), and this blog, “Jeremiad”. The former contains notes on society and culture, leaving aside my own faith commitments, as I try to analyse what’s going on. The latter expresses my own personal faith convictions much more explicitly.

Self-Abandonment to Divine Providence