
Amid coronavirus pandemic, a theology for not ‘assembling’
OKLAHOMA CITY — Well, this is awkward. We are used…
I bring this column to you, once again, from my news organization’s hastily configured satellite bureau.
That’s correct: I’m writing from home, where I’m properly socially isolated in the time of coronavirus. (Right, Ted Olsen?)
I launched the “Weekend Plug-In” column in January with big dreams of bringing readers new and exciting topics each week.
Lately, though, it’s all coronavirus all the time, and guess what? That doesn’t appear likely to change anytime soon.
Amid the COVID-19 horror stories, I’m stressed. I’ll admit that much. How about you?
As a person of faith, I’m trying my best to trust in God. But it’s a crazy, crazy time to be alive. Can I get an amen?
Once again this week, I’ll forgo our normal format. Let’s focus on key coronavirus-related questions making religion headlines.
1. Should we kill Grandma to boost the economy?: Apparently, that’s not a rhetorical question.
Here’s how Washington Post religion writer Sarah Pulliam Bailey described the issue on Twitter: “Today I watched a miserable debate unfold: should we let older Americans die or save the economy.” As Bailey’s Post story noted, Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick suggested that “he and other older Americans should be willing to sacrifice their lives for the sake of the economy, which he said was in mortal jeopardy because of shutdowns related to the coronavirus pandemic.”
https://twitter.com/spulliam/status/1242604638752440321
An Associated Press headline put it this way: “Trump’s push to open economy could come at cost of lives.”
Russell Moore, president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, wrote a New York Times op-ed headlined “God doesn’t want us to sacrifice the old.”
But The Federalist’s Mollie Hemingway (like Bailey a friend and former colleague of mine with GetReligion.org) suggests the story is more complicated than some make it: “The Twitter hive mind has ruled that you’re not allowed to have any thoughts about the economic costs of our path without being accused of being a heartless monster who obviously wants people to die … but FYI.”
BOBBY ROSS JR. is Editor-in-Chief of The Christian Chronicle. Reach him at [email protected].
“Weekend Plug-in,” featuring analysis, insights and top headlines from the world of faith, is produced in partnership with Religion Unplugged.
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