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HomeCommentaryCOVID-19 Tests More Than Our Bodies

COVID-19 Tests More Than Our Bodies

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By Paul Graves

“Six feet of separation.” “Six degrees of separation.” They may look similar, but they really aren’t! The first, a medical caution during the COVID-19 is to keep 6 feet of separation between “me and thee.” A wise precaution.          

Six degrees of separation is the popular idea that all people are six, or fewer, social connections from each other. The term was first used in 1929 — and popularized in a 1993 movie of the same name — to emphasize how closely connected people are all over the world.          

The first phrase denotes physical separation of people.  The second points to emotional connections of people.  Both seem circumstantially appropriate in this time of medical, economic and social crises. Both phrases suggest ways that COVID-19 is testing more than our bodies.

The health crisis is testing not just our ability, but our willingness to keep our physical distance from other persons even while we reach out to support other people.  And when some kind of supportive opportunity presents itself, most people are quickly ready to step up in some way!         

Again our finest impulses are working overtime to pull our country together to care for the vulnerable, to heal those with the coronavirus, and to remind each other how connected we are to one another. We see this in newspapers, TV news shows, even TV commercials, social media posts, or anecdotal stories told to each other.

We see and hear of people helping one another in simple, caring ways, or in highly organized ways. We offer this humble brag as a reason why we do this:  “well, our community is just like this”; “our country can pull together in a time of crisis.”

And that is true. But it’s beyond the place we live that prompts us to help others.  It’s because we are human!  We are wired, if you will, to reach out to others with compassionate support. 

Deep down inside our very being, our souls — regardless of what our defensive egos might prompt us to stupidly, hurtfully, do at times — we hope intuitively that we are not alone.  We act out an often-silent connectedness to others because that’s who we really are!         

Our world health-crisis moment called COVID-19 compels us to remember this: All of creation is impacted by how we manage ourselves, how we relate to each other, and how we work together to nourish our finest impulses.  We are not built to do this as individuals, folks.         

We often live our daily lives in the illusion bubble that we are individuals first, last and always. But God created us also to be in healthy, nurturing, relationships with other.  In spite of our theologies and rituals that insist we are separate from each other, and even God, ultimately we aren’t.           

In Romans 8:38-39, Paul reminds us that NOTHING SEPARATES US FROM THE LOVE OF GOD.  These verses are warmly repeated by countless Christians at a variety of times. But I wonder how deeply those repetitions go into our very being, our souls.  Not very deep, as I observe.         

A quick look today at the empty toilet-paper shelves in grocery stores suggests that it’s “every person for him/her self.” Now, admittedly, some people may buy extra TP to give to someone else. I surely hope so. Be thankful! Even empty TP shelves won’t separate us from the love of God!    

The COVID-19 is testing more than our bodies.  Our spirits are getting a great test too. We will pass it as best we can as individuals, even standing six feet apart. But we’re strongest when we live as Helping Community.

Help support FāVS by becoming a member so we can publish more commentary like this!

Paul Graves
Paul Graves
Paul Graves is a retired and re-focused United Methodist pastor and a long-time resident of Sandpoint, Idaho, where he formerly served on city council and mayor. His second career is in geriatric social work, and since 2005 he's been the Lead Geezer-in-Training of Elder Advocates, a consulting and teaching ministry on aging issues. Since 1992, Graves has been a volunteer chaplain for Bonner Community Hospice. His columns regularly appear in The Spokesman-Review's Faith and Values section, and he also writes the Dear Geezer column for the Bonner County Daily Bee and is the host of the bi-weekly Geezer Forum on aging issues in Sandpoint.

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