It
is believed, Italian philosopher Niccolò Machiavelli first said, “Never waste
the opportunity offered by a good crisis.” Sir Winston Churchill popularized that
saying with, “Never let a good crisis go to waste”. The pandemic COVID-19
provides a good backdrop for us to examine the merits of this saying.
Although the first for all of us, our world
has experienced a few global disasters. The influenza pandemic of 1918-1919
killed more people than World War I (WWI). Somewhere between 20 and 40 million
people died. It has been cited as the most devastating epidemic in recorded
world history. Known as the “Spanish Flu”, that pandemic killed more people in
a single year than in four-years of the Black Death Bubonic Plague from 1347 to
1351.
Like
with COVID-19, Christians have had to live through and respond to pandemics in
history. In fact, historians would confirm that one of the
main catalysts for the church’s explosive growth in its early years was how
Christians navigated disease, suffering, and death.
In 249 to 262 CE, Western civilization was
devastated by one of the deadliest pandemics in its history. The city of Rome
was said to have lost an estimated 5,000 people a day at the height of the
outbreak. One eyewitness, Bishop Dionysius of Alexandria, wrote that although the plague did not discriminate between Christians and
non-Christians, “Its full impact fell on non-Christians.” Having noted the
difference between Christian and non-Christian responses to the plague, he says
of the non-Christians in Alexandria:
At the first onset of the disease, they pushed the
sufferers away and fled from their dearest, throwing them into the roads before
they were dead and treating unburied corpses as dirt, hoping thereby to avert
the spread and contagion of the fatal disease; but do what they might, they
found it difficult to escape.
A century later, the Roman Emperor Julian attempted
to curb the growth of Christianity after the plague by leading a campaign to
establish pagan charities that mirrored the work of Christians in his realm. In
a 362 CE letter, Julian complained that his people needed to match the Christians in
virtue, blaming the recent growth of Christianity on their “benevolence to
strangers, their care for the graves of the dead, and the pretended holiness of
their lives.” Elsewhere he wrote, “For it is a disgrace that . . . the impious Galileans
[Christians] support not only their own poor but ours as well.”
Though Julian questioned the motives of Christians,
his embarrassment over public charities confirms that pagan efforts fell
massively short of Christian standards of serving the sick and poor, especially
during epidemics. According to Rodney Stark in The Rise of Christianity, this is because “for all that [Julian] urged pagan priests to match
these Christian practices, there was little or no response because there
were no doctrinal bases or traditional practices for them to build upon.”
The impact of this service was twofold. Firstly,
Christian sacrifice for their fellow believers stunned the unbelieving world as
they witnessed communal love like they’d never seen. Secondly, Christian
sacrifice for non-Christians resulted in the early church experiencing
exponential growth as non-Christian survivors, who benefited from the care of
their Christian neighbors, converted to the faith in large numbers.
Back
in the 1600s, Martin Rinkart was a Lutheran pastor from Germany. He found
himself ministering in the midst of horrendous famine and disease. At the age
of thirty-one he was commissioned to serve in his native town of Eilenburg. He
went there as the war broke out and served for more than thirty years.
The
plague of 1637 visited Eilenburg with severity. The town was overcrowded with
fugitives from the country districts. In one year, some 8,000 persons died,
including ministerial colleagues. At one point he was the only pastor left in
his town and conducted as many as fifty funerals in one day. In his three
decades of ministry, he buried more than 4,000 persons.
The
plague was followed by a severe famine. One historian recorded that thirty or
forty persons could be seen fighting in the streets for a dead cat or crow. Pastor
Rinkart gave away everything, but the barest rations for his own family.
Despite his life of tremendous sacrifice in response to crises in his
community, history remembers him for writing the hymn of praise, “Now Thank We
All Our God.”
The
pandemic COVID-19 presents Christians with many opportunities to suffer and
respond with the spirit of Jesus. We must resist the public response of self-preservation
and exploiting the vulnerable. What about patronizing Chinese businesses that
some are avoiding due to stereotyping. Among other things, I have been sharing
music videos that encourage faith and reduce fear.
Hopefully,
we will never have another pandemic like this one in our lifetime. If only for
this reason, we should never let this crisis go to waste.
3 comments:
A rich compendium of examples and wisdom for a time like this. Bro. Tim Erdel
Thank you Dr. Corbin for a thought provoking newsletter. I too have been seeking ways to capitalize in this crisis in more ways than one. This document is a great reminder that the Kingdom of God quite often is built as a result of the crisis that Christians find themselves in. I believe that at the end of this crisis, the church will be seen more favourably because of our positive conduct and representation of God.
Bless you Sir and family in this time.
Thank you David for these inspiring examples.
Knowing the great crowd of witnesses we have, how can we not do our part in the relay?
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