Irony

Places of worship in England will be able to open from Saturday 13th June for acts of private prayer. People can pray in household groups as long as they distance themselves from other praying groups. However, acts of organised worship are still not allowed. I am, I admit, mystified by the difference between a room of socially-distanced people engaged in individual prayer and the same people, in the same room, at the same distance, engaging in an act of worship. Apart from a priest and a little more exhalation I don’t see any difference.

My Dad’s funeral took place on the 12th June. He had worshipped on and off for 50 years in the village church (admittedly more off than on – like Churchill he was more a flying buttress than a pillar of the church, supporting it from the outside), but he could not have his funeral service in the church. If he’d died a few weeks later this would have been OK. That’s irksome, but not ironic. The irony is that they announced the reopening on the day of his funeral.

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Stained Glass – Ely

11 thoughts on “Irony

  1. arlingwoman

    One of the hardest things about this mess has been the inability to have funerals. That of course is after the inability to be with the person who died. Sometimes people have to leave a person at the door of the emergency room. I’m sorry. Losing a parent is hard, even without the strange circumstances.

    Reply
    1. quercuscommunity

      You just have to do the best you can. My sister was able to see him by webcam while he was on the ward sleeping. Visits are restricted to one end of life visit by one member of the family. He died early in the morning before my sister could visit.

      Reply

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