top of page
  • Duncan Ballard

We are all one body

Our lives are connected in ways we are only beginning to comprehend.

Our lives depend on so much– but first, and mostly, they depend on each other.


This is what it is to be One Body. Every Sunday we say 'though we are many, we are One Body, because we all share in the one bread'/ Maybe we understand this basic tenet of our faith now in a way that life has not forced us to grasp before. We are so connected, sharing everything in common, that we literally have to remove ourselves from each other in the flesh, to keep from passing along at random–and at high speed– a destructive virus. If just one member is infected, it touches us all. When a part of the body hurts, we all suffer.


And if one city still has a beach full of people, a packed bar on a Saturday night, a crowded subway– well, we all know ... Things carry.


I think we always knew this, but it seems we needed a refresher.


Other parts of the world have known contagion before. Have known famine, drought, unimaginable suffering. We have tried to help, sometimes in effective ways, but often in ways that don’t really cost us anything. Here in the western world, we’ve been protected by the bounds of privilege, the safety afforded to us by relative economic security. But now, we are faced with a foe that doesn’t discriminate. Old, young; rich, poor; man, woman, child; black, white, brown; gay, straight, trans; Socialist or Conservative; the things that we so blithely decide can distinguish us, on any given day– those labels, like thin lines on a map, are laughable in the face of this thing.


This living, moving pathogen that has come to take up residence. In this One global Body.

And by the way, this needs to be said: God does not send pestilence. The Holy One is not reigning down judgement on a wicked earth. We need to put this notion finally to rest: God did not cause Coronavirus. Dig a little deeper. God has not unleashed this ill on the world. But perhaps God can walk us through it with eyes to see – as surely we see now – that this is the Body of Christ. This is what it is to share everything in common. For better or worse. For richer, for poorer. In sickness and in health. In sickness and in health. We are all one body. And if one member of the body suffers, we all suffer.


If the least among us are not cared for, the suffering will come back to each one of us; it will be felt in every part of our being, every limb, organ, appendage. The aching back, the weakened heart, the heaving lung.


God does not send a pestilence. That is just a simplistic bedtime story. But surely, God has shown us a better way.


In this body, which we now know is a shared being.


We see it now, wanting to or not. There is no wellness unless all are well.


Maybe once we get our heads around the truth of the interdependency of these bodies – this One Body – then we’ll be able to see the truth of connectedness in other parts of life as well.


Can we see it in the economy, in the wealth that we so blithely label as ‘ours’ and ‘theirs,’ ‘earned’ and ‘deserved;’ can we see that, if the foot doesn’t have what it needs, the hand will go wanting?

Can we see it in the environment– the dirt we stand on and pretend to possess? Surely we see by now, we can’t separate the air we pollute from the air our neighbours breathe. We cannot separate the water we contaminate from the water we will someday drink – or use to wash our hands. To wash our hands again. And again.

.

And this is a body, broken. Suffering, not by the hand of God, but by the harmful constructs of our own design. Lines on maps, and walls around borders, have lured us into a false sense of singularity. Systems of education and healthcare that serve only the healthy, wealthy and secure – we built those on the same lie.  It’s the same story we tell ourselves when we sacrifice environmental regulations for profit – they’ll only contaminate that one part of the water supply, right? It will only affect the air in that one country; that one city; that one part of town…


But water doesn’t see lines on the map. Our border walls don’t stop the flow of air. And this disease knows no legislative boundaries.


Stay home. Love your people. Check on your neighbours. Wash your hands. This is how the Body cares for its many parts. Even as we withdraw and refrain from touching each other, even as we avoid breathing the same air as much as possible: we are all connected.


We are so much more than our bodies. We are stories and spirit; we are love and light. In times of sickness, it is critical that we remember that. We are more than our bodies– but we are One Body. If we live like people who know that, we might all be well.

12 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All
Post: Blog2_Post
bottom of page