Life & Work Magazine
Life & Work Magazine


3 mins

A season of awakening

The Very Rev Albert Bogle considers whether the Covid-19 pandemic has created an opportunity to reset mission.

POLITICIANS within my lifetime have spoken of great moments and movements of reform in terms of ‘The Winds of Change’.

Could it be time once more for an honest weather check? The Covid-19 world pandemic has created a sociological and spiritual tsunami that has changed our world outlook. The terrain we once called ‘church life’ has changed. We are all looking for new road maps to navigate a changed spiritual and sociological landscape.

When I was growing up as a teenager, writers, commentators, artists and politicians all feared the destruction of the world through nuclear weapons. You could literally feel the mood in the air by the way people spoke and talked about the future. It was as though an awakening had occurred and we were on a train heading for a derailment and no one knew quite what to do. Barry McGuire summed up the feeling of many in his hit song The Eve of Destruction.

The music of the 60s was changing and with it the world, everything was in flux. There was even the ‘Death of God Movement’. Dylan sang about The Times They’re A Changing and I recall a whole generation of people recognising that technology and science had engaged in a giant leap for all humanity, leading some to think humanity had outgrown the concept of God.

But while we celebrated science, we also questioned where it was all leading? There even was a song entitled Everyone’s Gone to the Moon. The implication was that life could never be the same again. Humanity was seeking to escape planet earth. So the thought was the world had gone mad, (or perhaps the moon had affected all of us). It was as though the tectonic plates of our lives had shifted and things were fragile and less familiar. The old familiar landscape had changed. Certainty had gone and was not returning.

However, a new dawn for humanity was emerging. Science was the master of the universe but it was being overshadowed by a mushroom cloud. Technology that had brought one kind of progress now threatened destruction with the hydrogen bomb. At least that’s how I felt as a teenager.

The parallels in today’s world have a familiar catastrophic ring to them. Nuclear weapons still threaten our civilisation along with the threat of global warming. Bill Gates, billionaire founder of Microsoft, warns that we must not underestimate the size of the challenge facing humanity. He has recently commented that we just need to remember two figures. 50 billion and zero. It is 50 billion tonnes of greenhouse gases that humans typically add to the atmosphere each year and we need to reduce our usage to the zero target. Gates points out the solution to cut emissions to a level where any remaining greenhouse gas releases are balanced out by absorbing an equivalent amount from the atmosphere will be a Herculean task which demands radical action now. This time he warns we are on the eve of destruction.

It surely is time for a new world order. There is a longing in so many hearts today for the renewal of how we organise our world. We need to begin thinking about what the purpose of economy is and above all what is the purpose of church? Is this a season of awakening? A time when we need to pray that the Holy Spirit is going to draw near to us all and bring about a renewal of faith in our world and our churches. We are living in such a moment, when hearts and minds are open to revaluing what is important to life. It is often the case that spiritual renewal parallels times of questioning and reordering of global priorities.

”We are living in such a moment, when hearts and minds are open to revaluing what is important to life. It is often the case that spiritual renewal parallels times of questioning and re-ordering of global priorities.

The Christian community has an opportunity to reset and reboot its mission on a course that goes far beyond the moon – one that brings heaven to earth. The wind of change is blowing could it be the breath of God? Now is that not a weather forecast worth checking? ¤

This article appears in the April 2021 Issue of Life and Work

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This article appears in the April 2021 Issue of Life and Work