DAILY NEWS

Six key areas for church response to emergency – Bishop McClay

Bishop David McClay of Down & Dromore in a letter to his clergy and people has identified six key areas for church members.

Bishop McClay writes –

Firstly, our local businesses are facing incredible challenges, especially smaller businesses. I heard yesterday of a husband who bought a gift token from his wife’s hairdresser on the day they closed up the shop for the foreseeable future. He paid up front for 12 hair appointments for his wife as a way of helping the business owner to continue to provide for her family in the coming months. I have been told of people buying vouchers on–line for restaurants that are currently closed, which can be used when things return to normal or move to a new normal to help ensure cafes and restaurants can survive. Can I encourage you to support local businesses where possible, but of course shopping safely which now means almost exclusively on–line.

Secondly, I firmly believe that in these days where life is so very different there will be many people who will be drawn to reading the Bible perhaps for the first time or for the first time in many years. People will be spending time away from others for at least several weeks, even isolation for some, others working from home and certainly not socialising in our usual ways. Some will have concerns, even fears, about the big issues of life and death – and what better way to help them find answers than by pointing them to God’s Word. This is the time to provide people with a Bible who may not have their own Bible.

The Book of Common Prayer is another great resource – full of truth and comfort. When I was in the Cathedral at Downpatrick on Sunday morning to broadcast Morning Prayer it struck me that many people may not have a copy of the Prayer Book in their homes. To have their own copy at home would enable people to join in and follow along with a broadcast service, but also benefit from the other rich resources that are contained in the Book of Common Prayer.

As people spend time at home in the weeks and possibly months ahead my expectation is that thousands of people in our parishes who have not read the Bible much or at all for years, nor used the Prayer Book in their homes, could be encouraged to use both.

Please grasp this opportunity to get the Bible and prayer books into homes in your parish that do not have a Bible, or indeed to send a gift to friends or family anywhere in Ireland. I know of many, including clergy and ministers, who came to faith in Jesus simply through reading the scriptures. What if we could get hundreds if not thousands of people reading the Bible in the coming weeks who have never read it before, and what if many of them turn to Christ and become Christian leaders of future generations.

For that reason, I have asked Richard Ryan of the Book Well to partner with us in the following way. Although the Book Well has had to close its doors to the public for the time being, they will still be operating an on–line service. At present on their website you can get 15% off copies of the Book of Common Prayer pew edition, with free delivery to anywhere in the UK or Ireland. They also have an excellent selection of Bibles to purchase on–line. Do visit thebookwell.co.uk to find out more.

Evangelism

Thirdly, people are beginning to share with me how they are taking opportunities to talk about faith in Jesus in all sorts of ways that might previously have felt uncomfortable for us. Perhaps a conversation from a safe distance in a shop, or over the neighbour’s fence, or in a phone call or email – offering to pray with the person then and there for the things that they are concerned about, and sharing with them something brief of the good news of the gospel.

Fourthly, I would encourage parishes to contact their local GP surgeries and hospitals or any medical staff that they know asking for prayer requests so that you and your people can commit to praying daily into their needs and concerns. Our medics and frontline staff are giving so much and praying for them is our privilege.

Fifthly, please make sure that your parish website is up to date and well–resourced with the materials that the Diocese is providing. Church websites are often the first place that people will look for information, and indeed are a key resource for those looking for spiritual help. There are great materials available – let’s share these with each other, giving and receiving resources from other parishes in our Diocese. Let’s be especially helpful towards and mindful of parishes with less resources than others. Please use the resources on the diocesan website – put them up on your parish website or Facebook page, or distribute them in any other ways that could be helpful to people.

Finally I am currently looking at how quickly we may be able to produce and make available evangelistic resources – using people who are gifted in explaining the gospel in ways that those who don’t yet know Christ can understand, so that by the Holy Spirit working in their lives they may be enabled to make a real, personal and life changing response to Jesus. Please check the diocesan website regularly for more details.

I am so grateful to you for all that we are doing together to make Christ known, not just to those who attend our churches on a regular basis but – in faith – to the thousands indeed hundreds of thousands with whom we have had little contact in recent years but we now have the opportunity to reach, those for whom Christ died.