‘HOPE IS
NOT THE SAME AS OPTIMISM’
This observation, by the Czech playwright and president,
Václav Havel, is quoted by Fr Diarmuid O’Murchu as opening a door to
understanding where we are called to go in a future after Covid. It has been
said many times, and most emphatically by Pope Francis, that we cannot go back
to pre-Covid days as if nothing has happened. Some politicians are leading
their people to think that if we can just get a reliable vaccine – and it seems
we now have one – we can get ‘back to normal’ and, most importantly, get the
economy going again.
But no, says the seemingly still minority opinion, it is not
medicine only we need but conversion. We simply cannot go back to where we were
where we squeeze nature to serve our interests regardless of the consequences. We
can repeat the adage: God always forgives; men and women sometimes forgive;
nature never forgives. But nature will bounce back if given a chance. The destruction
of the ozone layer has been halted and is slowly reforming and fish have
returned to the no longer polluted rivers of Europe. But we, and especially the
young among us, now know that the planet will continue to warm up unless we
take action. And a consensus is slowly accumulating to support that action,
even to demand it.
And so we continue with the question: can we return to what
we considered our normal way of life in a post-Covid world? What the mounting
number of voices is telling us is ‘no’. We have to ‘lose our life if we are to
find it’. We have to put a limit on our lust for power and wealth if we and our
children are to have a good life on this earth. The human body has a built-in
immunity as a gift of nature. But in the world of the spirit immunity is not
built-in. It has to be chosen freely. The gift of the human spirit is that we
construct our own ever evolving immunity by our choices. The vaccine, like any
medicine, does not affect our choices. It just does its job, like air in a tyre
or fuel in an engine.
We need another kind of immunity as a result of the scare
both Covid and global warming are giving us. And this is where Václav Havel
comes in. We find no solution in optimism which is often defined as ‘hoping for
the best’ but which, in practice, means looking forward to things returning to
normal. That is not hope. Hope is being open to a new future which will reveal
itself when we preserve the best of what we have achieved while avoiding those
things we now know to be harmful to us and our planet.
In Advent, O’Murchu tells us, we focus on God coming to us
but we would do well to invert the focus to one of us coming to God. Covid is like John the Baptist: it comes to
warn us to ‘make straight the ways’ and that means to pay attention to what we
have to do to make sure this planet will still be around so that our children
and our children’s children have ‘life to the full’.
13 Dec 2020 Advent
Sunday 3 B Is 61:1-2, 10-11 1 Th 5: 16-24 Jn 1:6-8, 19-28
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