NEWS
Induction Service for Revd Canon Helen Cameron, the next Moderator of the Free Churches Group
We are inviting you to the induction Service for the Revd Helen Cameron, who will succeed Revd Dr Hugh Osgood.
It promises to be an inspiring service where we will formally receive the Revd Helen Cameron in her new role, spend time in worship, offer prayers, and hear from Revd Helen Cameron as she gives her first formal address as the Moderator. We will also take the opportunity to record our thanks to Revd Hugh Osgood for his service and dedication as the Moderator of the Free Churches Group over the last few years.
We hope that many of our people from across the Free Churches will join us, to share this special occasion. The Service of Induction will be held at 6.30 pm on Sunday 3rd April 2022, at Wesley’s Chapel, 49 City Road, London, EC1 1AU. Please register for this free event via Eventbrite HERE.
We look forward to seeing you, but please do contact Sabina Williams on email: sabina.williams@freechurches.org.uk if you have any questions.
Revd Paul Rochester
General Secretary of the Free Churches Group
If you’re tired and you know it, clap your hands
Photo by cottonbro from Pexels
It is just over two years since the first patients to be treated for Covid-19 in England were admitted to Newcastle’s Royal Victoria Infirmary. It wasn’t too many weeks before other hospitals were admitting their first patients and words like shielding, social-distancing and lockdown started to enter into our vocabulary.
Nobody knew what to expect at nor how long things might last. As cases began to rapidly rise, a metaphor that I sometimes heard was of being in a 100 metre sprint. Over time, as cases did not rise quite as sharply as initially thought, but nor did they rapidly drop off either, that metaphor changed to one of being less a sprint but more a 10km race. As cases began to rise again in the later part of 2020, the distance was upped again to that of a marathon. Two years on and we must now be in the territory of ultra-distance racing!
I recently asked health and social care chaplains to send me three words that sum up a little of how they are feeling. The vast majority included the word ‘tired’ or some related synonym. Experienced staff, both chaplains and those in other professions, talk about how they have never known anything like it. There have always been busy times, particular during winter, but they say that they feel like they have been responding to a major incident for the best part of two years. A colleague recently wrote about how they hated the description of the NHS working ‘tirelessly’ as it plays down the reality of how shattered people actually are.
Throughout the time of the pandemic, even though Covid pressures have risen and fallen, the pressure on staff has not. Each time Covid infection rates fall, there is the pressure to catch up with postponed operations, tests, appointments, etc. Patients are often coming into hospital, or seeing GPs, later than they might have done previously and consequently may have more complex medical, emotional and spiritual needs. Alongside the exhaustion, there are also high levels of anxiety, guilt, and moral injury. The danger of burnout is very real with some modelling suggest that there could be as many as one in six doctors and nurses off sick throughout 2022.
Chaplains are not immune to this, as the frequency of the choice of the word tired shows. However – to finish on a more uplifting note – many chaplains also included positive words such as hopeful, grateful and blessed. It is the privilege of health and social care chaplains to minister to a community of patients, visitors and staff who face some of the most profound human experiences. The good news of the gospel is that our exhausted and fragile reality is bound up with the nature of God, distinctively revealed in the person of Jesus Christ, who shared our weakness and vulnerability. In paying attention to the meanings and stories of people’s lives, hopes, beliefs and doubts we affirm the dignity and value of people, whatever their circumstances, and are a tangible reminder of a transcendent dimension to life.
Revd Dr. Mark Newitt
Secretary for Healthcare Chaplaincy
Note: This reflection is written for the Churches Together in England