Every few years at Swanvale Halt church, we go through
a process of trying to sort out a new rota for giving lifts to church to
congregation members who might need them. This time it’s been Sally our
Pastoral Assistant who has with some degree of annoyance asked to put an appeal
on the notice sheet for help, because the list of lifters has shrunk until it’s
basically her. She is not the first driver to whom this has happened, and it’s
one instance of the general phenomenon in churches, and I suspect in voluntary
organisations more widely, that once one person shows an aptitude or
willingness to do a particular task, everyone else is happy to step back and
let them do it. To be absolutely fair, this is almost always because they are themselves doing half a dozen other tasks as well, but then so is the victim.
I warned Sally that the likelihood was that nobody
would volunteer. There is only a handful of people who need lifts to church,
but there’s also only a handful of people in a position to offer them. You
wouldn’t have thought this very basic act of Christian service should be hard
to arrange, but it is. People’s individual preferences and circumstances need
negotiating around – absences to see family members, a desire to stay for
coffee after the service or a positive preference not to, for instance – and while
it ought to be possible for grown-up people to compromise, it adds effort to
what’s already the effortful decision to go to church in the first place.
Elderly and less able souls may decide at the last minute that they don’t feel
up to coming after all, while drivers, most of whom are themselves elderly and not that
able, may be hesitant about taking on responsibility for people who
are even more liable to fall over. Parking in the centre of the village is very
difficult – only today Sally found herself parking so far away that her car was
probably equidistant between the church and her house. Finally, everyone who
can give a lift is cramming in several other church-related tasks, as well as
trying to fit in family commitments and so on. For instance, I could take
people home after the service, but I can’t take people there because I
absolutely have to be on time, at least twenty minutes before we’re due to
begin, and even then I sometimes have baptisms which rule out any possibility
of giving lifts home.
At one extreme of the liftees is Roland. Roland has
learning difficulties and lives a good half-mile from the church, but doggedly
walks to us for 10am, week in, week out, in a jacket and tie. The other week he
wrote me a letter, referring to himself, as he does, in the third person: ‘When
Roland is old Roland won’t be able to come to church’. He already is old, of
course, so in Sally’s absence I took him home for two weeks, in the first case going
home to get my car, and in the second parking, as I’ve said, some distance away
(driving, parking, and walking took exactly the same amount of time as if I’d
merely walked). I’ve spoken to Roland’s care providers who think they can
probably rejig their Sunday duties so they can at least bring him to us.
At the other pole of difficulty we find Edna. Edna
lives near one church member but for obscure reasons I prefer not even to know about would
rather not have a lift from them, so it was Andrew and Sheila who brought her to
church before they moved. On one occasion they were en route when she
asked to divert to the Post Office. Andrew pointed out that he was churchwarden
at the time, while Sheila was sidesperson that morning, and leading the
intercessions, and they were both on tea duty which meant they had to
get to church as soon as they could. Edna did not get her trip to the Post
Office, much apparently to her chagrin. The situation was compounded by the
knowledge that, unlike some members of the church, Edna is well able to get a
taxi if she chose to – which is exactly what my Mum does. My Mum, in fact,
lives no less than three miles away from the church she attends, though she
usually gets a lift home from a very kind lady whose house is nowhere nearby,
and the cost of a taxi is a significant sacrifice, rather more so than it would be for
Edna.
Of course, time was that when you couldn’t walk to church,
you didn’t come to church and that was it. The Lord of the Manor was unlikely to
send a pony-and-trap to pick you up from the parish’s far-flung parts. Thinking
back to +Rowan’s talk the other night, I wondered whether this might be an
opportunity not just to take communion to people in their homes in lieu of them attending in person, but have ‘communion
services to which they can invite their families and friends’, as he said. It could
be a real chance for mission – if only what Rene didn’t want, as well as the
Sacrament, was tea and a chat with Queenie, and vice versa (though Edna doesn’t
want tea with anyone).
This Sunday, Sally told me that she had indeed spoken to a
couple of souls who might be able to offer the odd lift, provided the liftees
were flexible and realistic. Good, I thought. There’s the rub, though; or one
of the rubs.