Oh my.

I have struggled with television this week. I have basic cable so it's possible that the news channels that aren't included in my cable package have done a good job of covering the devastating storms of the past week. I haven't found that to be the case on the main networks.

According to the most recent article posted on the Associated Press website, "At least 297 were killed across six states in Wednesday's outbreak." The same article also noted that "The loss of life is the greatest from an outbreak of U.S. tornadoes since April 1974, when the weather service said 315 people were killed by a storm that swept across 13 Southern and Midwestern states."  I remember that. I was eleven years old and saw tornadoes cross the horizon just before heading to the basement in the house where I grew up in Elizabethtown, KY. Brandenburg, KY experienced significant devastation and loss of life in that sweep of tornadoes and Louisville's parks still show some signs of the damage wreaked by those winds. 

How is it, then, that preparation for the Royal Wedding along with coverage for the actual wedding has preempted any significant coverage of the storms through the south this past week? I don't begrudge Will and Kate their pomp and circumstance or the generous outpouring of support and well-wishes from around the world. I do struggle with the fact that in the midst of a weather catastrophe whose scope is still unknown, the primary television news outlets of the United States of America have barely cut into their planned royal coverage this week. 

Are we Americans truly so shallow that we have driven this news cycle away from this significant loss of life? Are we so easily distracted by glitz and glamor that we would rather watch a discussion of whether or not a royal kiss measured up to the expectations of the crowd? Again, don't get me wrong. I did watch this morning (I did not set an alarm to get up early, I simply watched after I woke up) and I did appreciate seeing the marriage ceremony with the inspiring music and Anglican liturgy. I just wish the news in the U.S. had remained the news and that our focus, as Americans, might have remained on the crisis on our own shores rather than on a patriarchal, fantasy-inducing - if beautiful - wedding in London.


 
 
Children bring special gifts to worship and grow in the faith through their regular inclusion and participation in the worship of the congregation. (W-3.1004 Children in Worship)

I think one of the things we might be afraid of is that taking this statement seriously will mean change of scope far beyond the way we include children and encourage their participation - it seems we will also be led to similar statements for lots of folks:

People who look different than us bring special gifts to worship and grow in the faith through their regular inclusion and participation in the worship of the congregation.

Single moms bring special gifts to worship and grow in the faith through their regular inclusion and participation in the worship of the congregation.

Autistic adults bring special gifts to worship and grow in the faith through their regular inclusion and participation in the worship of the congregation.

People who are unable to sit for longer than 45 minutes bring special gifts to worship and grow in the faith through their regular inclusion and participation in the worship of the congregation.

People who are uneducated bring special gifts to worship and grow in the faith through their regular inclusion and participation in the worship of the congregation

Retired ministers bring special gifts to worship and grow in the faith through their regular inclusion and participation in the worship of the congregation.

College students bring special gifts to worship and grow in the faith through their regular inclusion and participation in the worship of the congregation.
Stay-at-home dads bring special gifts to worship and grow in the faith through their regular inclusion and participation in the worship of the congregation.

People who are out of work bring special gifts to worship and grow in the faith through their regular inclusion and participation in the worship of the congregation.

Parents bring special gifts to worship and grow in the faith through their regular inclusion and participation in the worship of the congregation.

Even people who shush children and give parents "the look" bring special gifts to worship and grow in the faith through their regular inclusion and participation in the worship of the congregation

Every person brings special gifts to worship and grows in the faith through their regular inclusion and participation in the worship of the congregation.

I recognize that some of the things listed above are changeable and others are for a season. I also recognize that many more people could be highlighted in the list. Being a child is only for a season too. May we recognize that the season of childhood is brief. May we recognize that how we honor and include children impacts more than children - it impacts their parents, friends, the community and more. May we grant to every person the honoring of even the simplest gift of their presence.