Singing at the Sunday Service
People exclaim about the beauties and wonder of ‘ordinary people doing extraordinary things’, but perhaps it is possible to draw inspiration also from ordinary people doing . . . ordinary things.
The chapel at Middlemore Hospital has all the spiritual and
aesthetic magic of an old dentist’s waiting room. It obviously has at
some time been two smaller rooms that have had the dividing wall removed, it
is still fairly small, has a strange low-lying sink with a tap in one
corner, is painted a dull institutional hospital beige, has a few
windows framed by dreary curtains giving a view out onto corrugated
iron roofs.
Last Sunday morning the patients came slowly in -
some in wheelchairs, some walking, some accompanied by volunteers from
the local Methodist church.
The service itself - how can I
describe this accurately but politely? - it was dreary.
I
saw video footage once of the great Pope John Paul II and Mother
Theresa of the Missionaries of Charity - the two great saints of the
twentieth century - together in a Calcutta hospice for the dying.
Everything was poor and squalid and bare and yet it glowed with the
divine light of love and goodness.
Here at Middlemore I failed
to see any comparable splendours. Here at Middlemore everything
seemed . . . terribly ordinary.
And yet . . . and yet . . .
Were
these not too the sick and the dying, was not the chaplain in that dull
room in that dreary service dedicating her life to that same outpouring
of love, that same divine flood of compassion that was found in the
Calcutta slums? What did I know - walking in all healthy and proud - of
the solace brought to hearts racked with pain and sorrow, solace
brought by the smallest, most humdrum demonstration of God’s infinite
compassion.
In the end I could only be honoured to be there, privileged to, in my own small way, contribute.

Some
day we must take mint tea together and eat a little Turkish delight and
I shall tell you the story of how my friend John and I ended up
founding and leading a music group. Suffice it to say here that I find
myself in the unlikely position of directing and playing harmonium for
a group of singers. And now each first Sunday of the month we trek out
to Middlemore Hospital and sing at the Sunday service in the chapel.
I
think we add a certain dimension to the service; I think we are
inspiring; people say so - but in the end we are definitely also just
ordinary people doing . . . ordinary things.

Chatting with the Chaplain
Links:
Out little music group is formed of members of the Auckland Sri Chinmoy Centreand sings a small - though ever expanding - selection of Sri Chinmoy's large output of songs.

