Item
“I would say that it hasn't affected my faith or beliefs in any kind of..."
Media
Title (Dublin Core)
“I would say that it hasn't affected my faith or beliefs in any kind of..."
Religion 101 Oral History #80, 2020/04
Disclaimer (Dublin Core)
DISCLAIMER: This item may have been submitted in response to a school assignment prompt. See Linked Data.
Description (Dublin Core)
“I would say that it hasn't affected my faith or beliefs in any kind of drastic way. I've always grown up going to church and I still feel the same about my church and about my religious beliefs and God and I don't think that this pandemic was something sent by God to smite us or that we are being ignored by any kind of higher being or something for this happening. I think that just stuff happens and you know faith and science are two separate things.”
Recording Date (Dublin Core)
April 1, 2020
Contributor (Dublin Core)
Tom Beazley
Event Identifier (Dublin Core)
REL101
Partner (Dublin Core)
Arizona State University
Type (Dublin Core)
Oral History
Controlled Vocabulary (Dublin Core)
English
Religion
English
Emotion
English
Community & Community Organizations
English
Community Service
Curator's Tags (Omeka Classic)
theology
homeless
participation
faith
shutdown
Methodist
church
Tempe
Collection (Dublin Core)
Religion
Curatorial Notes (Dublin Core)
Curated by Contributor. Interviews were conducted on an unknown date in Spring of 2020. 04/01/2020 chosen as an arbitrary date. Verbal Permission Omitted in Public File but Original File and Student Creator's Name Kept Private. 07/24/2020. Tom Beazley.
Date Submitted (Dublin Core)
05/14/2020
Date Modified (Dublin Core)
07/24/2020
10/22/2020
12/07/2020
12/11/2020
05/19/2021
07/21/2021
05/10/2022
06/20/2022
08/12/2022
06/13/2023
Location (Omeka Classic)
Tempe
Arizona
United States of America
Format (Dublin Core)
mp3
Language (Dublin Core)
English
Duration (Omeka Classic)
0h:03m07s
abstract (Bibliographic Ontology)
Speaker 2 talks about how the COVID-19 pandemic has affected their faith and beliefs. They also talk about changed to their and their family’s participation in their church community and how the church’s homeless outreach program has been affected.
Transcription (Omeka Classic)
Speaker 1 0:00
First question: how has COVID-19 affected your faith or beliefs?
Speaker 2 0:05
Um, I would say that it hasn't affected my faith or beliefs in any kind of drastic way. I have always grown up going to church and I still feel the same about my church and about my religious beliefs and God. And I don't think that this pandemic was something sent from God to smite us or that we are, like, being ignored by any kind of higher being or something for this happening. I think that it's just like stuff happens and, you know, faith and science are two separate things.
Speaker 1 0:43
Okay, and question two: is your religious community still gathering currently? How has COVID-19 affected your participation in your religious community?
Speaker 2 0:54
My religious community is not still gathering. It's actually Tempe First United Methodist Church, which is on ASU campus, in fact, or right next to it, I don't know if it's ASU owned land or anything like that. Um, but it's affected the participation in my religious community in the sense that I'm not attending church, because they're not gathering. And as far as my direct family, my father and brother are in the church choir and so they have not been attending. And my grandparents, as well, usually attend, it's like something that we do as a family. And they do a lot of help with the community outreach and the Wesley program, which is like the college program at the church. So, you know, that's all like the religious community, not necessarily worship, that we are typically very involved in my family that we have not been involved in because of all this.
Speaker 1 1:56
Okay, and question three: is your religious community supplying or engaged any kind of community service in an attempt to help alleviate issues caused by the pandemic? If so, what are those efforts?
Speaker 2 2:10
Actually, my church is very dedicated to helping out the homeless in the Tempe community. We have a shower program where folks can come on Wednesdays and Sundays. And they can shower and get a new set of clean clothes, which we have a whole closet full of clean clothes for them, and get a hot meal. And my grandparents do the laundry for that, so they wash all the dirty clothes and towels from that. So that way, every week when the homeless people come, there's clean towels, clean clothes for them to exchange their dirty clothes for and that's actually been shut down because of this because the majority of volunteers in my church are like 75-plus, and so they're unable to do any of this.
Speaker 1 3:02
Okay, perfect. And that's all the questions. Thank you.
Speaker 2 3:05
Thank you.
First question: how has COVID-19 affected your faith or beliefs?
Speaker 2 0:05
Um, I would say that it hasn't affected my faith or beliefs in any kind of drastic way. I have always grown up going to church and I still feel the same about my church and about my religious beliefs and God. And I don't think that this pandemic was something sent from God to smite us or that we are, like, being ignored by any kind of higher being or something for this happening. I think that it's just like stuff happens and, you know, faith and science are two separate things.
Speaker 1 0:43
Okay, and question two: is your religious community still gathering currently? How has COVID-19 affected your participation in your religious community?
Speaker 2 0:54
My religious community is not still gathering. It's actually Tempe First United Methodist Church, which is on ASU campus, in fact, or right next to it, I don't know if it's ASU owned land or anything like that. Um, but it's affected the participation in my religious community in the sense that I'm not attending church, because they're not gathering. And as far as my direct family, my father and brother are in the church choir and so they have not been attending. And my grandparents, as well, usually attend, it's like something that we do as a family. And they do a lot of help with the community outreach and the Wesley program, which is like the college program at the church. So, you know, that's all like the religious community, not necessarily worship, that we are typically very involved in my family that we have not been involved in because of all this.
Speaker 1 1:56
Okay, and question three: is your religious community supplying or engaged any kind of community service in an attempt to help alleviate issues caused by the pandemic? If so, what are those efforts?
Speaker 2 2:10
Actually, my church is very dedicated to helping out the homeless in the Tempe community. We have a shower program where folks can come on Wednesdays and Sundays. And they can shower and get a new set of clean clothes, which we have a whole closet full of clean clothes for them, and get a hot meal. And my grandparents do the laundry for that, so they wash all the dirty clothes and towels from that. So that way, every week when the homeless people come, there's clean towels, clean clothes for them to exchange their dirty clothes for and that's actually been shut down because of this because the majority of volunteers in my church are like 75-plus, and so they're unable to do any of this.
Speaker 1 3:02
Okay, perfect. And that's all the questions. Thank you.
Speaker 2 3:05
Thank you.
Accrual Method (Dublin Core)
4191