I'm going to try to hunt down a booster shot today - the drug store boosters are experiencing a two to three week wait here in our fair city, host of the "We're Back" in person Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade yesterday. To the thread topic, fear of the vaccines remains on my mind because hesitancy remains in the air in the black and brown communities, and the fear of being vaccinated outweighs, for those folks, the value of the vaccine. It's not that these folks are bad or ignorant or foolish. It's that they're afraid for their health more from taking the vaccine than from getting the virus.
I personally don't think I can march directly toward the vaccine and receive it, all the shots necessary, and then opine that it's a good or helpful thing not to be vaccinated. I would be lying about my own belief and motive. I don't want the virus - having seen its depredations and results - and I want the vaccine because it prevents it and/or keeps the worst of its results from me. That's just overwhelmingly the fact of the situation, tiny tiny outlier percentages aside.
At the same time, I don't think browbeating those who are not vaccinated works at all as a strategy. It's a proven loser. So I and my church leaders practice encouragement without judging, and because there are those who are not vaccinated in the assembly, continue to wear masks in church. We have not found that simply by stating that we the leadership are vaccinated and encouraging vaccination we have alienated those who aren't. It's kind of in the followup, the not browbeating, the listening, the continuation of mask policy for safety sake that we are moving forward with a "mixed multitude." It's a fear mitigation stance. Guess what? It's not easy. Nothing about this whole time period has been.
Dave Benke