Scent-free parishes in vogue.FOR people whose throats virtually close up at the first whiff of incense incense, perfume diffused by the burning of aromatic gums or spices. Incense was used in ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome and is mentioned in the Old and the New Testaments. It is also found in the major religions of Asia. or heavy perfume, going to church can not only be a health risk but lethal. Many churches are becoming aware of medical problems some people have with scents and chemicals and are asking parishioners and visitors to be sensitive about their use of scented products when coming to church. In some parishes, use of incense and even overhead fans has been discontinued out of courtesy to parishioners and visitors whose lungs cannot handle the smoke or dust. For Michelle Murdoch, a Sunday school Sunday school, institution for instruction in religion and morals, usually conducted in churches as part of the church organization but sometimes maintained by other religious or philanthropic bodies. In England during the 18th cent. teacher at St. Mark's Church St. Mark's Church may mean:
Slang for an individual homeowner who strips the equity out of his or her home through mortgage refinancing. Proceeds are generally not re-invested, but spent on consumer goods. Notes: Most people get rich by saving and investing wisely. put her in hospital with a tube down her throat. Subsequent treatment for allergies and asthma sapped her energy and kept her in a wheelchair and away from work and church. Her condition was so chronic that she even began planning for her own funeral. On one of his regular pastoral visits to her during her illness, Ms. Murdoch's priest, Archdeacon Thomas Moulton, asked her to speak to the parish about her sensitivity to scent before she began attending church again. Half expecting a hostile reaction, Ms. Murdoch was relieved to find her congregation supportive of becoming a scent-free parish. "Because I was in a wheelchair, and because I went from being very small to being quite large because of steroids, I had a real impact," said Ms. Murdoch. "People could see I had changed." Archdeacon Moulton said there was no resistance at the vestry level or in the congregation to St. Mark's St. Mark's could refer to:
The church also turns off its ceiling fans during services out of consideration for a parishioner who quickly loses his voice due to dust and carpet fibres that are stirred up by the breeze. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the Lung Association, one in five Canadians suffers from a lung problem. Many manage their problem with asthma inhalers Asthma inhalers are devices for treating asthma. They contain an asthma medication--a drug that treats the symptoms of asthma. The most widely used variety are pressurised aerosols metered-dose inhalers (MDI) using a carrier substance to suspend the drug, pressurise the system and or suffer in silence, sitting in non-smoking sections of restaurants, avoiding smoky bars, quietly changing seats in a movie theatre when someone smelling of smoke or perfume sits next to them. But church poses a different situation. Rev. Ruth Smith, a retired priest in the diocese of Ontario, is reluctant to move away from someone whose scent causes her chronic bronchial asthma bronchial asthma n. A condition of the lungs characterized by widespread narrowing of the airways due to spasm of the smooth muscle, edema of the mucosa, and the presence of mucus in the lumen of the bronchi and bronchioles. to flare up to become suddenly heated or excited; to burst into a passion. - Thackeray. See also: Flare . "In church, if someone sits beside me with strong perfume, it's not appropriate to get up and move," she said. "That, in a sense, is a rejection of that person. It's un-Christian." As a former parish priest Parish priest may refer to
Chris Ambidge, a parishioner of Toronto's Church of the Redeemer, has been known to flee churches when incense is used. While his church seldom uses incense (and it gives notice in the bulletin when it will use it), visits to other church services are a gamble. "I often get chased out of big church services," said Mr. Ambidge, who visits other churches frequently as one of the heads of Toronto's chapter of Integrity, a group for gay and lesbian Anglicans. Incense, pets, pollen and physical stress trigger his asthma, which occasionally sends him to the hospital emergency room. "Liturgy is supposed to be life-giving, not life-threatening," observed Mr. Ambidge "I have problems with people deliberately choosing to make worship space unfriendly and life-threatening to people with lung problems." Church of the Redeemer uses incense only about twice a year, including Easter vigil The Easter Vigil, also called the Paschal Vigil or the Great Vigil of Easter, is a service held in many Christian churches as the first official celebration of the Resurrection of Jesus. when the notation "Solemn Eucharist" in the bulletin alerts Mr. Ambidge that incense will be used. "I go to another parish for Easter vigil." Still, he won't leave the parish despite its occasional use of incense. He would, however, be happy if it followed the example of other churches and became scent free. Many of the provincial chapters of the Canadian Lung Association offer signs to churches wishing to become scent free. "I'm all for lowering barriers for the whole people of God to worship," he said. Providing access for people in wheelchairs or the hearing impaired is becoming common in many churches, said Mr. Ambidge. However, those decisions have a capital cost. "There's no capital cost to (going scent free)," he said. |
|
||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion