From Washington-
The life of the Rev. Canon William Barnwell, a crusading, liberal, Episcopalian priest who died
March 27 of (suspected) coronavirus in New Orleans, could teach lessons
we all should apply as we respond to the current contagion.
Barnwell was my friend, just as he was a friend to many
other conservatives despite political disagreements. He had a rare
ability, as described
by journalist Jed Horne in a March 29 obituary: “He could read a room —
and immediately begin putting together people he thought might be good
at energizing each other in common cause.”
He could quickly discern which subjects were ones on which
you and he would never agree and push them aside forever. He could
figure out which things were negotiable disagreements and bank them in
his mind for later, cordial discussion. But with just a few probing
questions or suggestions, he would find common ground on other topics
and immediately home in. How could that agreement be turned into
concrete action — and how quickly? And crucially, how could it be
organized and leveraged to be most effective? He wanted discernible
results, not merely feel-good fulminations or worthless wheel spinning.
More here-
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/one-priest-who-died-of-the-coronavirus-could-have-helped-us-cope-with-it
Wednesday, April 1, 2020
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