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Edith Oferrell's avatar

I’m trying to imagine the Upper Room experience as a Zoom meeting. It’s hard to see the tongues of fire or feel the mighty wind coming out of a screen. The reality of the physical coming together of all the people welcomed the Holy Spirit in.

There is a need for both means of gathering, but the ease of the screen should never be a reason to neglect the power of being present with each other.

Tim Miller's avatar

Very interesting. You're so right that it makes large group get-togethers unwieldly if not undoable. But as an introvert, I find I don't like large group interactions much if at all. The smaller the group, the better I like it in general, all the way down to 2. The larger the group, the more pressure there is to conform, or at least it feels that way to me. One on one, it's easier to just be me. I also love that Zoom allows getting together without driving anywhere. And that it connects me with people who live far away and sometimes with people I might never interact with in the "real" world. So I like Zoom pretty well. It isn't perfect, and the reason I like it reflects my own personal limitations. But being in the presence of others is definitely a richer experience in that it allows for exchange of information that doesn't come across in Zoom, like body language (below the screen), smells, very faint sounds, sharing food. Though another limitation of mine makes sharing food often a bit stressful. I am a vegan and I prefer very low sodium foods. That is not the way most people eat, so it's stressful if I have to bring food and stressful if I feel pressure to eat foods "normal" people bring. Zoom sessions take that kind of stress right out of the picture. Literally!

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