#VirtualRitual – Each weekday our friends from Penn, including Students, Staff, Faculty, Penn Religious Communities Council and other voices from campus will be sharing the ways their spiritual rituals have adapted while staying at home and as they connect to their spiritual communities remotely. ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
Today Tucker Else, Ministry Director of the Christian Union at Penn, shares:⠀
“O our God…We do not know what to do, but our eyes are on you.” – 2 Chronicles 20.12
In the past few months, my spiritual disciplines – my daily rituals – have become somewhat rote. I go through the motions of reading Scripture, prayer, and fellowship with community (with much less community than I enjoyed 5 months ago).
Back in the old-days (prior to Covid-19), music was an important but taken-for-granted aspect of my life. Whether it was old Motown, alt-country, or French rap, my playlist choices were easy to enjoy and pretty arbitrary. If I wanted to listen to Gospel…great. R&B…good stuff. Even some sad British indie music…sounds interesting. But over the course of these last 5 months, I’ve developed the same resigned “meh” to music as I have to my spiritual disciplines. Just some background noise. Nothing more. As long as it gets me through a 30-minute run, great.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
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![](https://chaplain.upenn.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Tucker-Post-300x300.png)
This has become a daily ritual. Scripture, prayer, and then music. But not just any music. Music that turns my eyes to hope. Whatever that music is for you, take a moment to stop, listen, and remember. Even if we aren’t sure when or how this particular season ends, there is hope. In those moments when I feel incapable of worship, it has been helpful to hear those who can worship for me.