Jamaica Gleaner

COVID church closures not faithless – St James pastor

- Albert Ferguson/Gleaner Writer

THE CLOSURE of church buildings across the island in the wake of the global outbreak of COVID-19 is not a demonstrat­ion of a lack of faith, says the Reverend Marc A. Mullings, pastor of the Emanuel Chapel Church in Mt Salem, St James.

With rising concern about the COVID19 pandemic, the Government has placed a suspension on mass public gatherings, with a maximum of 20 persons allowed to assembling for church services, funerals, and weddings.

That limit will fall to 10 effective March 25.

“The Church can never be closed; it’s the building that is closed,” said Mullings. “We can’t go to church [because] the Church is the people of God; it is the bride of Christ, the Ecclesia

– the called-out ones.”

According to the pastor, who is a former policeman, the Church is a living organism that thrives through persecutio­n and difficulti­es such as the COVID-19 pandemic. He said that the postponeme­nt of assemblies ought not to impede the work of Christians in teaching and preaching the Word of God, or preventing members from personal worship.

“Whether the people of God are gathered in one place or scattered in diverse places, God’s people are still the Church,” said Mullings, whose 15-yearold daughter survived a bullet wound sustained during an illegal New Year gun salute in Mt Salem. She was hit while standing in the churchyard.

“Closure of the building does not in any way, shape or form demonstrat­e a lack of faith. Rather, it demonstrat­es wisdom on the part of the undersheph­erds and obedience to the constitute­d authority, which God, our father, requires of His people,” he said.

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