Rome News-Tribune

Two COVID-19-ravaged churches take different paths to recovery

- By David Crary and Luis Andres Henao

NEW YORK — The paths of two New York City churches have diverged — one recently reopened and one stayed closed. But they have shared a tragic fate, together losing at least 134 members of their mostly Hispanic congregati­ons to the coronaviru­s.

Saint Bartholome­w Roman Catholic Church in Queens, where at least 74 parishione­rs have died from COVID-19, on Monday hosted its first large-scale in-person services since mid-March: an Englishlan­guage midday Mass and a Spanish one in the evening. At Saint Peter’s Lutheran Church in Manhattan, with a death toll nearly as high, the pastors say it’s too risky to open any time soon.

In Saint Bartholome­w’s, which normally can hold 800 people, every other row of pews was roped off to facilitate social distancing as about 60 worshipper­s attended the English service. Except for an infant, all wore face masks.

“It’s great to see you again — you should give yourselves a round of applause,” said the pastor, the Rev. Rick Beuther.

He prayed for the parishione­rs who recently died, and assured those present that God’s love for them “is a bond that can never be broken, even in tragic situations.”

Beuther had set the tone for the service beforehand, on the church’s Facebook page. “This will not be a celebrator­y opening,” he said. “This will be a slow start out of an abundance of caution.” The Diocese of Brooklyn said it received expert advice on how to reopen safely from a task force led by Joseph Esposito, the former New York City Emergency Management Commission­er. Saint Bartholome­w reopened in phases: first for prayer, then for weekday Masses and Sunday for weekend Masses.

Caution also is the watchword at Saint Peter’s, which serves churchgoer­s from across the city, but with a different result. It is still not ready to set a date for resuming inperson services while a parish task force, advised by experts, studies how to reopen safely.

Saint Peter’s officials say 60 members of the congregati­on — which numbered about 800 before the pandemic — have died of COVID-19, almost all of them part of the community of some 400 who attend services in Spanish.

Under city guidelines, Saint Peter’s could have reopened this week for 125 people at a time, or 25% of capacity. But senior pastor Jared Stahler said that would be irresponsi­ble given uncertaint­ies about health risks.

“For a church that has lost so many people, it would be a moral violation to go ahead and reopen right now,” he said. “We would give people a false sense of comfort.”

At both churches, pastors remain deeply concerned for the well-being of their parishione­rs, many of them immigrants living in the country without legal permission and lacking access to health care. Some lost jobs; others risked their health to work because they couldn’t afford to shelter at home without getting paid.

“They’ve been through a nuclear-like experience . ... Most of their families are in another place, and they’re coming to a church again that is like their second home,” Beuther said.

Among those in the pews at Saint Bartholome­w’s on Monday evening was Claudia Balderas. Above all, she came to pray for her 63-yearold brother, Porfirio Balderas, who died May 12 from coronaviru­s complicati­ons.

“This is a special place that helps me a lot,” said Balderas, 51, who also contracted COVID-19 and was hospitaliz­ed for weeks.

Balderas said lockdown restrictio­ns kept the family from having a funeral for Porfirio, and they couldn’t afford to send his ashes to their native Mexico. Instead, relatives in the city of Atlixco placed a wooden cross carved with his name next to his mother’s grave; the ashes are in an urn with his wife.

 ?? AP-Jessie Wardarski ?? Parishione­rs receive the sacrament from the Rev. Luis Gabriel Medina during Communion at Saint Bartholome­w Roman Catholic Church in the Queens borough of New York, on July 6. This was the first in-person Mass at the church in almost four months.
AP-Jessie Wardarski Parishione­rs receive the sacrament from the Rev. Luis Gabriel Medina during Communion at Saint Bartholome­w Roman Catholic Church in the Queens borough of New York, on July 6. This was the first in-person Mass at the church in almost four months.
 ??  ?? Claudia Balderas, 51, prays for her brother, who died from COVID-19 in May, while attending the first in-person Mass in almost four months at Saint Bartholome­w Roman Catholic Church on July 7.
Claudia Balderas, 51, prays for her brother, who died from COVID-19 in May, while attending the first in-person Mass in almost four months at Saint Bartholome­w Roman Catholic Church on July 7.
 ?? AP-John Minchillo ?? Pews are sanitized after Spanish-language Mass at St. Bartholome­w Roman Catholic Church.
AP-John Minchillo Pews are sanitized after Spanish-language Mass at St. Bartholome­w Roman Catholic Church.

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