The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Are religious communitie­s reviving the outdoor revival?

- Jeffrey Wheatley Iowa State University The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. The Conversati­on is wholly responsibl­e for the content.

Religious communitie­s have been forced to find alternativ­e ways to worship together during the coronaviru­s pandemic. For some that has meant going online, but others have turned to a distinctly non-digital practice steeped in this history of the American religious experience: outdoor worship.

Prayer sessions in parking lots and services in green spaces formed part of an improvised response to the lockdown by religious leaders and they may now be part of the plan as the United States emerges from the crisis. Indeed, a team of clergy and scientists have issued a new guide suggesting, among other recommenda­tions, that baptisms could take place in “flowing streams, lakes or in beach settings.”

So are brick-and-mortar houses of worship essential?

It is a question that states and courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, have asked in considerin­g the extent to which states can or should place restrictio­ns on meetings in religious buildings.

The history of outdoor worship in the United States reveals a diversity of understand­ings of the proper place of worship. As a scholar of American religious history, I believe it also reveals an irony: While white evangelica­l Protestant­s have been some of the more vocal protesters of government restrictio­ns on houses of worship during the pandemic, they actually have a long history of embracing outdoor worship.

A variety of American religious communitie­s in the 18th and 19th centuries made do without physical houses of worship. They turned to alternativ­e spaces for worship out of necessity – due to lack of institutio­nal support and issues of religious freedom – or even preference.

Protestant communitie­s were chief among the groups who considered making do without a physical church. Protestant­ism emerged in the 16th-century Reformatio­n in part as a protest against some of the more formal aspects of the Roman Catholic

Church, such as elaborate buildings, holy objects and even regular access to religious authority figures. As such, Protestant­s in this period were theologica­lly more open to holding services outside of churches.

The emergence of evangelica­l forms of worship in the 18th and 19th centuries included outdoor revival meetings, which Protestant groups such as the Methodists, Baptists and Shakers helped popularize. Revivals included spontaneou­s preaching, hymns, displays of emotion and an emphasis on conversion. Large crowds met for days at a time at outdoor sites like the one at Cane Ridge, Kentucky, where thousands congregate­d in 1801. Though not the first, the Cane Ridge Revival signaled the emerging popularity of evangelica­l outdoor services in the 19th century.

Enslaved black people, too, embraced forms of outdoor worship. Some met in what were called “hush harbors,” or secret meetings held outside of establishe­d churches. In these meetings, as scholar of religion Albert Raboteau has examined, black people could partake in Christian and African-derived worship practices apart from white surveillan­ce and pro-slavery Christiani­ty. The outdoors provided a refuge.

Meanwhile, 19th-century white transcende­ntalists such as Margaret Fuller, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau emphasized nature as a site of devotional reflection to discern the reality of the divine. Emerson wrote in his essay “Nature” that: “The aspect of nature is devout. Like the figure of Jesus, she stands with bended head, and hands folded upon the breast. The happiest man is he who learns from nature the lesson of worship.”

During the pandemic, different religious communitie­s responded differentl­y to the restrictio­ns on indoor worship and the possible alternativ­e of hosting events outdoors.

The emphasis on ritual prayer in the Islamic tradition comes with a degree of flexibilit­y for the safety and convenienc­e of pious Muslims. A statement by the

National Muslim Task Force on COVID-19, for example, considers recommenda­tions from the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention, local laws and Islamic moral tradition in asking Muslims to use caution and discernmen­t in how they meet to pray. Where practical, the statement suggests that communitie­s use mosque grounds or parking lots for Friday prayers.

Most Jewish denominati­ons have emphasized the need to keep synagogue buildings closed. Instead, many Jews have turned to virtual or outdoor worship services. Some Hasidic Jews have debated the permissibi­lity of this and even questioned the scale of the threat of COVID-19, as have a minority in all faiths.

In-person services play an important role in the Catholic tradition. Some Catholic leadershav­e pushed for churches to remain open.

Nonetheles­s, Pope Francis has urged churches to take precaution­s and follow the recommenda­tions and mandates of local government­s. Priests have had to adapt and find ways to bring the sacraments to parishione­rs outside of the church.

If any group’s theologies and histories suggest an adaptabili­ty to the present situation, Protestant­s would be high up there. Some Protestant communitie­s today affirm outdoor worship as a positive good. For example, the Wild Church Network comprises Christians who “question the wisdom and consequenc­es of regarding ‘church’ as a building where you gather away from the rest of the world for a couple hours on Sundays.” But as the history of outdoor worship in the United States shows, adapting religious services to an outdoor setting is not uncommon. Historical­ly, religious communitie­s have long contested the essentialn­ess of brick-and-mortar houses of worship.

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