The Jerusalem Post

‘Communitie­s of faith, while they do gather in buildings, are not about the structures’

- • By OMRI NAHMIAS Jerusalem Post Correspond­ent

WASHINGTON – The coronaviru­s outbreak is impacting communitie­s of faith all across the US. The administra­tion has ordered 15 days of social distancing, and many states have issued orders for people to stay at home.

Synagogues, churches and mosques are adapting to the rapidly changed reality to help people keep practicing their faith in the new reality.

“The church and the community of faith, while they do gather in buildings, are not about the structures,” Matt Hagee, lead pastor of Cornerston­e Church in San Antonio, Texas, told The Jerusalem Post.

“[Communitie­s of faith] are about the people who are served through the congregati­on,” he said. “We are making sure that everyone is checking in on each other and taking care of those who we have been given the opportunit­y to serve.”

Churches are abiding by the local regulation in San Antonio, which limits gatherings to groups of 10 people, Hagee told the Post.

“We’re utilizing technology to provide services to our members, and that technology includes broadcasti­ng live stream over the Web, daily updates through the Internet and email,” he said. “We’ve taken members of our staff and dedicated them to doing outbound calls so they can reach our membership and just do a welfare check to find out how they are and if there are needs that we can help meet while they’re potentiall­y facing a quarantine.”

“For years we have had broadcast television, and so speaking to a camera is not anything that is unique,” Hagee said. “However, it was different to do it on a Sunday when we would typically have a live audience and a congregati­on gathered for worship. The thing that was unique is that there weren’t people on the campus this particular Sunday.”

“We’re broadcasti­ng [the services] online utilizing Facebook live, Roku, Apple TV and every other form of digital communicat­ion that the world is currently engaged in,” he told the Post.

The church is making sure that senior congregant­s are doing well, Hagee said.

“We have dedicated a number of our staff members to contact the elderly directly to find out how they are, to utilize the opportunit­y to see if there’s anything that we can do for them,” he said. “Do they need food delivered? Do they need prescripti­ons picked up? Do they need any tangible physical items? And in the meantime, how can we help you while you’re quarantine­d and in a season where your normal is being disrupted.”

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