Northern Outlook

‘Unvaxed’ pastor has pass

- MARTIN VAN BEYNEN

A Destiny Church pastor known for his refusal to get a Covid-19 vaccinatio­n because he trusted his faith to protect him appears to have been vaccinated.

Christchur­ch’s Destiny Church pastor Derek Tait recently told his flock via his Facebook page he was not getting vaccinated.

‘‘I personally am NOT getting COVID Vaccine,’’ he wrote.

‘‘But that’s my choice/decision, no hate no judgement if you do get Vaccinated, each man (& women) have to make their own informed decision…. My faith in Christ & belief in the strength & health of my immune system means I don’t need it & if I did get it it would not harm me (sic).’’

However, last Tuesday Tait produced a vaccine pass at a Rangiora eatery in North Canterbury which Stuff has agreed not to name.

The owner of the outlet said Tait had entered his premises about midday on Tuesday.

Tait, who wasn’t wearing a mask as apparently he has an exemption, showed the vaccine pass on his cellphone, holding it above the counter.

‘‘I said ‘I didn’t think you guys got vaccinated’. He said ‘who told you that?’‘‘ the business owner told Stuff.

He then told Tait his business did not serve Destiny Church people, not because of their religion but because of Tait’s behaviour after the terror attack on two Christchur­ch mosques.

Members of Destiny Church met opposite the An-nur (Al Noor) Masjid to proclaim Christchur­ch a Christian city on April 22, 2019. It was the day the mosque met for its first call to prayer since the shootings on March 15.

At the time Tait said his group opposed the national broadcast of the first Muslim call to prayer by the mosque following the March 15 terror attack.

‘‘The purpose was to stand out in the open and to declare that Christchur­ch and New Zealand belongs to Jesus Christ who is the one true God,’’ he said.

The business owner said the shootings had shocked him, and he found the Destiny

Church rally to reclaim Christchur­ch for Christiani­ty abhorrent.

‘‘We had just returned from a trip to Oman, Jordan and Egypt when the mosque shootings happened. We had a fantastic experience and everyone we met was so lovely.’’

The eatery owner said Tait had argued with him when he was asked to leave and he decided to call the police.

Either the vaccine pass was false or Tait was telling his followers one thing and doing another, he said.

‘‘They lead vulnerable people down a pathway they are not prepared to go down themselves,’’ he said.

According to sources, Tait has also been banned from the Coffee Culture outlet in Rangiora due to his apparent vaccinatio­n status.

He would sit outside with vaccinated people and make it difficult for staff to enforce the law, a patron said. He was not seen to offer a vaccinatio­n pass, the patron said.

Tait was asked for comment but did not respond.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand