Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Access and travel rules influence vaccine policies for missionari­es

- By Holly Meyer

NEW YORK >> COVID-19 vaccine refusal rates may be high among white evangelica­l Christians, but the Internatio­nal Mission Board — which deploys thousands of missionari­es — is not hesitant about the shot.

The global agency of the Southern Baptist Convention, the largest evangelica­l Protestant denominati­on in the U.S., announced this month it is requiring vaccinatio­ns for missionari­es they’re sending into the field amid the pandemic.

The IMB may be the first U.S. missionary agency known to have such a mandate, according to leaders in the field, as other faith groups approach the issue in a variety of ways including limiting where people can serve and making considerat­ions for uneven global access to the vaccines.

“This is a very commonsens­e decision,” said Ed Stetzer, a Southern Baptist who is dean of Mission, Ministry and Leadership at Wheaton College. “Mission-sending agencies from the United States have the real opportunit­y to be vaccinated, and they’re going to places around the world that don’t.”

The IMB policy applies to both current and future missionari­es as well as some staff members. Among the reasons it cited for the measure are health concerns and the fact that increasing numbers of countries are implementi­ng their own vaccine requiremen­ts — some field personnel have reported needing to show proof to board airplanes and subways or enter restaurant­s and malls.

In a statement announcing the policy, IMB leaders acknowledg­ed that it could be a deal-breaker for some people considerin­g missionary work or currently serving with the organizati­on.

The Rev. Allen Nelson IV, a pastor who leads a Southern Baptist congregati­on in Arkansas, said he is not against vaccines but is completely opposed to mandates for missionari­es.

“This is something that must be left up to a person’s own conscience, research and discussion­s with a doctor, as well as their particular ministry context,” Nelson told The Associated Press.

Among religious groups that have stopped short of issuing vaccine mandates is The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, widely known as the Mormon church, which is giving unvaccinat­ed missionari­es assignment­s in their home countries.

The United Methodist Church, for its part, strongly encourages missionari­es to get vaccinated but does not require it. That is partly because availabili­ty is not consistent around the world, according to Judy Chung, executive director of missionary services for the denominati­on’s Global Ministries.

“We have discussed how to promote vaccinatio­n without making a mandatory requiremen­t,” Chung said, “because some may not have access to that yet.”

The denominati­on currently has about 240 fulltime missionari­es serving in 70 countries, and the most recently deployed cohort of about 40 has a vaccinatio­n rate around 80%.

“We want to make sure that our missionary population are safe so that they can focus on the mission work that has been assigned to them,” Chung said. “We want to make sure that we are not causing harm as we engage in mission.”

A key question for U.S.based mission groups is whether they will fall under the Biden administra­tion’s recently announced rule that companies with more than 100 employees must require workers be vaccinated for the coronaviru­s or undergo weekly testing.

If they do, Ted Esler, the president of Missio Nexus, an associatio­n that includes hundreds of missionary agencies in the U.S. and Canada, said about 30% of those agencies could be affected. He thinks they would comply with the federal mandate but said the issue is not currently stirring much discussion.

Ultimately, he noted, organizati­ons’ internal rules may be rendered moot by vaccine entry requiremen­ts that many countries have instituted for visitors.

“Whether you have a policy or not,” Esler said, “if you’re going to serve crosscultu­rally in another country, you’re going to be faced with the government regulation.”

A June survey by the Public Religion Research Institute showed COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy decreasing and acceptance growing, but refusal rates holding steady. It also found significan­t variance of opinion between people from different faith traditions.

White evangelica­l Protestant­s had the highest vaccine refusal rate at 24% and among the lowest acceptance rates at 56%. By comparison, acceptance rates stood at 56% for Hispanic Protestant­s, 65% for Latter-day Saints, 66% for Black Protestant­s, 69% for other Protestant­s of color and 74% for white mainline Protestant­s.

The IMB has had vaccine requiremen­ts for other diseases in place since the 1980s, and it says some have chosen to skip internatio­nal service because of it.

Esler, who served as a missionary in Bosnia in the 1990s with the Pioneers organizati­on, said he had to be inoculated against diseases like diphtheria, polio, tetanus and typhoid before he could go.

Esler wasn’t eager to get a COVID-19 vaccine and is hesitant to advise others to roll up their sleeves. But he got vaccinated because he is continuing to travel.

“From my perspectiv­e, this is an issue more because of the fact that it’s COVID-related than it is vaccine-related,” Esler said.

“It’s unfortunat­e that the COVID vaccine here is controvers­ial and rejected by some,” he added, “when in other places it would be coveted and highly soughtafte­r and they cannot get it.”

 ?? GLOBAL MINISTRIES VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Global Mission Fellow Wingamkaml­iu Rentta leads youth and young adults in St. Lucia during her service with the United Methodist Church in the Caribbean and the Americas recently. Faith groups are taking various approaches to COVID-19vaccines for missionari­es. The United Methodist Church encourages but does not mandate its missionari­es get the COVID-19vaccine. The Southern Baptist Convention’s Internatio­nal Mission Board does require it, though evangelica­ls have exhibited the most vaccine hesitancy.
GLOBAL MINISTRIES VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Global Mission Fellow Wingamkaml­iu Rentta leads youth and young adults in St. Lucia during her service with the United Methodist Church in the Caribbean and the Americas recently. Faith groups are taking various approaches to COVID-19vaccines for missionari­es. The United Methodist Church encourages but does not mandate its missionari­es get the COVID-19vaccine. The Southern Baptist Convention’s Internatio­nal Mission Board does require it, though evangelica­ls have exhibited the most vaccine hesitancy.

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