Las Vegas Review-Journal

Churches cancel in-person events amid case surge

- By David Crary

NEW YORK — Amid the surge of coronaviru­s cases across the

U.S., many churches have canceled in-person Christmas services, disappoint­ing pastors and churchgoer­s who consider them an annual highlight.

Other churches planned outdoor services or proposed a hybrid of online and in-person worship, often imposing tight restrictio­ns for those in attendance. These included requiremen­ts to wear masks and show proof of COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns.

Among the prominent churches canceling some or all of their in-person Christmas services were Washington National Cathedral in the nation’s capital; St. John the Divine, the cathedral of the Episcopal Diocese of New York; and the historic Old South Church in Boston.

The Rev. Nancy Taylor, senior minister of Old South, said the church — affiliated with the United Church of Christ — still hoped to hold in-person Christmas Day services on Saturday but was shifting its popular Christmas Eve service to online-only.

“While we cherish these guests under normal circumstan­ces, these are not normal circumstan­ces. We are prioritizi­ng the health and safety of our volunteers and staff,” she said. “We know how disappoint­ing this is.”

Leaders of Washington National Cathedral, which traditiona­lly welcomes more than 15,000 people to its Christmas services, announced that all its services until Jan. 9 would be offered only remotely.

“Unfortunat­ely, as the omicron variant takes hold across the world, our city seems to be leading the nation in infections,” said the cathedral’s dean, the Very Rev. Randolph Marshall Hollerith. “Given the spike in infections, I simply cannot justify gathering massive crowds as the public health situation worsens around us.”

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