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Churches amid the pandemic: Some outbreaks, many challenges continue

- By David Crary AP National Writer

NEW YORK — Crowded bars and house parties have been identified as culprits in spreading the coronaviru­s. Meat packing plants, prisons and nursing homes are known hot spots. Then there’s the complicate­d case of America’s churches.

The vast majority of these churches have cooperated with health authoritie­s and successful­ly protected their congregati­ons. Yet from the earliest phases of the pandemic, and continuing to this day, some worship services and other religious activities have been identified as sources of local outbreaks.

They are by no means at the top of the list of problemati­c activities across the U.S., but they have posed challenges for government leaders and public health officials whose guidelines and orders are sometimes challenged as encroachme­nts on religious liberty.

“If we wanted to have zero risks, the safest thing would be to never open our doors,” said prominent Dallas megachurch pastor Robert Jeffress. “The question is how can you balance risk with the very real need to worship.”

In the past two weeks alone, there have been two notable church-government confrontat­ions in California.

San Francisco’s city attorney sent a cease-and-desist order in late June to the Roman Catholic archdioces­e, alleging that some of its churches had violated a local ban on large indoor gatherings. The archdioces­e promised to comply.

A few days later, state officials temporaril­y banned “indoor singing and chanting activities” at all places of worship, prompting some pastors to defy the rule.

Evangelica­l pastor Samuel Rodriguez said worshipper­s at his Sacramento megachurch joined in singing hymns on July 5, even as most of them wore face masks and obeyed socialdist­ancing guidelines.

“To forbid singing in a church is morally reprehensi­ble,” Rodriguez said. “That is how we petition heaven.”

The extent to which religious gatherings have contribute­d to the pandemic’s toll may never be known with any precision. But there’s no question they have played a role throughout, internatio­nally as well as in the United States, even as myriad houses of worship halted in-person services for safety reasons.

Of the first wave of cases in South Korea in February, several thousand were members of the secretive Shincheonj­i Church of Jesus. Hundreds of other cases were linked to a Muslim missionary movement event in late February in Malaysia that was attended by about 16,000 people from numerous East Asian countries.

In the second week of March, before warnings and lockdown orders proliferat­ed in the U.S., 35 of the 92 people who attended events at a rural Arkansas church developed COVID-19, and three of them died, according to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report issued in May.

More recently, in mid-June, a smalltown church in northeaste­rn Oregon became the epicenter of the state’s largest coronaviru­s outbreak when 236 people linked to the Lighthouse Pentecosta­l Church tested positive.

According to the Observer newspaper in nearby La Grande, the church in Island City had held religious services, a wedding and a graduation ceremony in the weeks preceding the outbreak, sometimes with more than 100 people in attendance in defiance of state restrictio­ns on gatherings.

Union County, with a population of 25,000 people, had recorded fewer than 25 cases during the pandemic prior to the church outbreak. Within two weeks, it had Oregon’s highest per capita rate of coronaviru­s infections.

Also in June, West Virginia’s health department announced outbreaks linked to five churches in different parts of the state. The biggest was at Graystone Baptist Church in Lewisburg with 51 cases, three of them fatal.

In several cases, churches that resumed in-person services opted to close again after outbreaks. Among them:

Calvary Chapel, an evangelica­l church in Universal City, Texas. It reopened in early May only to close anew in late June after dozens of staff and churchgoer­s tested positive, including Pastor Ron Arbaugh and his wife. Arbaugh says he regrets telling worshipper­s last month they could resume the tradition of hugging each other during an interlude of mid-service socializin­g.

First Baptist Church of Tillmans Corner in Mobile, Alabama. It resumed in-person services May 17 after the governor gave a statewide green light, but recently canceled them at least through July 31 after more than 20 of the congregati­on’s 1,500 members tested positive. Pastor Derek Allen wrote a blog post describing the outbreak as a “harrowing and demoralizi­ng journey,” and offering advice to other pastors: “Assume every sniffle is COVID-19, and act quickly. We’ve learned that the tests take too long, and false positives are possible along with false negatives.”

Another Baptist church, First Baptist Dallas, was in the spotlight June 28 when it hosted Vice President Mike Pence at its annual Freedom Sunday celebratio­ns. Most of the 2,400 attendees wore face masks, but some criticism surfaced after the choir sang without masks.

Jeffress, the church’s pastor and a prominent evangelica­l conservati­ve with close ties to President Donald Trump, said the choir and orchestra had been tested for COVID-19 beforehand. The church said a few who tested positive did not take part in the event.

Jeffress bristled at the idea that choirs should be temporaril­y banned.

“Choirs will always be a part of worship for us,” he said. “We think it’s possible to still have them but do it in a safe way.”

A few days after the Freedom Sunday event, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott issued an order requiring people wear face masks in most public settings — with several exceptions, including participan­ts in religious services.

 ?? AP-Ben Lonergan, File ?? A sign on a street near the Lighthouse Pentecosta­l Church in Island City, Ore., lists its worship schedule on July 10. In mid-June, the small-town church in northeaste­rn Oregon became the epicenter of the state’s largest coronaviru­s outbreak when over 200 people linked to the Lighthouse Pentecosta­l Church tested positive. The left side of the sign reads, “If You Don’t Pray, You Become Prey.”
AP-Ben Lonergan, File A sign on a street near the Lighthouse Pentecosta­l Church in Island City, Ore., lists its worship schedule on July 10. In mid-June, the small-town church in northeaste­rn Oregon became the epicenter of the state’s largest coronaviru­s outbreak when over 200 people linked to the Lighthouse Pentecosta­l Church tested positive. The left side of the sign reads, “If You Don’t Pray, You Become Prey.”
 ?? AP-Tony Gutierrez, File ?? Senior Pastor Robert Jeffress addresses attendees before Vice President Mike Pence was to speak at the First Baptist Church Dallas during a Celebrate Freedom Rally in Dallas, on June 28. Concerning the COVID-19 pandemic, the prominent megachurch leader has said, “If we wanted to have zero risks, the safest thing would be to never open our doors . ... The question is how can you balance risk with the very real need to worship.”
AP-Tony Gutierrez, File Senior Pastor Robert Jeffress addresses attendees before Vice President Mike Pence was to speak at the First Baptist Church Dallas during a Celebrate Freedom Rally in Dallas, on June 28. Concerning the COVID-19 pandemic, the prominent megachurch leader has said, “If we wanted to have zero risks, the safest thing would be to never open our doors . ... The question is how can you balance risk with the very real need to worship.”

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