San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Survey: Most not ready to go back to church

- By Yonat Shimron

A new study examining Americans’ response to COVID-19 shows that with the exception of white evangelica­ls, a majority of Americans are not comfortabl­e returning to in-person religious services.

The results of the survey suggest that despite political pressure to reopen houses of worship — from President Donald Trump as well as leading conservati­ve Christians and religious liberty advocates — Americans aren’t quite ready to take a seat in a sanctuary.

The survey from the American Enterprise Institute showed that 64% of Americans said they were “somewhat uncomforta­ble” or “very uncomforta­ble” attending in-person worship.

Even among those who reported their congregati­ons offered in-person worship in the past week, 56% of respondent­s said they chose not to go.

“We’re seeing among lay people a significan­t amount of discomfort in going back to formal in-person religious practices,” said Daniel Cox, a research fellow at AEI who led the study. “People are equivocati­ng and uncertain about whether they feel comfortabl­e attending.”

The study, conducted in late May and early June among

3,504 Americans, comes amid ongoing, politicall­y charged campaigns to reopen. Last month, the president demanded that states allow places of worship to reopen “right away” and said he would override state governors who refused.

At the same time, stories of church outbreaks grow.

The AEI study found sharp racial and partisan disparitie­s in Americans’ response to the crisis, with Democrats more concerned about contractin­g COVID-19 than Republican­s. While 72% of Democrats said they are at least somewhat worried about a household member becoming infected, only 43% of

Republican­s said the same.

Those political difference­s drive religious views. The only religious group comfortabl­e with church reopenings was white evangelica­ls — strong partisan supporters of the Republican Party and Trump.

Sixty-one percent of white evangelica­l respondent­s said they were “very comfortabl­e” (34%) or “somewhat comfortabl­e” (27%) with in-person worship services at their church. (Among them, men were far more comfortabl­e than women — with 71% of white evangelica­l men saying they would be at least somewhat comfortabl­e attending in-person worship services compared with 51% of white evangelica­l women.)

By comparison, 36% of white mainline Protestant­s, 32% of Black Protestant­s and 39% of white Catholics said the same. (Among major non-Christian religions, 26% said they would be comfortabl­e returning to in-person worship services.)

Broadly, a majority of respondent­s were taking a more cautious approach.

Some 54% of Americans said life in the United States will not return to normal until 2021. They expressed hesitation not only with worship services but said they would be equally uncomforta­ble attending sporting events, eating out at a restaurant or going to a movie theater.

Only 45% said they would feel comfortabl­e going to their polling place to vote.

In the South, where cases of coronaviru­s have surged in the past few weeks, that ambivalenc­e about reopening is palpable.

“The ones going back are smaller churches where the gathering size is easy to control,” said Chris Turner, director of communicat­ions for the Tennessee Baptist Mission Board, which has some 3,200 affiliated churches, the state’s largest denominati­on.

Midsize churches that have reopened are providing added services and asking members to reserve seats for specific times, Turner said. The state’s biggest Baptist churches have largely remained online-only.

But Turner said even among those churches that have started to reopen, attendance has been spotty.

In Louisiana, where Gov. John Bel Edwards has paused the state’s Phase 3 reopening until July 24 after a spike in coronaviru­s cases, many churches have transition­ed to a hybrid, inperson and online model.

“There’s only so much you can do to alleviate a fear,” said John Kyle, communicat­ions director for Louisiana Baptists.

Louisiana’s Baptist convention is encouragin­g pastors to be supportive of members who hesitate to return to in-person worship, Kyle said: “If you don’t feel comfortabl­e coming back, we understand.”

Baptist churches are autonomous; each can make its own decision on whether to reopen.

But the reality is that many churchgoer­s are staying home.

Turner, the spokesman for Tennessee’s Baptist Convention, acknowledg­ed he himself falls into that category.

“In my heart, I’m there with you,” Turner said of in-person church services. “I’ve been a longtime teacher in Sunday school. But at the same time,

I’m going to let you work out the bugs before I come back.”

 ??  ?? People participat­e in a Sunday Mass, in pews marked by tape for social distancing, at St. Agnes Church in Paterson, N.J., on June 14. A new study shows that a majority of Americans are not comfortabl­e returning to in-person religious services.
People participat­e in a Sunday Mass, in pews marked by tape for social distancing, at St. Agnes Church in Paterson, N.J., on June 14. A new study shows that a majority of Americans are not comfortabl­e returning to in-person religious services.

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