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Some U.S. religious leaders flout COVID-19 restrictions with large gatherings

Religious service, steeped as it is in community, is one area where people are finding it hard to avoid gathering amid the COVID-19 pandemic. And while some churches in the U.S. are finding innovative ways to continue services, such as conducting them virtually, a few are still gathering in person, potentially exposing many people to the novel coronavirus.

Florida, Louisiana pastors arrested for violating health emergency guidelines

Congregants gather after services at the Life Tabernacle Church in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on Sunday, despite a shelter-in-place order by Gov. John Bel Edwards as a measure to combat the coronavirus pandemic. (Gerald Herbert/The Associated Press)

School buses delivered hundreds of church-goers to Life Tabernacle Church in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on Sunday, defying physical-distancing guidelines and the state governor's direct order banning gatherings of more than 10 people.

Religious service, steeped as it is in community, is one area where people are finding it hard to avoid gathering amid the COVID-19 pandemic. And while some churches in the U.S. are finding innovative ways to continue services, such as conducting them virtually, a few are still gathering in person, potentially exposing many people to the novel coronavirus.

South Korea has experience with the danger of public worship services: More than half of the country's coronavirus cases were linked to the branch of the Shincheonji Church of Jesus in Daegu

But Life Tabernacle is flouting officials' pleas in a state where, as of Monday afternoon, more than 4,000 have been infected and 185 have died, according to an ongoing tally by Johns Hopkins University.

Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat, on March 22 ordered a lockdown of all but essential services, which did not include religious worship services, and prohibited gatherings of more than 10 people.

Pastor Tony Spell, right, has continued to hold services with hundreds of congregants at the Life Tabernacle Church. (Gerald Herbert/The Associated Press)

The father of Life Tabernacle's pastor Tony Spell says the church is an essential service.

"The church is not a non-essential. The church is the most essential thing in all the world," Timothy Spell told NBC News outside the church Sunday.

"No one is telling anybody you got to come to church. We tell people not to come if you have a fever, if you have any symptoms, if you're aged, if you're elderly, don't come."

Pastors arrested

That's got local residents like Ryan Tregre fuming.

"If they really worried about just spreading the [spiritual] word, they would go on Facebook Live or YouTube or some kind of way to spread the word where they would not have to go and meet in places and spread this virus that's killing people every day," he told NBC.

Life Tabernacle wasn't the only church to defy public orders and open their doors to parishioners on Sunday. 

video posted to the Facebook page of the River at Tampa Bay Pentecostal church in Florida on Sunday shows hundreds of parishioners standing side by side.

The Rev. Rodney Howard-Browne, pastor of the River at Tampa Bay Church, was arrested Monday after flouting physical-distancing guidelines to hold large services on Sunday. (Hernando County Jail/The Associated Press)

Rev. Rodney Howard-Browne has said he would close services only for the Rapture and that shutdowns were for "pansies." He reportedly held two services Sunday, flying in the face of physical-distancing guidelines and attracting the attention of the local sheriff's department. 

Florida has not ordered a statewide shutdown of non-essential businesses, but on Monday the Hillsborough County Sheriff charged him with unlawful assembly and a violation of health emergency rules.

On Tuesday, Spell was charged with six misdemeanors for holding church services in violation of the governor's ban, said East Baton Rouge Parish District Attorney Hillar Moore.

"The whole situation just puts everyone at risk," Moore said. "We ask everyone to abide by the governor's order."

That didn't deter Spell, who proceeded with a service Tuesday night.

"We're still here and still assembling and having church," Spell said when reached by The Associated Press. Asked why he was defying the governor's orders, he said, "Because the Lord told us to."

Canadian clergy urge compliance

It's a different story in Canada.

A statement released by religious leaders across Canada on Monday urged people to follow public health officials' guidelines.

David Guretzki, vice-president of the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada said there were no evangelical services that he knew of this past weekend and noted his group has signed on to statement.

Still, members of all faiths are grappling with how to continue practising.

Some mosques in the Toronto area had stayed open to 50 or fewer people after Ontario Premier Doug Ford declared a province-wide state of emergency March 17. They all now appear to be closed.

In Montreal, police were called to a synagogue after receiving a report that someone saw Hasidic men going inside, CTV reported.

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"Some wonder if this is too much, too fast, but in general the approach has been that, no, the best approach is just to shut down," said Daniel Cere, an associate professor of Religion, Law and Public Policy at McGill University in Montreal. 

"My impression is that on the whole, in Canada, the religious communities have fallen in line with the government on this."

'God will take care of your body'

One religious scholar in the U.S. attributes the defiance to a particular type of Christian teaching.

"There is this strand in modern American Christianity that has rejected the norms of science and medicine and that thinks health can be achieved through discourse with the divine, holy spirit," said Bradley Storin, director of religious studies at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge.

The philosophy is, he says: "If you are a good and true believer then God will take care of your body."

He's noted the church busing people in for services and passing out "anointed" handkerchiefs to people for protection. 

"What we see pastor Spell doing is giving way to this ancient tradition of linking faith in God with healing in the body," said Storin.

"It feels a little violative of the social compact that we have right now," said Storin.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Sylvia Thomson is a producer with the CBC in Toronto. She spent several years as a producer covering politics in Washington, D.C., and Ottawa and has covered major international stories.

With files from The Associated Press

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