Thursday, April 02, 2020

Close church at Easter?

Is the closing of our church services a religious liberty issue?  Well, no. 

Let’s parse this situation.  First, coronavirus is not a respecter of persons.  In the same way that the rain falls on both the just and unjust, this disease has impacted over 180 countries with more than 46, 000 deaths.  Men, women, children have died.  The preponderance, yes, are older people with health issues.  They are not more likely to contract the disease.  They, make that we, are more likely to succumb to the disease. 

The governing bodies that are mandating the closure of church are not respecters of persons either.  March Madness was closed down; the NBA was cancelled...and baseball is not happening.  Concerts and theater are not happening.  You can’t go to the movie; you can’t visit many parks.  No, this is not a religious liberty issue.  It is a social necessity issue. 

The biblical mandate is that we should be obedient to the governing authority.  13 Submit to every human authority because of the Lord, whether to the emperor[a] as the supreme authority 14 or to governors as those sent out by him to punish those who do what is evil and to praise those who do what is good. 15 For it is God’s will that you silence the ignorance of foolish people by doing good. 16 Submit as free people, not using your freedom as a cover-up for evil, but as God’s slaves. (1 Pt. 2: 13-16) 

This is even more important for the church to not only be obedient to the governing authority but to demonstrate redemptive leadership.  This leadership is imminently practical for local congregations.  In 1948, an American writer named Shirley Jackson published a bombshell story in which a village participated in an annual ritual where the community selected by lottery which one person among them would be stoned to death.  Gathering in light of the virulence of the coronavirus is the modern version.  Yet, our lottery has the chance to kill more than one and to concentrate its force on the seniors.  Imagine a church business meeting where we vote who we’ll kill.  Continuing our gatherings in the current environment may not be quite that forceful, but it is the lottery!  What level of risk should we run towards one another? 

But, the risk goes beyond the risk to ourselves.  If we, by gathering, carry the virus into our homes and our essential businesses, we cease to be salt and light and turn ourselves into instruments of destruction.  That is opposite to our mandate. 

We need to remember our mission among the world.  We are to : 5 Act wisely toward outsiders, making the most of the time. 6 Let your speech always be gracious, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how you should answer each person. Colossians 4:5-6 (CSB)  Our answer to those who are outside needs to be consistent of our care for them, spiritually, but also physically.  

The greatest enemy of mankind is not a new mutation of coronavirus.  The greatest enemy of mankind is sin and its corollary, death.  That enemy has been stripped of its power.  We are entering into the annual celebration of that great defeat.  Palm Sunday ushered in that final week of Christ’s earthly life ending in the sacrificial victory of the Cross.  Jesus stepped out into the white-hot radiation of mankinds sin and death.   He obliterated it by the power of His holiness and death and then at the prophesied time took life back up again.  Holy Week coincides with the beginning of the American apex of COVID-19. We have never had a better time to witness to His reality and resurrection than now: not by our normal public celebrations of Resurrection but by private prayer and worship coupled with statements of faith mindful of this dangerous day.  

3 comments:

Unknown said...

Thanks Don!

THe next verse - v17 of 1 Peter 2 - wraps it up nicely and each phrase can be a point for us to follow in the present situation...

17 Honor all people, love the brotherhood, fear God, honor the king.

Unknown said...

100% agreement.
We should be "salt and light" We should be leading the charge for civil responsibility.

Unknown said...

So true and the Lord gave us the the Spirit of wisdom

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