Massimo Faggioli, NCR – Coronavirus, social distancing and the company of the faith

https://www.ncronline.org/news/opinion/coronavirus-social-distancing-and-company-faith

by Massimo Faggioli

Mar 13, 2020

“If you have a diary, keep writing it. If you don’t have a diary, begin one. This is an extraordinary moment.” This is what I told my undergraduate students at the beginning of our last non-virtual, in-person class March 11, just before the five- week break decided by Villanova University.

This is an extraordinary moment for the world as well as for the church. In some sense, it is truly unprecedented for the impact it is having on religious life, not only on the Catholic Church. On March 12 the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints decided to cancel all meetings worldwide.

In this moment of life-and-death health crisis, the perception can be of the final blow struck against a religious tradition already in decline, an emergency used opportunistically by secular and political authorities to forever marginalize religion exactly when it is needed the most. But this would be a self-serving and ideological analysis.

Observing what has happened to Italy in the last two weeks and what is happening in many areas of the U.S., one cannot fail to take notice of the state of suspension of every public liturgical activity of the church. In Italy the prohibition to celebrate all Masses has come from the government, and has been accepted quickly and without hesitation by church authorities.

Some important Italian Catholic progressive intellectuals wrote in op-eds that the bishops accepted it too quickly. But that was in an early stage of this emergency: there is a consensus both in the Italian church and in the Vatican that these draconian measures are absolutely necessary. But Italy has lived since 1945 in a quiet entente between church and state. I am curious to see how this will play out in the U.S., given the very di!erent historical and constitutional relations between church and state.

In many countries now the liturgy (in Greek: action of the people) is suspended for the sake of the people. This could last for weeks or months, into the Easter celebrations and possibly until the season of first Communions (our daughter is among those included) and Pentecost. There are examples of suspension of Masses in some plague-stricken areas in the past, but not yet many examples (like in Italy and now Malta) of nation-wide total bans of the celebration of Mass for weeks.

What does it mean for the community not to gather for Mass for some weeks? In the last few years, it has become evident the virtualization of the religious experience (on media and social media) at the expense of the truly sacramental in its physicality. The suspension of sacramentality entails a detachment from the ‘stu!y’ character of Catholicism: the bells, the smells, all the works. It is a kind of liturgical fast.

The good thing is that this forced suspension of the participation to the liturgy of the church could make us feel the need for a de-virtualization. On the other hand, the danger is that the tension created by this deep and prolonged scare is endangering social connections (with co-parishioners, with other parents at the Catholic school, with neighbors and colleagues) that are already frail and di”cult to develop in normal times (this is something I noticed and continue to notice after 12 years in the United States).

This suspension of the celebration of the Mass could also have ecclesiological consequences, that is, on the way Catholics conceive and imagine the church. The pope being the only one celebrating Mass in public in Italy every day (via internet from the chapel in the residence of Santa Marta) is elevating the papacy to levels that not even the Ultramontanist majority at Vatican I, the council that declared papal primacy and infallibility, could imagine.

On the other hand, if you have watched it, you have noticed that it is a down-to-earth Mass, in Italian, in the rite of Vatican II (not the Latin pre-Vatican II Mass), and very much like the average weekday Mass with its sparse congregation, the sometimes truly bad singing, without the script and theatricality of papal masses in St. Peter’s or during apostolic trips. It is, in its own unintentional way, a contribution to the debate (stronger in the English-speaking world than anywhere else) on the liturgical reform of Vatican II and the wishes for a neo-traditionalist “reform of the reform.”

A barber reads a newspaper in his empty shop in Rome March 10. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

But I have to confess: I hope that once this emergency passes, the broadcast of the daily celebration of the Mass by Francis will not continue, or that it will become superfluous. In a synodal church that tries to become more missionary by being all-ministerial, the identification of the pope as “celebrant-in-chief” could have long-term side e!ects contrary to Francis’ vision for the future of the

Evangelii Gaudium ‘to the extreme’

Rome’s churches were ordered closed by the papal vicar for the Rome diocese March 12. But the order was modified March 13, to allow pastors to open their churches, if they did so with care to limit people’s contact with one another.

It remains to be seen how this reversal will a!ect the Italian bishops’ conference’s recommendation that individual bishops order the closure of all churches in Italy until at least March 25. (Some regional bishops’ conferences, like Lombardy, had not accepted that recommendation.)

A delivery driver transfers groceries from a shopping cart to a motorbike outside a supermarket in Rome March 11. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

This situation is in some sense taking to an extreme Francis’ invitation to the church, since his first major document, November 2013’s Evangelii Gaudium, to “go forth” and leave the comfort zone of the sacristy behind. Francis’ “field hospital” church now has to support the literal field-hospital, war-like situation that some hospitals in Northern Italy, among the best in the world, are facing.

This situation is putting some Catholics o!-balance: those who want to play catacombs, to role-play the persecution during the Roman Empire and celebrate clandestine Masses in a rejection of the government decree as if it was motivated by anti-Catholic sentiment. As if the prime minister, Giuseppe Conte, were not a Catholic and also a devout follower of Padre Pio.

But this is creating some terminological di”culties also for those who continue to describe Masses celebrated without the assembly as “private Masses,” when it is clear that every Mass is public by definition, whether the people is present or not.

This global health crisis, which is accelerating in some countries political and constitutional crises (in the U.S. especially), is forcing upon us hard rethinking of important concepts that have reshaped the theological conversation in the last few years.

What is the meaning of vulnerability and how di!erent can it be in di!erent countries and societies? Vulnerability is di!erent, during a pandemic, between a country where there is a strong public health care system (like in Italy) and a country (like the U.S.) where the public health care system plays a supporting role to private, for-profit health care providers.

What does it mean to practice radical hospitality in the time of a pandemic? How true is that we see ourselves as one people of God if we don’t measure everything we do against the needs of the weakest among us?

This crisis could be an opportunity to rediscover the wisdom of Catholic social doctrine, especially concerning universal access to health care as a fundamental right, but also the role of government regulations for the sake of the common good. We will see who among the episcopates and other Catholic leaders will be receptive to this challenge.

What is being forced upon them and us is something else. The first, most measurable e!ect of the crisis is the redrawing of the boundaries not only between persons, but also between church and state: in Italy for now, but soon in other countries a!ected by the virus. The debates of the last few years about liberalism and Catholic anti-liberalism are now moot or at least have aged very rapidly.

It is not liberalism that has made some countries (like the U.S.) weaker than others in responding to this emergency by sidelining scientists and downplaying their role in advising political leaders. It is certainly not the anti-liberalism that we know that can put science in charge of giving advice to politicians.

A waiter wearing a mask for protection from the coronavirus serves a table at a restaurant near the Vatican in Rome March 11.

The real e!ect, measurable already in Italy, is the e!ect in terms of limits to religious liberty. In order to protect the elderly and the vulnerable, there are limits to the freedom of worship — and the state does not consider heroic your will to become a martyr of the coronavirus if you put other people’s lives in danger by risking to spread the infection.

In cases of an emergency like this, it has become clear who is in charge (governments) and who is taking orders (the churches, among others). This is another episode in the history of biopolitics as the most important force behind the reshaping of the relations between church and state: the 20th century wars, the changes in sexual morality, the medicalization of all stages of life from conception to death, and the post-9/11 national security state. Now it’s the turn of this global pandemic.

National governments are weaker than they used to be, but less weak than the churches. When it is about protecting the common good, national governments are the authority — or at least, they are expected to be, somewhat in vain. There are countries where the role of public authorities is still taken seriously. We will see what happens in Trump’s U.S., where the collapse of the authority and credibility of political leaders is not entirely di!erent from the collapse of trust in church leaders. It is a test for both of them. Catholics expect words of meaning that can o!set the daily diet of lies and deception, especially in an election year.

But there is something that does not depend on the presidents, the prime ministers, or the bishops. This moment is also revealing some deep dimensions of the Christian faith.

The video this week of Cardinal Angelo Comastri, the vicar general of Vatican City, leading the prayer of the Angelus and the Holy Rosary with some faithful at the Altar of the Chair in St. Peter’s Basilica struck me.

There was a Roman cardinal, all alone, standing before a very simple chair, with a few people sitting behind him, in a basilica as empty as never before: an icon of the moments of stark loneliness of the believer in the secular world, but always in the company of the faith and of other faithful, sparsely but ever present, somewhere congregated.

[Massimo Faggioli is a professor in the Department of Theology and Religious Studies at Villanova University.]

coronavirus-social-distancing-and-the-company-of-the-faith-national-catholic-.pdf

Chiesa ortodossa russa: allerta sul coronavirus, la comunione, il bacio dell’icona

chiesa-ortodossa-russa-allerta-sul-coronavirus-la-comunione-il-bacio-delle28099icona-1.pdf

AsiaNews.it – 13 marzo 2020

Chiesa ortodossa russa: allerta sul coronavirus, la comunione, il bacio dell’icona

di Vladimir Rozanskij

Indicazioni del Sinodo del patriarcato di Mosca: disinfettare le icone, baciate per devozione; attenzione alle bevande benedette. Per alcuni sacerdoti, la comunione, essendo segno dell’amore di Dio, non può portarci la malattia e la morte. Più cauta la Chiesa greca. Le lunghe file per baciare le reliquie di san Giovanni Battista a San Pietroburgo. Ma la Russia è più preoccupata della “corona” di Putin.

Mosca (AsiaNews) – Anche il Patriarcato di Mosca ha deciso di raccomandare ai propri fedeli il rispetto di alcune norme di comportamento di fronte alla diffusione del coronavirus. La Russia appare in realtà piuttosto immune dalla diffusione del virus, registrando poche decine di casi. Qualcuno sospetta che forse il governo non diffonde statistiche credibili.

L’interesse del Paese è rivolto piuttosto a un’altra “corona”, quella presidenziale, legata all’approvazione delle varie modifiche alla Costituzione e soprattutto alla proposta della deputata Valentina Tereshkova (la prima donna astronauta), che alla fine delle discussioni sulla carta costituzionale ha proposto di annullare le limitazioni di legge a tutti i precedenti mandati di Vladimir Putin, “per assicurare stabilità al Paese”. Il presidente della Duma, Vjačeslav Volodin, ha subito appoggiato la proposta, chiedendo ai parlamentari di difendere Putin come “prerogativa ed eccellenza” della Russia. Lo stesso presidente ha accettato la proposta, rivelando la vera finalità di tutte le manovre costituzionali: rimanere al potere in ogni modo. Con le nuove tempistiche, egli potrebbe rimanere presidente fino al 2036, avvicinandosi ai record di Ivan il Terribile (50 anni di regno) e di Pietro il Grande (40 anni).

Il Sinodo patriarcale si è comunque riunito l’11 marzo, rilasciando una dichiarazione in cui si esprimono le “condoglianze per i parenti e i congiunti delle vittime del coronavirus in Cina, Sud Corea, Iran, Italia, Francia, Germania, Spagna e negli altri Stati”. Benedicendo l’opera dei medici e dei volontari, il sinodo ricorda che “durante le epidemie la Chiesa ortodossa russa ha sempre adempiuto al proprio ministero di testimonianza, non rifiutando a nessuno l’assistenza spirituale e la piena partecipazione ai sacramenti”. Si invita alla moderazione e al buon senso, mantenendo la “tranquillità nella preghiera” senza cedere al panico e ai timori per la diffusione della pandemia.

Si raccomanda di “osservare in modo coerente e inflessibile le misure igienico-sanitarie di carattere profilattico nelle parrocchie e nei monasteri, soprattutto nelle regioni dove le condizioni epidemiologiche sono ufficialmente riconosciute come critiche, usando soluzioni per disinfettare le icone esposte alla venerazione, che i fedeli baciano inchinandosi, e di utilizzare bicchieri monouso per le bevande di devozione”. Nei riti ortodossi, a parte la comunione eucaristica, è infatti d’uso l’assunzione di acqua e vino benedetti, come partecipazione devota alla liturgia comunitaria.

Proprio il rito della comunione eucaristica crea parecchie perplessità, molto discusse in questi giorni, sulle quali il Sinodo ha deciso di sorvolare. I fedeli ortodossi ricevono l’Eucarestia sotto forma di frammenti di pane intinti nel vino, e distribuiti ai fedeli con un cucchiaio dorato dalle mani del sacerdote direttamente in bocca, mentre i diaconi asciugano il viso del comunicando con manutergi rossi (del colore del vino). Chi non riceve la comunione (per la quale è obbligatorio confessarsi durante la liturgia), cioè la maggioranza dei fedeli, si limita a bere l’acqua e vino benedetti ai lati dell’altare. Tutte queste procedure ora creano apprensione, e i fedeli che decidono di accedere alla consumazione sacramentale e di devozione sono sempre di meno.

Alcuni sacerdoti, come l’archimandrita Filipp (Rjabikh), rappresentante della Chiesa russa presso le istituzioni europee a Strasburgo, ritengono che “anche se è terribile ammalarsi di questo grave virus, che può portare anche a un esito letale, sarebbe ancora più grave se per questo ci privassimo della sacra comunione o della stessa liturgia, il grande dono di Dio”. Padre Filipp ha ricordato le parole dei padri della Chiesa, secondo i quali “il mondo si regge sulla celebrazione della liturgia e dell’eucarestia”, e ha paragonato la chiusura delle chiese di questi giorni con il periodo sovietico, quando le chiese venivano chiuse o distrutte dal regime.

Anche la Chiesa ortodossa greca, nella riunione del Sinodo del 9 marzo, aveva dichiarato che “la Santa Comunione non può essere causa di trasmissione del coronavirus, perché è una consegna della persona nelle mani di Dio e una manifestazione del Suo amore”. È anche vero che, rispetto ai russi, i greci sono meno “impositivi” nel gesto sacramentale lasciando piuttosto ai fedeli la possibilità di adeguare il cucchiaio all’assunzione del pane e del vino consacrati, come avviene anche nella Chiesa Copta. I Vecchio-Credenti, l’antica Chiesa russa tradizionalista, ha invece ammonito sul rischio di infezione all’atto della comunione, invocando misure più severe fino alla sospensione delle celebrazioni liturgiche.

A San Pietroburgo, senza curarsi dei rischi di infezione, masse di fedeli si recano in questi giorni alla cattedrale della Madonna di Kazan, al centro della” capitale del nord”, dove sono esposte le reliquie di San Giovanni Battista (v. foto). Migliaia di persone si accalcano nelle file fuori e dentro la chiesa, per giungere infine a baciare le reliquie, atto certamente devoto e forse salvifico, ma sicuramente assai poco igienico in periodo di coronavirus.

COVID-19 Upends American Religious Life

With Easter, Passover and Ramadan approaching, religious leaders from Kentucky to New York prepare for new ways of worship.

https://www.usnews.com/news/national-news/articles/2020-03-13/americas-religious-communities-confront-coronavirus

https://www.usnews.com/news/national-news/articles/2020-03-13/americas-religious-communities-confront-coronavirus

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints suspends worldwide public worships and meetings

https://newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/gatherings-worldwide-temporarily-suspended

The First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints sent the following letter March 12, 2020, to Church members worldwide. 

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

As promised in our letter of March 11, 2020, we continue to monitor the changing conditions related to COVID-19 throughout the world. We have considered the counsel of local Church leaders, government officials and medical professionals, and have sought the Lord’s guidance in these matters. We now provide the following updated directions.

Beginning immediately, all public gatherings of Church members are being temporarily suspended worldwide until further notice. This includes:

  • Stake conferences, leadership conferences and other large gatherings
  • All public worship services, including sacrament meetings
  • Branch, ward and stake activities

Where possible, please conduct any essential leadership meetings via technology. Specific questions may be referred to local priesthood leaders. Further direction related to other matters will be provided.

Bishops should counsel with their stake president to determine how to make the sacrament available to members at least once a month.

We encourage members in their ministering efforts to care for one another. We should follow the Savior’s example to bless and lift others.

We bear our witness of the Lord’s love during this time of uncertainty. He will bless you to find joy as you do your best to live the gospel of Jesus Christ in every circumstance.

Sincerely,

The First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve Apostles

CNN – How religious communities are modifying traditions to prevent coronavirus spread

When Episcopal congregants receive Holy Communion this weekend, many of them may choose not to dip the consecrated bread into the single, shared chalice. Some Catholic churches simply won’t be using the cup during communion. And when worshippers of both traditions exchange the sign of peace, they’ll wave or bump elbows instead of the typical handshakes or hugs.
Those are just a handful of the precautions that the 
Episcopal Diocese of Chicagoand the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago are each taking to help prevent the spread of coronavirus in their congregations. Both institutions have issued guidelines to clergy, priests and other congregation leaders as more cases of coronavirus are identified across their region. 
And as coronavirus continues to spread around the world, religious leaders across several faith traditions are modifying practices and adjusting services.Churches are offering mass online and on TV. Synagogues may stream readings of the Scroll of Esther for Purim. Muslim pilgrimages of Umrah are temporarily suspended. 
Here’s a look at some of the ways that religions are adapting to the threat of coronavirus.
Christianity
In Bethlehem, doors are closed at the Church of the Nativity, considered the birthplace of Jesus. And across Manger Square, the Omar Ben Khatab mosque stands empty as well.


The Church of the Nativity, regarded as the birthplace of Jesus, is closed over fears of coronavirus.
Instead of giving his weekly Sunday greeting at the window in St. Peter’s Square in Rome, Pope Francis delivered the Angelus prayer via video link.”We do this so that the close concentration of people won’t spread the virus,” the Pope said Sunday. He used his address to pray for those suffering from the outbreak and for those who are helping them. 
The Pope appeared briefly at the window to bless a small number of people gathered in St. Peter’s Square.
The Pope’s weekly Wednesday audience will also be via video link, the Vatican said in a statement Saturday, and all public participation in his weekday private mass has been canceled through March 15.
Vatican City reported its first coronavirus case on Friday, and the Vatican dispelled reports that Pope Francis had been tested for coronavirus, saying he only had a cold. Meanwhile, churches in many cities in the north of Italy — including Bologna, Turin, and Venice — suspended their Ash Wednesday services, with some offering masses online or on local television.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has closed several temples and limited or temporarily suspended gatherings in Hong Kong, Mongolia, South Korea, Japan and Seattle. 
The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)’s Office of Theology and Worship has assured worshippers that they can decide to limit church participation, or not, without fear of judgment. It also encouraged people who decide to stay home because they are sick to engage in other ways, including prayer circles, small groups and social media.
“I think it’s a way to stave off a sense of panic or too much alarm,” Jeffrey Lee, Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese in Chicago, told CNN. “Knowing that there are things we can do is powerful for people in church or out of church.”
Judaism
Next week is Purim, one of the most festive and joyous holidays of the year, often marked by feasts, parties and parades. Given the outbreak in some communities, Jewish leaders are making tough calls on whether they will be able to adjust some of the usual traditions — or whether they’ll have to scrap them altogether. 


Israel’s Ministry of Health has banned large community events and mass gatherings of more than 5,000 people, meaning many cities have had to cancel their Purim celebrations.
Other traditions are being affected too.
Jewish law requires that one hear a reading of the Scroll of Esther, or the Megillah, out loud on Purim. Synagogues that have either closed down due to the virus or have suspended large gatherings are now grappling with how their congregants can still fulfill that obligation. 
The Rabinnical Assembly, the international association of Conservative rabbis, has issued guidelines that suggest congregations could stream the reading. 
It’s an option that Congregation Beth Shalom, a Conservative synagogue in Seattle, is looking into, according to board president Norbert Sorg. The synagogue has canceled large gatherings for the time being, including Shabbat services on Friday nights and Saturday mornings.
Besides the reading, other Purim customs include gifting food to friends and neighbors and giving charity to those in need. 
At Young Israel of New Rochelle, an Orthodox synagogue in a New York City suburb, it’s tradition to go out and distribute cash to the poor, said Samuel Heilman, one of the synagogue’s congregants. But that won’t happen this year. 

Young Israel of New Rochelle has been closed and several of its congregants are in quarantine after a member of the community tested positive for coronavirus. 
The synagogue is closed after a member of the community tested positive for coronavirus. And several of its congregants, including Heilman and his wife Ellin Heilman, are under self-quarantine.


“Purim is pretty much going to be a washout this year,” Heilman said.
Islam
Muslims at the Islamic Center of Southern California are asked not to embrace or kiss each other on the cheek, but rather place a hand over their hearts, give a respectful nod or flash a warm smile. 
Members of the community have been advised to wash their hands often and keep their distance from others, and hand sanitizer stations have been installed for use as people enter and exit the mosque.

Workers clean the inside of Mecca’s Grand Mosque on Thursday after Saudi Arabia emptied the holy site due to coronavirus fears. 
California has seen at least 49 cases, and officials are warning that more are likely. 
The Islamic Center of Southern California hasn’t yet canceled services or urged people to pray at home. For now, they’re waiting to see how the situation evolves. But it is something they’re considering, according to spokesman Omar Ricci.
“We’re just trying to stay ahead of things and I think a big part of this is messaging to the community,” Ricci said. “If they see that the Islamic Center is on top of it and actively looking at things, I think that will give them a comfort level about us making some good choices. I think the important thing is that we don’t overreact or underreact as things evolve.”
Elsewhere in the world, communities are taking things a step further.
Saudi Arabia, which draws millions of faithful visitors each year, has temporarily suspended foreigners from coming to the kingdom for Umrah, a pilgrimage to visit Islam’s holiest sites that can be taken at any time of the year.



Tajikstan, which has not yet reported any coronavirus cases, has suspended Friday prayers, the most important congregation of the week. The United Arab Emirates’ Sharia Council issued a fatwa banning people who are sick from attending prayers and services.
Hinduism
India’s Prime Minister Narenda Modi said he won’t attend next week’s Holi celebrations — the Hindu festival that marks the coming of spring and involves revelers throwing brightly colored powder — because of the guidance to avoid large gatherings. The country’s authorities have also advised states to avoid mass gatherings too. 
In the UK and Europe, all events and religious assemblies at BAPS Swaminarayan mandirs have been canceled or postponed until further notice. Other forms of worship are still available to devotees. People can visit mandirs for darshan, the viewing of deities; arti, the ceremony of light; and abhishek, the practice of pouring water over the image of God. 
But the organization is encouraging people to avoid non-essential travel.
For those who want to avoid travel but continue to worship, the BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir in London says people can engage in daily darshan on its website.
Sikhism
Gurdwara Aid, a UK-based organization that assists Sikh gurdwaras, has advisedthat gurdwaras increase their cleaning schedules in communal areas and make hand sanitizer and tissues widely available.
The Sikh Coalition has also released recommendations for gurdwaras, including that communities take extra care in preparing and distributing langar (free meals) and parshad (halva) offered to visitors. The organization advised that both should only be served after proper hand hygiene and urged gurdwaras to consider using utensils to serve parshad, which is traditionally served by hand.
The North American Sikh Medical and Dental Association, along with other Sikh organizations, have issued guidance for gurdwaras in both English and Punjabi
Buddhism
In Hong Kong, the Fook Wai Ching She Buddhist temple has been closed as authorities investigate a cluster of coronavirus cases linked to it.
The Cultural Corps of Korean Buddhism announced it would suspend until March 20 its Templestay program, which allows participants to experience monastic Buddhist life at 137 temples around South Korea. 
More changes may come
Many of the religious leaders making the decisions to close houses of worship, ban large gatherings or modify their traditions acknowledge that their actions may be seen as disappointing or overcautious to some.
It remains to be seen how widespread the virus will become in many communities. The measures these institutions have in place are good for now, but there’s no telling how long they will keep having to make adjustments. That, for now, is the big question.

CNN will update this piece as we learn about more measures religious institutions are taking.
<a href="https://diresom.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/how-religious-communities-are-modifying-traditions-to-prevent-coronavirus-spread-cnn-1.pdf&quot;

Religious conservatives are blaming gay people for coronavirus

Why faith communities are key partners in planning for a coronavirus outbreak