Dear friends – I write to you as the rector of a County Kildare
parish within the commuter belt of Dublin
city and the Diocese of Dublin and Glendalough. This weekend I took the
difficult decision to close all of our churches until the end of the month or
indeed until advised that the current Coronavirus threat has passed. This was
not an easy decision and not one I took lightly but I did it because I was
conscious that ANY public gathering increases the risk of spreading infection
within the community.
It is not just those who might attend church that are
vulnerable but everyone they subsequently interface with which will inevitably
include the aged and the immuno-compromised. I like many in the Church of Ireland am rector of a parish where the
age profile is very high and so a significant number of my parishioners are in
a category (80+) where if they catch the virus, one in eight of them will likely
die! Please dwell on that for a moment! These are people who have served our
church all their lives and have sustained it through thick and thin and now we
are wilfully risking them these precious twilight years! This is
not a chance I am willing to take! In addition to this I have a number of
recovering cancer patients, transplant patients and those with respiratory
issues who are extremely vulnerable to this virus.
And I am also conscious that it is not just my parishioners
that I have a responsibility towards but also those in the wider community – My
church is part of that community and if we are negligent we risk not only our
own health but also those who we interface with in our daily lives and we have
an equal duty of care to them.
I am aware that the Government in neither jurisdictions has
demanded that we close and so those churches that remain open are not in breach
of the law but that does not mean that there is no moral imperative to do
otherwise!
Is our piety really more important than the health of the
most vulnerable members of society?
Do we believe in a God who demands that we sacrifice the
vulnerable in order to maintain public worship during a temporary crisis such
as this?
If we can say hand on heart that continuing public worship
will not increase the risk of infection then all is well but the reality is we
cannot and all is not well! This is a chance for those of us of religious faith
(no matter what creed or denomination) to stand up for the vulnerable – It’s in
the Gospels as far as I recollect…….
NB: I am aware that the bishops of Cashel, Ferns &
Ossary & Limerick & Killaloe Dioceses
have advised church closures and welcome the wisdom of their respective
decisions
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