God prefers parishioners who aren’t dead
In a surprising and reckless move, last week, the US Supreme Court sided with conservative religious groups in scrapping New York State’s Covid attendance limitations. As a religious leader, I strongly oppose that decision.
For those of us who work in religious institutions, there is no question that we deliver essential services, but my synagogue does not need to be physically open for that to be the case.
Congregations with integrity have understood that our most essential purpose is in saving and enhancing lives. We were alerted to some of the dangers unique to our ilk early on in the crisis, when a church choir rehearsal in Skagit County, WA led to the infection of 53 members.
There was something about a lot of people praying together that was getting them sick.
But despite this, there are some clergy who have led their congregations astray and into the pit of disease and death, by flouting protocols and reopening prematurely, sometimes even breaking the law, and encouraging their congregants to shun masks and spacing when it is common knowledge that crowded church services can be super-spreading events.
Like that Tampa, Florida pastor who was arrested in April for defying the authorities by holding services for hundreds of parishioners. Or the pastor in San Antonio, who later apologized for encouraging hugging at his church, resulting in at least 50 cases of the coronavirus. Or the Louisiana pastor who was arrested for defying stay-at-home orders after holding live services for hundreds of people. Or the church in Seoul, South Korea, that flouted regulations and was later found to be linked to more than 5,200 cases.
It’s a Jewish problem too. Like that super-spreader Hasidic funeral in Brooklyn that drew 2,500 people. And then there was Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky in Israel, who said that yeshiva students should stop being screened because “it could lead to a mass loss of Torah study.” Then he went on to contract the virus (and recover).
Or the pastor in Maine who, after officiating at a superspreader wedding, knowingly spread it to his congregation, defiantly mocking state and CDC guidelines, stating that God wants him to expose his people to disease. He said, “I want the people of God to enjoy liberty.”
Give me liberty, or give me breath!
Well, the God I pray to prefers parishioners who are not dead.
Or the thousands who attended a California megachurch, the Grace Community Church. Pastor John MacArthur defied a state order and 6,000 – 7,000 people showed up.
“We don’t orchestrate this, MacArthur said. “This is a church. We don’t ask people to make a reservation to come to church,” he said.
Well, maybe they should. Many do.
“We opened the doors,” he added, “because that’s what we are, we’re a church, and we’re going to trust those people to make adult decisions about the reality of their physical and spiritual health and how that balance works for each one of them,” he said. “Nobody’s forcing anything, they’re here because they want to be here.”
They apparently believe that God wants them to be sneezing all over each other.
They clearly did not read this passage from the Talmud, and perhaps the Supreme Court needs to read it too:
If there is plague in the city, gather your feet, i.e., limit the time you spend out of the house, as it is stated in the verse: “And none of you shall go out of the opening of his house until the morning.” (Bava Kamma 60b)
The Supreme Court is encouraging misguided clergy to do precisely the opposite, and to lead their trusting congregants off a cliff.
Leviticus 18 teaches:
וּשְׁמַרְתֶּם אֶת-חֻקֹּתַי וְאֶת-מִשְׁפָּטַי, אֲשֶׁר יַעֲשֶׂה אֹתָם הָאָדָם וָחַי בָּהֶם: אֲנִי, יְהוָה
Ye shall therefore keep My statutes, and My ordinances, which if a person do, they shall live by them: I am the LORD
We are told, regarding the mitzvot of the Torah, “V’chai bahem,” Life takes precedence over just about everything else in Jewish law, including Shabbat observance.
The Talmud teaches that Shabbat is holy only because we are alive to observe it. It isn’t holy in a vacuum. If a Shabbat falls in a forest and no one is there to observe it, it is irrelevant. If the coronavirus kills all of us, when Friday evening arrives, there will be no Shabbat. We “make Shabbos.” If we don’t make it, it doesn’t get made.
So preserving life takes precedence even over Shabbat observance. You are required to profane one Shabbat if that will enable you to live for many Shabbats to come.
The most essential service we can provide is to help people survive until next Shabbat — or to next March, or to whenever the vaccine brings immunity. Nothing else matters. All the rest is commentary.
With vaccines so close at hand, encouraging unnecessary risk by populating our places of worship prematurely is the equivalent of asking congregants to be like those thousands of unlucky soldiers who died on Armistice Day, when all seemed so serene on the Western Front.
We are all responsible to keep one another alive. Religion’s role is to remind us of that fact, imploring us to accept willingly and gratefully the public health advice of experts — even if it means our staying away from the pews for a while. The Supreme Court should do nothing to detract from that essential objective.
The God I pray to wants us to stay inside, while the pandemic rages on.
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I get results!
The US recorded over 3,100 COVID deaths in a single day yesterday, obliterating the record set last spring, while the number of Americans hospitalized with the virus has eclipsed 100,000 for the 1st time & new cases are topping 200,000 a day, according to figures released today.
The 3 benchmarks altogether showed a country slipping deeper into crisis, with perhaps the worst yet to come, in part due to delayed effects from Thanksgiving, when millions of Americans disregarded warnings to stay home.
Across the US, the surge has swamped hospitals with patients & left nurses shorthanded & burned out.
“The reality is Dec-Jan-Feb are going to be rough. I actually believe they're going to be the most difficult time in the public health history of this nation,” CDC head Dr. Robert Redfield said.
Health authorities warn the numbers could fluctuate strongly before & after Thanksgiving, as they often do around holidays, when because of reporting delays, figures often drop, then rise sharply a few days later as agencies catch up with the backlog.
Still, deaths, hospitalizations & cases in the US have been on a steady rise for weeks, sometimes breaking records for days on end.
The US recorded 3,157 deaths yesterday, according to Johns Hopkins University. That’s more than the number of people killed on 9/11 & it shattered the old mark of 2,603 set on Apr 15, when the New York metropolitan area was the epicenter.
The number of people in hospitals likewise set an all-time high yesterday. It's more than doubled over the past month.
The number of newly confirmed infections climbed to just over 200,000 yesterday for the 2nd time in less than a week.
Danger to Jews in the Emirates where Fressers romp around like little kids in a playground
The National Security Council issued a travel advisory today, warning Iran may try to attack American, Jewish & Israeli targets, citing recent threats by Iranian officials.
The NSC didn't specify the nature of the threats, but alluded to the assassination of top nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh over the weekend & to Tehran’s vows of revenge. US & Israeli officials don't have much comment on the killing.
The NSC advisory lists countries neighboring Iran as places Iranians could launch attacks — Georgia, Azerbaijan, Turkey, United Arab Emirates & Bahrain — as well as Iraqi Kurdistan, the Middle East in general & the entire African continent.
“In light of threats made recently by Iranian elements & given past involvement of Iranian elements in terrorist attacks in various countries, there's concern Iran will try to act in this manner,” the advisory said.
The statement also says “global jihadist orgs, special emphasis on Islamic State,” are “highly motivated” to launch global attacks following recent terrorist attacks in France, Austria & Germany.
“It’s possible part of the current wave of Islamist terror will reach targets identified with Israel or Jews” such as “synagogues, Kosher restaurants & Jewish museums,” the NSC said.
The statement mentions the Christmas period, calling it “attractive for hostile terrorist activity in Europe.”
Because of this, the NSC recommends those planning travel abroad “be more vigilant (near Western embassies, synagogues & Jewish institutions), obey security guidelines of local authorities, stay away from crowds & avoid unsecured public areas / govt buildings.”
Israel Foreign Ministry Director-general Alon Ushpiz wrote all diplomatic missions urging they be alert following the assassination of Fakhrizadeh, Tehran’s finger-pointing at Israel & vow of revenge.
Citing “events over the weekend,” Ushpiz called on missions to maintain “the highest possible preparedness for unusual activity near missions, homes of diplomatic families & Jewish community centers.”
Iranian agents & proxies have attacked Israeli or Jewish targets in the past, including embassies.
A 1992 bomb at the Israeli embassy in Argentina killed 29 people, in an attack traced to Iran. In 2012, Israeli diplomats were targeted in India, Georgia & Thailand.
Fakhrizadeh, the scientist heading Iran’s rogue nuclear weapons program, was killed in a military-style ambush Friday outside Tehran. The attack involved a truck bomb, gunmen & a remote control pick up armed with heavy weaponry, open fire on Fakhrizadeh.
The slaying threatens escalation between the US & Iran in the waning days of President Trump’s term. The Pentagon announced it sent the USS Nimitz aircraft carrier back to the Mideast.
The attack came just days before the 10-year anniversary of the killing of Iranian nuclear scientist Majid Shahriari, which Tehran blames on Israel. Other targeted killings happened at the time the Stuxnet computer virus, believed to be an American-Israeli creation, destroyed Iranian centrifuges.
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