Clergy to scofflaw churches: repent

Letter admonishes pastors for breaking COVID-19 restrictions

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A group of Manitoba clergy has signed an open letter to Springs Church pastor Leon Fontaine calling on him to repent of his actions for holding drive-in church services in contravention of public health orders.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 05/12/2020 (1437 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

A group of Manitoba clergy has signed an open letter to Springs Church pastor Leon Fontaine calling on him to repent of his actions for holding drive-in church services in contravention of public health orders.

At the same time, it asks him to “publicly apologize for putting your individual right to worship ahead of the good of our community.”

The letter, which states it is also intended for the Church of God Restoration near Steinbach, goes on to ask Fontaine to “publicly encourage your church members to remain at home and worship online while public health restrictions remain in place,” and to cease all legal action against the province.

Springs Church lost a court battle over its drive-in services Saturday, and Sunday became the recipient of a scathing letter from other churches urging it to respect the COVID-19 restrictions. (Daniel Crump / Winnipeg Free Press)
Springs Church lost a court battle over its drive-in services Saturday, and Sunday became the recipient of a scathing letter from other churches urging it to respect the COVID-19 restrictions. (Daniel Crump / Winnipeg Free Press)

Any donations collected by the church for its defence fund should be donated to Manitoba Harvest, the letter adds.

“We find that your actions during the past days of encouraging Christians to disobey public health orders in the name of freedom are not an example of following Christ,” it states, adding “We find that your insistence on the right to worship is not in keeping with Christ’s command to love our neighbour.”

The letter was initiated by Erik Parker, pastor of Sherwood Park Lutheran Church in East Kildonan.

Parker, who has family members and members of his church who have contracted COVID-19, wrote the letter because he thinks Fontaine and his church are “disconnected from the reality” of the virus, which has caused so much grief and death in the province and beyond.

“They are saying the rules don’t apply to us,” he said, adding “they are looking for loopholes” in the public health orders.

“Rather than try to keep others safe, they are trying to live their lives the way they want them to be,” he said. “They are putting themselves above the community.”

Parker is not sympathetic to the argument that drive-in church is just like going to Costco.

“You have to go to Costco to get food to eat,” he said. “You don’t need to be at church in person or in your car.”

“Rather than try to keep others safe, they are trying to live their lives the way they want them to be. They are putting themselves above the community.” – Erik Parker, pastor of Sherwood Park Lutheran Church

Springs doesn’t represent the majority of churches in Manitoba, he said.

“Springs has quite a megaphone,” he said. “They can make it seem like they are speaking for all Christians. But what they are doing is wrong and selfish.”

So far 18 clergy from Lutheran, Anglican and United churches have signed the letter; Parker hopes more will sign by e-mailing pastor@sherpark.ca

 

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John Longhurst

John Longhurst
Faith reporter

John Longhurst has been writing for Winnipeg's faith pages since 2003. He also writes for Religion News Service in the U.S., and blogs about the media, marketing and communications at Making the News.

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History

Updated on Sunday, December 6, 2020 10:20 PM CST: Fixes type

Updated on Monday, December 7, 2020 8:03 AM CST: Link to letter added.

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