Written by: Evangelical Focus
Article source: evangelicalfocus.com

Churches in Ireland are celebrating the ability to gather again, after new Covid-19 rules allowed religious groups to bring together up to 50 people.

The updated measures announced by the government came into effect on Monday 10 May and some evangelical churches did not wait until Sunday to celebrate their first gatherings, as Evangelical Alliance Ireland director Nick Park said a in a video message.

Small groups and social distancing limited the experience. “Yes, some things are not the same as fourteen months ago. Numbers are not the same, we are wearing masks, we cannot hug one another, we cannot take coffee together after the service”, Park said.

“And yet, God has done something wonderful in the life of the church in these last months, it has not all been negative. God has enabled His church to increase in prayer. God has enabled His church to be more intentional in the matter of giving, and in our reach, reaching people even beyond the borders of our land”.

Strong restrictions
Ireland has been one of the countries with strongest restrictions in Europe. Since the first lockdown in mid-March 2020, worship places had only been able to open for 14 weeks.

With 250,000 cases and nearly 5,000 deaths, the 5 million country went through a dangerous Covid-19 ‘second wave’ in January and February.

With the new rules, the re-opening of church buildings is only permitted for worship services. In addition to the limit to the number of attendants, there are restrictions on congregational singing.

Protests of church leaders
One month ago, evangelical leaders in the Dublin area wrote a letter to the national government denouncing the “criminalising of gathered church worship”. They asked the authorities “to understand that Christian worship is intrinsically corporate – an act of the gathered church. This lies at the very heart of how Christianity is practised”.

According to the signatories, “private, personal devotion at home does not constitute the church’s worship. Therefore, to criminalise gathered worship is effectively to criminalise the practise of the Christian religion”.

Also the Roman Catholic Church, Ireland’s largest religious institution, protested in recent weeks against measures that legal experts considered to be disproportionate as well.

It is estimated that evangelical Christians represent 1.6% of Ireland’s population.

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Date published: 21/05/2021
Feature image: Image for illustrative purposes only. A street in Dublin, Ireland. Credit – Conor Luddy, Unsplash CC0.

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