No hugs, handshakes as U.S. churches take new precautions against
coronavirus
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[March 09, 2020]
By Rich McKay
ATLANTA (Reuters) - With a wide smile and
arms outstretched, but quickly dropped into double elbow bumps, James
Harper warmly greets fellow congregants at Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic
Church on Sunday in Atlanta's Old Fourth Ward neighborhood.
"We're all tight here," said Harper, 51, a salesman. "Normally it's
nothing but deep hugs. But it's a different day now."
Churches across the United States are advising parishioners to avoid
direct contact with fellow members as an oft-reiterated warning against
spreading the coronavirus, which emerged in China last year and causes
the sometimes deadly respiratory illness COVID-19.
At least 19 people have died out of about 450 reported cases in the
United States. The outbreak has killed more than 3,600 worldwide.
Reverend Jeffery Ott, pastor of Our Lady of Lourdes, said that the
biggest change on Sunday was omitting the ceremonial sharing of wine in
the common cup, or chalice, during the Holy Communion service, as well
as receiving the wafer or bread in the hand only, not the mouth.
"Traditionalist may want the service, but this is not just the flu," he
said. "We are all responsible to stop the spread."
The instructions, now widespread across archdioceses across the nation,
involve changes to relatively new ceremonies, such as the exchange of
peace, which was introduced in the 1960s, as well as age-old traditions
such as Holy Communion that are at the core of Catholic ritual.
Thomas Groome, a professor of theology at Boston College and a former
priest, said the new measures show how seriously the church is taking
the risks of coronavirus.
"All of these things are traditions that many are sentimental about," he
said. "But none of these symbols are essentials to the church."
Traditionally Catholics embrace or shake hands during the so-called
"exchange of peace" while repeating the greeting "peace be with you."
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Parishioners raise their hands, rather than engaging in the
tradition of holding hands, during the saying of the Our Father
prayer, as a precaution against the coronavirus at Our Lady of
Lourdes Catholic church in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. March 8, 2020.
REUTERS/Christopher Aluka Berry
But the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Atlanta is one of many that
have told parishes to discourage physical contact during the ritual,
which is designed to remind worshippers they are members of a
community. Some dioceses want the "peace" ceremony eliminated all
together until the coronavirus outbreak abates.
As an alternative to touching, the Archdiocese of New York is
encouraging worshippers to wave at fellow parishioners during the
greeting, said Joseph Zwilling, a spokesman for the archdiocese.
Groome said that at his church in Boston, the congregation nods or
trades fist-bumps.
"This is the responsible thing to do," he said.
In the Archdiocese of Miami, churches have been urged to empty the
holy water fonts at the church doors as a precaution. When entering
a church, many Catholics dip their fingers in the fonts and make the
sign of the cross with the water which a priest had blessed. Experts
say it is an obvious conduit for infection.
Keeping people healthy is more important than tradition, Reverend
Ott said.
"Some of our older members might not like the changes but we have to
be responsible," he said.
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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