
Faith Crisis Amid Health Crisis: Catholics Need the Mass to Return
COMMENTARY: The faithful require — and deserve — something more tangible than the online Mass.
COMMENTARY: The faithful require — and deserve — something more tangible than the online Mass.
Catholic bishops and pastors respond to the Supreme Court’s 6-3 ruling Feb. 5 to allow indoor services, including Mass, amid the pandemic.
As several European countries resort to new lockdown measures to curb the coronavirus epidemic, freedom of worship is undergoing new restraints, arousing dismay among Catholic authorities and faithful.
Across the country, people of faith are fighting for fairer treatment under COVID-19 limitations.
The city has been allowing only one worshipper at a time in places of worship, regardless of the building's size, while allowing multiple patrons in other indoor establishments.
The DOJ letter called on the mayor to treat places of worship equally with other venues where people share enclosed spaces, such as gyms, tattoo parlors, hair salons, massage studios, and daycares.
Some Catholic moral principles to help illuminate how best to address a pandemic.
This weekend, San Francisco Catholics will participate in Eucharistic processions across the city, which will join together and walk past city hall, in part to protest the city’s revised limits on public worship.
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