Since the beginning of the “pandemic,” many of us have felt bombarded by our Orthodox leaders with messages to “protect the least of these.” We closed churches. We kept them closed longer, in some places, than even the secular authority demanded. We canceled catechism classes, activities, coffee hour. We changed the way we worshipped. In some places, we even changed communion practices. Many of our bishops mandated masks, even in places where the secular authority did not require them. Most dioceses continued mandating strict Covid protocols for over a year, in some cases far longer than local secular authority required. While many parishes have returned to a semblance of normality, even now, not all have.
Almost from the beginning it was known, to anyone paying attention, that COVID-19 was a significant threat only to the elderly and those with serious comorbidities. But we were not allowed to talk about that fact. Especially at Church, we had to pretend that we were saving lives amidst the new Black Death. Even as 99.9% survival rates in most age groups became common knowledge, we were told to keep following the protocols. After all, “if it saves one life…” and “what harm can this do?”
The truth is, the NPIs including masks, lock downs, church closures, and modified worship have done a lot of harm: alienation from Church, increased drug use, suicides (especially among children), hundreds of thousands of businesses lost, increased deaths from undiagnosed illnesses, massive increase in mental illnesses (eating disorders and compulsions in children and adolescents, anxiety, depression, suicide ideation, neurosis), lost education, global food insecurity, elderly dying alone in care homes, massive increases in global poverty, increased child abuse, increased alcoholism… The “cure” for COVID was definitely worse than the disease. There are millions of children alive today who don’t remember what it was like to live without masks. It will take years to undo all this trauma.
One of the worst effects, however, has to be the rise of “blaming the victim.” The public health establishment, contrary to all actual science, claimed the anti-Covid measures worked. Anyone getting a positive PCR test or coming down with symptoms was immediately asked, “How’d you get it?” The presumption was you must have done something wrong – if you had just worn your mask and social distanced, then this would never have happened to you. Politicians, public “health” officials, even clergy constantly reinforced this notion. “Cases” went down, they credited their policies. “Cases” went up, they blamed the people for not following orders.
Heads I win, tails you lose.
We never did that with any other disease. Getting the flu, for example, never kicked off an interrogation about your failures as a person. Nor did it get you a lecture on how to be a better Christian. You got sick. You got over it. Life went on. In the Age of Covid, getting ill suddenly turned into a moral failing.
That culture of “blame the victim” has now entered the Orthodox Church. Actions taken by Church authorities over the past year (clergy and parish councils) have hurt many people. Words spoken in defense of those actions have also caused great pain. Actions not taken have produced great disappointment, even among some of the clergy. Merely pointing these facts out is a great way to start a fight. The immediate reaction of far too many Orthodox Christians is to blame those who were hurt, while protecting those in power. The name calling and vitriol are frequently breathtaking.
Paying attention to the spiritually wounded is “undermining Church authority,” “trying to make the Church protestant,” “attacking the Church,” “serving Putin,” “disrespecting the bishops,” “misunderstanding the Church,” “not following the science,” “advocating disobedience to the law,” “being a Monday-morning quarterback,” “wanting to kill people,” etc. (Actual comments we have received.) The spiritually wounded are at fault. Their faith was not strong enough. Our parishes are better off without them. Those who notice their pain have bad motives. They must be silenced. As Orthodox Christians, our job is to obey those in authority and those who couldn’t, for whatever reason, deserve their fates. We should all just move on without them.
God is love. As Orthodox Christians, we are called to love even those who spitefully use us. Our own worst enemies are to feel our love as burning coals heaped upon their heads. We all know this, of course, but what we seem to have forgotten is that true love requires compassion. As Elder Paisos of the Holy Mountain reminds us:
This is the most important thing of all: to have true love among yourselves . . . not false love. Always, when there is true concern for each other, compassion and love, one can act correctly. Kindness and love are empowering.
Our priest announced last Sunday that, “The pandemic is over.” For most of the country, doubtless that is true. (Though we should remember, in our good fortune, that much of the world is still suffering oppression under the guise of “public health.”) As our parishes fully reopen, there will be people missing from our ranks on Sunday mornings. Perhaps we should at least ponder why they are not there? The following testimonials represent some of the reasons. These are just a handful, but they can give you a sense of what so many Orthodox Christians have gone through over the past year. Please read them with compassion and love.
As we move forward, let us take stock of ourselves and our actions. Have we compassion for our brothers and sisters in Christ? Or do we have contempt? Do we notice their absence from Divine Liturgy, or are they simply forgotten? Are we reaching out in love to those who are missing? Do their souls matter to us? Have we asked forgiveness, if we played a role in their not having returned to Church?
May the Holy Trinity have mercy on us all.
Deborah:
We had no idea how much our lives would change when we heard about the strange disease in Wuhan, China. We had gone to church on Wednesday night and I taped the priests lesson. I worked on Thursday and received a call on the way home from work and I was informed that I could not come back to church, because I was a nurse. I almost ran off the road and had to stop to process this news. I learned that it was because I might work with Covid patients. We celebrated Pascha at home virtually and I cried, because it just wasn’t the same as being there. For the next 6 weeks, we celebrated on Sunday mornings using the Horologion. I wrote an appeal to my bishop from which I never received a response. Finally my family and I began attending a Serbian church that was willing to take us in. To this day I am SO thankful and appreciative of their hospitality. This whole experience has taught me to not take attending church for granted and taught me that I am responsible for my own worship. It’s left me disillusioned with priests and bishops who are more afraid of the laws of man and death than the laws of God.
Desia:
Hi, I was not asked to leave my Greek parish, but for a year (until last month) was not allowed to attend services even during the week when few attended) because I was over 65 and therefore “high risk”. However, I found a Serbian Orthodox church whose priest said, “I will not turn anyone away.” I am now am conflicted. While I am allowed to now attend the Greek church where I’ve been a member for over 20 years, I feel they did not remain faithful to those who tried to be faithful. The Serbs simply carried on with minimal outside influence. God bless and protect the Serbs. May God grant wisdom to all the Orthodox bishops and priests. We live in trying times.
Ronda:
In response to a survey from our parish council, I wrote about how our family has experienced the lockdown and mask mandates; the word used in the survey was “isolation”. Actually, autism is a kind of isolation all on its own for my daughter Jessica. We moved to St. Cloud, to live near a brand new mission parish. We were finally able to go to confession and receive the Eucharist regularly, and experience parish life. We moved when Jessica was 22. After she suffered an assault and a trying time of separation, I enrolled her in an occupational therapy program that included integrated listening therapy, and I initiated a particular home and community based program for her through the county. We accompanied her into the community on a daily basis to facilitate her integration into various social settings and when possible, her participation – for example helping set tables for Sunday night meals at FOCUS, karate classes, art instruction, bowling, roller skating, going to the library, the mall, book stores, museums, art galleries, parks, zoos, movies, and also simply attending Vespers, Divine Liturgy and coffee hour.
Last March (2020) that all vanished overnight. In March when everything locked down and the church was closed, she was confused when we told her we couldn’t go. It took her a long time to finally stop asking to go, and insisting that she wanted to go. I have not brought Jessica to services since the church opened again partly due to the mask requirement. Jessica does not comprehend wearing a mask. I could explain it to her, but it would scare her. And even if I could explain it somehow without scaring her, she wouldn’t wear one anyway. It’s unfamiliar, and she wouldn’t be able to tolerate the feeling of the mask touching her face or restricting her the way a mask is restrictive. She would rip it off. She seems bewildered by other people wearing masks, too. She probably doesn’t notice much if a stranger is wearing one, but if someone she knows talks to her wearing a mask, I get the feeling it hurts her feelings. Having a communication disorder means language is difficult to start with, so if someone wearing one speaks to her, she looks bewildered and doesn’t respond because she can’t figure out what they are saying. So I don’t wear a mask with her.
In May of 2021, I found an Antiochian parish where there is no absolute mask requirement, and no pressure to get the vaccine, either. We won’t be going back to Holy Trinity.
Jeff:
There are 3 parishes in Nova Scotia, all lockdown churches. Just got baptized last week. My priest refused to do it because we went into lockdown. We have a tiny monastery close to Halifax, one of two in Canada. They baptized me. I’m a former Baptist pastor, so am somewhat familiar with church politics. I am shocked that the Bishops in North America have almost totally capitulated-from the get go.
Things were fairly obvious over a year ago when two weeks to flatten the curve stretched out. Political agenda became obvious. So far, the impact of the virus has been devastating, with a total of 71 deaths in all three waves, including 4 in the latest wave. Average age of those who have succumbed to the virus is 80. Now, the priest is hinting that only those who have been vaccinated will be allowed to attend liturgy once the parish is allowed to be reopened.
Cassandra St. John:
In November 2020, the All-Holy Trinity rescued me and my family from GOARCH and the recently instituted Religion of the Mask that its parishes have embraced without question. This new religion is one of fear, superstition, idolatry, cowardice, betrayal, and tyranny, all supposedly justified under the rubric of “obedience.”
We spent years attending, tithing, volunteering at, and enjoying this Greek parish. When the spring 2020 closure hit, we were among the few providing chanting, livestreaming, and moral support. When the spring 2020 reopening hit, we were among the few back in the pews. We did all of this without fear, masks, or illnesses.
Before the summer mask mandate hit, we urged the priest and the parish council on toward flexibility and accountability. We were ignored.
The council made the rules but rarely attended church in 2020. The one council member who attended regularly did so to stream the Liturgy for his homebound elderly mother. At some point, he authorized himself to wander the nave freely during Liturgies to prop doors for ventilation in 30-degree weather and to admonish parishioners and acolytes to adjust their masks as he deemed necessary.
When the mask mandate hit and the “allowed” number of maskers suddenly appeared on Sundays, we instead attended midweek Liturgies, arrived early, and sat in a corner pew. Among the 10 to 15 attendees, we were usually the only bare faces in sight, besides the priest. Our self-effacing actions were deemed insufficient, however. The priest suddenly emailed one autumn day to say we would need masks in order to return. We said no thank you, unsure of our next move but fully convinced that the blasphemous, dehumanizing face masks have no place in the 2,000-year-old Orthodox worship of God. The word “orthodox,” after all, does mean “correct praise.”
He Who promised is faithful; and not long afterward we found a Serbian parish full of faith, love, Orthodox teaching, and bare faces. We have been there ever since, without fear, masks, or illnesses.
For guidance and support, we thank Fr. Peter Heers’ podcasts, Orthodox Reflections’ articles, and the handful of like-minded fellow travelers we have found along the way.
Glory to God!
To even suggest that anything in an Orthodox Church can cause death instead of Life, and it must therefore be closed down or restricted, is sacriligious blasphemy.
“And to the angels (bishops) of the churches of America, write, These things says the Amen, the Faithful and True Witness, the Beginning of the creation of God: I know your works, that you are neither cold nor hot. I wish you were cold or hot. So then, because you are lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will vomit you out of My mouth. Because you say, I am rich, have become wealthy and have need of nothing – and do not know that you are wretched, miserable, poor, blind and naked – …He who has an ear let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.”
Lol more pathetic moscovite propaganda
We just got this urgent request in today:
“There are monastics in Greece, under obedience, who are being told that they must take a covid vaccine. It has been requested from me, if her article entitled “An Orthodox MD works out the bioethical kinds of the Covid vaccine…” could be provided in the Greek language. Does this exist?”
The email came from a Greek server and a Greek domain name. But, certainly it is just Russian propaganda?
Don’t feed the trolls. Please ignore this troll, both here & on Twitter. He feeds off of replies & negativity. All he has to offer are insults.
Probably need to implement men only services like the Muslims to avoid church closures in the future because you know that the reason they caved is whamen were scared of the cold.
We cannot begin to tell you the number of strong, Orthodox women who have stood strong in this mess. Just look at our female contributors. Faith over fear all down the line. This is not a gender issue. This is a faith issue.
I was pretty new to Orthodoxy but as soon as the plademic hit I watched the church fold like a cheap accordian. Closed the doors, banned medical staff from attending, when it did open back up, masked up everyone, priest made rude passive aggressive remarks during homily. He even went as far to say he marked out those who chose not to attend out of his prayer book. Priest also initiated shunning of those who didn’t go along to get along. Many families left and are never returning, we are one of many. Meanwhile, protestant churches went on with business as normal. Funny, i thought the Orthodox didn’t scare so easy. We didnt leave the church, the church left us
The COVID regime began in the middle of Lent. I knew someone who was not Orthodox but had begun attending. She was using the Church as a means of getting away from a nascent cocaine addiction. When she was at church, she wasn’t bored at home trying to not be in touch with her cocaine friends. With Lent she was very excited to have five days a week where she could avoid cocaine temptation. Then all that closed down, and she began sinking back into her old habits.
Is that her fault? She found the remedy, and it was stolen from her. Will God judge her on the final day?
I don’t know where you or your friend are located. But please consider contacting the monks at St. Anthony Monastery for further advice and guidance for her.
https://stanthonysmonastery.org
Our local Greek Orthodox church decided to follow a heretic who denounced Holy Communion as a speaker of disease. We left. We found a local Romanian Church and a distant Greek Church which we now attend. While we had to wear masks by upper edict, they have promoted relief from the draconian measures and the importance of Jesus Christ and the need for in person Church. I will not go into too many details to protect the priest from the hierarchy.
Extremely sad that you have to keep details quiet to protect a priest. Horrible.
“I’m going to have to ask you to leave.”
Jesus? Or the Parish Council rep tasked with enforcement?
We were kicked out of Antioch.
🙁
God Bless the Serbs who welcomed us and built up our faith in the holiness of holy things and the love of God.
The Serbs. Axios.
I’m shocked and bewildered at how easily priests and Bishops succumbed to the plandemic hysteria and with a sweeping display of ‘no faith’ turned Holy liturgy into government Church.
God bless the faithful Serbs! Don’t let your guard down. This isn’t over. It’s only just begun. Much more trying times are upon us.
This will all be memory holed as if it never happened and swept under the rug. Then on to the next thing. Hoax alien encounter or Middle East world war. Whatever it is we must follow the agenda of the powers that be!
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Or maybe both!
They will sweep COVID under the rug as much as possible. But the fallout will not allow parishes to go back to normal, IMHO. Their transformation (and that of their faithless parishioners and clergy) has begun, unless they all fully repent.
Mick, I feel the same way. We already hear many of the parishes parroting the talking points of the “vaccine” being the key to opening the door to worship normalcy. Personally, me and my family are “GOA wilderness dwellers”. All of the parishes in my area–even those in different jurisdictions– capitulated to Caeseropapism to one degree or another. Like you I simply don’t trust them. I don’t believe for one minute there has been any reflections(and certainly no repentance) on the collateral damage this has caused. Most likely as soon as the secular elites establish their next health and safety narrative most parishes will jump through hoops to accommodate them. I pray that I will be wrong, but at this point I’m not optimistic. My family and I will continue the prayer rule we have established as we have turned a portion of our home into a chapel! May our gracious Lord guide you in your journey!
This is what happens you buy the lie that the priests are magicians and the sacraments derive their magic from these mages’ magical abilities rather than from your faith.
Even with most of the mandates now being lifted, I find myself unable to attend a parish or monastery where they bowed down to the civil authorities. I feel betrayed by the majority of bishops. I thank God that I found a parish that flew under the radar and never instituted any of the oppressive anti-Orthodox mandates. Quite frankly, I am surprised that some of the Churches are not demanding to see proof of being injected with the experimental RNA abortion shot.
Very well written and spot on for me!
To his own Master one standeth or falleth, if “they” misguided us, “they” will have to give an account.