With Christmas upon us, a number of Canadians will not be able to attend a church service to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, and those who can attend might choose not to do so due to caps on attendance or fears of contracting COVID-19.
“With introductions of COVID-19 in multiple communities over the past week, we must move to the strictest public health restrictions across the entire territory,” Dr. Michael Patterson, Nunavut’s chief public health officer, said in a statement.
Places of worship are allowed to operate at 50 percent capacity with a maximum occupancy of 250 people, who must remain seated.
The Christmas Eve mass in the famous Saint Joseph’s Oratory and the Marie-Reine-du-Monde Cathedral in Montreal will still take place, but other parts of the province have chosen to forego church services altogether.
“I’m aware it will be very disappointing to not congregate in the church this year to celebrate Christmas and the New Year, but I consider it our duty to participate in the collective effort to avoid increasing the spread of the coronavirus,” the head of the diocese, Cardinal Gérald C. Lacroix, said in a statement.
This type of situation across Canada since the onset of the pandemic is leaving some faith groups reflecting on the state of religious rights in the country.
“Banning people from attending Christmas church services is a cruel and repressive move that I can’t believe is actually happening in a democratic nation like Canada,” says Jack Fonseca, political operations director for the pro-life group Campaign Life Coalition.
While authorities are taking a top-down approach in attempting to manage the different sectors of society, some religious adherents feel that the very nature of their existence is being curtailed.
“Our civil liberties and constitutional rights are being attacked, and those of us who refuse the abortion-tainted COVID injections are being denied the right to worship God and to receive the sacraments,” says Fonseca.