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John MacArthur, Grace Community Church sue California officials over indoor worship ban


SUN VALLEY, Calif. (AP/RNS) — Grace Community Church, the suburban Los Angeles megachurch pastored by John MacArthur, has filed a lawsuit to continue holding indoor services after California issued a second lockdown order to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

MacArthur and Grace Community Church have accused state officials of violating state law by “unequally” restricting their free exercise of religion during the pandemic while allowing large racial justice protests to go unchecked.

The church initially complied with state restrictions but reopened its doors to several thousand worshippers in late July. Church leaders say that meeting and singing hymns together in person are commanded in the Bible.

Video streams of services show packed rows of worshipers with little to no social distancing or masks in use.

“It is time for California to recognize that disfavored religious minorities are not second-class citizens,” states the lawsuit, filed Wednesday (Aug. 12) in the Superior Court of the State of California County of Los Angeles. “It is time for California to explain how it can justify banning worship to prevent the spread of a disease (with an overall mortality rate of 0.02 percent) while it is fine for protestors to spread that disease like wildfire.”

The suit names as defendants Gov. Gavin Newsom, Attorney General Xavier Becerra, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti and other public health and law enforcement officials in the state.

A Los Angeles County order issued July 29 limits indoor gatherings at houses of worship to 100 people or 25 percent of the building’s capacity, whichever is lower. Singing has also been banned for indoor services; health officials say chanting and singing “negate the risk-reduction achieved” through social distancing measures.

Los Angeles County attorneys have also sent a cease and desist letter to the church threatening arrest or a daily fine of $1,000.

Some constitutional law experts say the Supreme Court has recognized that the right to gather and worship can be suspended broadly for public health reasons. Restricting religious practices, not beliefs, during a pandemic, is legal.

Grace Community Church leaders and their lawyers disagree.

“… California’s edicts demanding an indefinite shut down have gone now far past rational or reasonable and are firmly in the territory of tyranny and discrimination,” said Jenna Ellis of the Thomas More Society Special Counsel, a conservative law firm that is representing church leaders. “This isn’t about health. It’s about blatantly targeting churches.”

The church argues that the California and U.S. constitutions offer “heightened protection” to houses of worship “because our Founders recognized that the church has throughout world history been the target of secular kings and tyrants, not unlike Gavin Newsom.”

“In a society hostile to religion, banning worship might be justified to prevent deaths,” the lawsuit argues. “But how can California — the land of the Missions — justify unfairly imposing the burden of lowering coronavirus infection rates (not death rates) on worshippers?”

MacArthur said that no members of his church have been infected with COVID-19.

Los Angeles County is currently reporting 1,500-2,500 new infections daily.


From Religion News Service via The Associated Press. May not be republished.

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  • Aysha Khan