Mercy Not Sacrifice: Lessons from Christianity for COVID-19 Pandemic

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Abstract

The World Health Organization announced that Coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) officially a pandemic after its detection in Wuhan, China. From a religious point of view, most churches announced a suspension of all liturgical activities. Church practices have been altered in an effort to contain the virus. In this article we will enumerate the lessons applied from Christianity to behave in such pandemics. Introduction On March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization announced that the COVID-19 officially a pandemic after barreling through 114 countries in three months and infecting over three million people [1]. It's comprehensible that people tend to use religion to deal with a crisis or explain the tragedy by reference to an Act of God and seeking a church to receive spiritual support and healing during such traumatic events. Nonetheless, all over the world, liturgical services are being suspended [2]. Several million worshipers have been deprived of the existential comfort of attending religious rituals in a moment of critical vagueness and confusion.
仁慈而不是牺牲:基督教对COVID-19大流行的教训
世界卫生组织宣布,在中国武汉发现新型冠状病毒病(COVID-19)后,正式进入大流行阶段。从宗教的角度来看,大多数教堂宣布暂停所有礼拜活动。为了控制病毒,教会已经改变了惯例。在本文中,我们将列举基督教在应对此类流行病方面的经验教训。2020年3月11日,世界卫生组织(who)宣布,新冠肺炎(COVID-19)在三个月内席卷了114个国家,感染人数超过300万人,正式进入大流行状态。可以理解的是,人们倾向于用宗教来处理危机,或者用上帝的行为来解释悲剧,并在这种创伤事件中寻求教会的精神支持和治疗。尽管如此,在世界各地,礼拜仪式正在暂停。在这个关键的模糊和混乱的时刻,数百万信徒被剥夺了参加宗教仪式的存在感。
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