Throughout the month of March, most of the nation’s leading religious institutions recognized the seriousness of the coronavirus crisis and began making changes. To protect congregants, the doors to houses of worship would obviously have to close, but leaders from the faith community took their services online — and in some instances, set up drive-thru confessionals.
There are, however, several reports — out of Florida, Louisiana, and elsewhere — of Christian pastors getting into trouble with the law for ignoring official social-distancing directives intended to protect the public. In Texas, there’s even a pending lawsuit filed by pastors seeking an exemption to stay-at-home orders for religious services.
The case was filed after Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo ordered most local businesses closed, and directed faith leaders to perform worship services “by video and teleconference.” Three Texas pastors and Republican activist Steven Hotze are demanding a “religious liberty” exemption.
Vox’s Ian Millhiser made a compelling case this morning that the case deserves to fail for the obvious reason it’s trying to place “the public health of an entire community against the interests of a handful of pastors (and, potentially, parishioners) with an idiosyncratic view of the pandemic.”








