An interfaith Clergy Prayer for the Pandemic

Interfaith Clergy Offer a Pandemic Prayer

 

Since March we, the heads of communion and executives whose congregations and clergy represent over 1,000,000 Minnesotans of faith, have been in regular contact with each other. We face a deadly threat that thrives when we behave like everything is normal. We have shared the pressing concerns of communities who have been most impacted by this virus. In recent weeks we have felt greater urgency about our deepening crisis.

We have learned to guide our congregations in adopting new practices which minimize the risk of COVID-19 infection.  We can do this while still performing the essential roles of faith communities in connecting people with God and with each other. We urge you to also adjust your behaviors to match the reality of a worsening pandemic.

We take as given certain facts about the virus:

  • The threat of COVID-19 is real, and that in Minnesota as in the rest of the nation it is worsening.
  • Among our own state’s faith communities there has been an increase in cases connected to worship, weddings and funerals.
  • While following safer practices guidance in serving our communities does mitigate risk, it does not eliminate risk of transmission.
  • Communities of color are disproportionately impacted by the health effects of COVID-19.
  • Behavioral changes including increased handwashing, physical distancing, and mask-wearing help to reduce the spread of COVID-19.

In addition to these truths, we also know that the moral voice of faith communities makes a real difference in shaping how we face this disease. Though we may all have our feet in different places on policy solutions, our hearts are in the same place in our desire to save lives. We urge Minnesotans to embrace three values when choosing how to oppose this disease.

Service: Try to be of service not only to your faith but to your community. The decisions made in each household have impacts that reach far beyond its walls. Make decisions not simply for your own sake but for the sakes of those whom you have yet to meet. Consider how you can be of service to your neighbors during this pandemic.

Partnership: Partner with your neighbors and public health workers. There is expertise in the world that can help us all to better survive through the pandemic. Our congregations who share facts about COVID-19, who host testing sites, and who are changing the ways they conduct ministry are active partners with experts in their communities forming a united front in the fight against this disease’s spread.

Leadership: Leaders of all stripes know that pushback is an ever-present element of change. As a leader, please make difficult changes in order to change lives. While we would all prefer to wish COVID-19 out of our lives, those leaders strong enough to look our rising numbers in the eye and help their congregations, communities and families to behave differently in order to save lives deserve our thanks. We also know that your decisions have ripple effects. We pray our own changed behaviors give others the courage to also make life-saving choices.

Every community is different and there is no end to the variety of congregations and ministries engaged in our state. We find ourselves polarized in many ways and of one mind in so few. Yet we are united in our being under threat from COVID-19. And we are united as diverse faith leaders across the state in urging all Minnesotans to unite under the values of service, partnership and leadership. In doing so, we make real our shared commitment as people of faith to love our neighbor.

Consider sharing this prayer at your holiday table: “We grieve those who are not at our table today, even as we hope that the end of this struggle is in sight. Give us servant hearts to love our neighbors enough to not spread this disease to them. Help us to partner with medical professionals and front-line workers as we wash our hands, physically distance, and wear our masks. With these practices, may our actions lead to a better and more hopeful future.”

 

Organizational signatories

Minnesota Rabbinical Association

Muslim American Society of Minnesota

Minnesota Council of Churches, including

African Methodist Episcopal Church Fourth Episcopal District

Church of God in Christ, Minnesota Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction

Mid-American Baptist Churches of Iowa and Minnesota

Minnesota Annual Conference United Methodist Church

Minnesota Conference United Church of Christ

Minnesota State Baptist Convention

Minnesota Valleys Presbytery, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)

Pentecostal Assemblies of the World, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Dakotas District

Presbytery of the Twin Cities Area, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)

Saint Paul Area Synod, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

Western District Moravian Church, Northern Province

Northwest Conference of the Evangelical Covenant Church

The Communion of Holy Christian Churches

 

Individual signatories

Bishop Craig Loya, Episcopal Church in Minnesota

Bishop Jon Anderson, Southwest Minnesota Synod, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

Bishop Regina Hassanally, Southeastern Minnesota Synod, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

Bishop Amy Odgren, Northeastern Minnesota Synod, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

Bishop Ann L. Svennungsen, Minneapolis Area Synod, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

Bishop Bill Tesch, Northwestern Minnesota Synod, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America