Sean Feucht Brings COVID Worship Protest to Nashville, Had No Permit Say Health Officials

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NASHVILLE (RNS) ā€” Christian musician Sean Feucht brought his worship protest tour to Nashville on Sunday (Oct. 11).

Feucht played before a mostly maskless crowd gathered on a public square in front of the Nashville Metropolitan Courthouse.Ā VideoĀ of the event shows thousands of tightly packed people jumping and raising their hands as Feucht and his band play.

ā€œWe had THREE venue changes and so much resistance,ā€ Feucht wrote on Twitter. ā€œBUT THE CHURCH WILL NOT BE SILENCED!ā€

The Christian musician and worship leader hasĀ heldĀ a number of outdoor concerts and protest events around the country in recent months. After a September concert was canceled in Seattle, Feucht held an impromptu musical street protest instead.

Feucht has ties to Bethel Community Church, a prominent California charismatic congregation. Earlier this year, the church criticized a concert held in its community by Feucht for failing to follow planned safety precautions to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

The Metro Nashville Health Department issued a statement Monday, saying that Feucht did not apply for a permit.

“The Health Department is very concerned by the actions that took place at the event and we are investigating and will pursue appropriate penalties against the organizer,” the departmentĀ saidĀ in a statement.

At least one conservative Nashville pastor was perplexed by Feuchtā€™s choosing Nashville for his event, noting that the city’s churches and other houses of worship have been cleared to meet in person.

ā€œI donā€™t mind people protesting where churches arenā€™t able to meet,ā€ said the Rev. Thomas McKenzie, pastor of Church of the Redeemer, a conservative Anglican Church in North America congregation. ā€œNashville makes no sense.”

McKenzie said his congregation has been meeting at their church for months. They follow Nashvilleā€™sĀ guidelinesĀ for meeting in person, including wearing masks and social distancing. McKenzie has also offered drive-in communion in the parking lot.

As far as he could tell, Feuchtā€™s worship protest ignored the cityā€™s advice.

ā€œAll I see is a concert with no social distancing,ā€ he said. ā€œIt seems to be this is more about Sean and less about Jesus.ā€

Many of Nashvilleā€™s largest congregations, includingĀ Mt. Zion Baptist Church,Ā Long Hollow Baptist Church, andĀ CrossPointe Church, have been holding online services due to COVID-19.

A strategic planning document posted on the Mt. Zion Baptist website outlines the process the Black charismatic megachurch used to determine its response to the coronavirus pandemic. After consulting health experts and church leaders, the megachurch has decided to keep worshipping online.

ā€œBecause of Mt. Zionā€™s size, capacity, and reach in the community, hosting in-person worship services now and in the near future (before a COVID-19 vaccine) are not felt to be safe,ā€ the report states.

An analysis of cell-phone travel data found that worship attendance in September was down 30 percent from February 2020, according toĀ the Tennessean newspaper in Nashville. Tennesseeā€™s governor, Bill Lee, has encouraged congregations to meet online but has not issued any formal restrictions on worship.

City officials have planned to allow about 7,000 fans to attend Tennessee Titans football games. Nissan Stadium, where the Titans play, can hold about 70,000 fans.

Tennessee legislators have taken steps to limit protests near the state’s capitol building in downtown Nashville. After activists ā€” including faith-based activists ā€” camped out near the capitol to protest police brutality and racism, state legislators passed aĀ new lawĀ making camping near the capitol a felony.


This article originally appeared on ReligionNews.com.

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Bob Smietanahttps://factsandtrends.net
Bob Smietana is an award-winning religion reporter and editor who has spent two decades producing breaking news, data journalism, investigative reporting, profiles and features for magazines, newspapers, trade publications and websites. Most notably, he has served as a senior writer for Facts & Trends, senior editor of Christianity Today, religion writer at The Tennessean, correspondent for RNS and contributor to OnFaith, USA Today and The Washington Post.

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