Social Distancing Is No Stumbling Block for Texas Church’s Minecraft Easter Egg Hunt

Social Distancing Is No Stumbling Block for Texas Church’s Minecraft Easter Egg Hunt


(RNS) — Last year, leaders at Tate Springs Baptist Church hid thousands of plastic Easter eggs on its back lawn in Arlington, Texas.

This year, they plan to do the same. Except the eggs won’t be on the lawn. 

Instead, they’ll be in Minecraft.

Since it was announced in March, Tate Springs’ virtual Easter egg hunt, set for Sunday (April 12) afternoon, has grown into a national event, even catching the attention of the National Esports Association.

“It started out as a local event to reach our own people and also people in our community, and then people from all over the nation — churches and parents — just started jumping on, and then it just started going out from there,” said Jared Wellman, lead pastor at Tate Springs.

Hosting the Easter egg hunt on Minecraft — a popular video game that allows players to build and interact in blocky worlds populated with characters with names like “creepers” and “Steve” — was the brainchild of Curtis James, the family pastor at Tate Springs.

As stay-at-home orders took effect to slow the spread of the coronavirus, James said the church’s family ministry team wanted to make sure young people at Tate Springs still had a place to connect.

That was easy for its teenagers, who already were connected via text messaging and social media.

The church was sharing resources with parents of younger children in a group chat online,…

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Trump: ‘The Light of Christ Will Always Triumph’ Because ‘He Has Defeated Death’

Trump: ‘The Light of Christ Will Always Triumph’ Because ‘He Has Defeated Death’


Christ’s light will always triumph over “trials and tribulations,” President Trump said in an Easter message that also commended Americans for displaying the “core tenets of Christianity” during the coronavirus pandemic. 

The White House released the statement over Easter weekend. 

“No matter the circumstances, we will always celebrate Easter as a time of rejuvenation, rebirth, and a renewed sense of purpose and faith,” Trump said. “The coronavirus will not stop Easter. Even in the darkest hours, God’s abundant love and mercy are unwavering.

“The light of Christ will always triumph over the trials and tribulations we face because He has defeated death. Today, let us take a little extra time to pray for the strength of our country and our people, and ask that God hold all Americans in the palm of His hand. Together, let us rejoice in knowing that Christ has risen.”

The statement acknowledged this year’s Easter observance came “during a somber time for our Nation” but said Americans have displayed many works of compassion. 

“Throughout this difficult period, we have witnessed the core tenets of Christianity – love, compassion, and kindness – reflected in the many acts of courage, generosity, and caring of the American people,” Trump said. “Our country’s citizens have taken to heart the words of 1 Peter 4:10: ‘Each one should use…

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‘If Beer Is Essential, So Is Easter’: Judge Overturns Ban on Drive-In Church Service

‘If Beer Is Essential, So Is Easter’: Judge Overturns Ban on Drive-In Church Service


A federal judge’s decision halting a ban on drive-in church services is being applauded by Christian leaders.

Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer last week said drive-in church services wouldn’t be allowed during the COVID-19 pandemic, but On Fire Christian Church – a local congregation – quickly filed suit in federal court. On Saturday, federal judge Justin R. Walker issued a temporary restraining order against the mayor’s prohibition, saying the church had demonstrated a “strong likelihood” to win the case on the merits.

Although Walker’s decision technically applied only to the one church, he added, “Louisville ought not to view the limits of this injunction as a green light to violate the religious liberty of non-parties.”

“On Holy Thursday, an American mayor criminalized the communal celebration of Easter,” Walker wrote. “That sentence is one that this Court never expected to see outside the pages of a dystopian novel, or perhaps the pages of The Onion. But two days ago, citing the need for social distancing during the current pandemic, Louisville’s Mayor Greg Fischer ordered Christians not to attend Sunday services, even if they remained in their cars to worship – and even though it’s Easter.

“The Mayor’s decision is stunning. And it is, ‘beyond all reason,’ unconstitutional.”

First Liberty Institute represented the church.

On Fire…

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God Will ‘Be Glorified’ During Pandemic, Clemson’s Dabo Swinney Tells ESPN

God Will ‘Be Glorified’ During Pandemic, Clemson’s Dabo Swinney Tells ESPN


Clemson head football coach Dabo Swinney says he believes God will be “glorified” during the COVID-19 pandemic and that football will be played this fall.

Swinney, who often discusses his Christian faith during public interviews, made the remarks last week on ESPN’s First Take

“Faith and hope,” he said, make him optimistic the pandemic will end soon enough to allow for a football season. 

“I just have always lived my life with optimism,” he said. “… I think that God is bigger than this [pandemic]. I think He’s gonna be glorified and shine through this in a mighty way. … He has the ability to stamp this thing out as quick as it rose up.

“… If it doesn’t work out that way, then you adjust. But my plan is to get back at it and hope for the best.”

Swinney’s optimism, he said, is driven by his faith.

“The reason I have that optimism is because of 50 years of life and because of my faith in Jesus,” Swinney said. “Over 2,000 years ago this weekend, the world was in a crisis. And I’m sure a lot of smart people didn’t think that Jesus could come back to life. But He did. And this Sunday, we’re gonna celebrate that.”

Swinney acknowledged the decision to have a football season was out of his hand.

“At the end of the day the leaders of the universities – the presidents, the [conference] commissioners, the medical experts – they’re ultimately going to…

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Pastor of Dallas church apologizes for Good Friday service with multiple attendees: What makes this story different

Stock photo.

A pastor in Dallas has apologized for conducting a Good Friday service with multiple attendees, calling it a “mistake.”

But before you assume that he intentionally disobeyed restrictions on public gatherings, read the rest of the story.

Father Jacek Nowak of St. Peter the Apostle Catholic Church
was conducting a private mass for himself, his brother, and a few family
friends. The service was conducted mostly in Polish.

The problem was, the door to the church was left open during the day to allow individuals to pray. When the mass began, there were only five people present. However, others came in during the service. “It was my fault,” the priest said later. “I should have closed the church.”

The fact that people would come in from the street to a
private mass being conducted primarily in Polish speaks to the spiritual hunger
in our hearts during these days of crisis. Easter Sunday services conducted
online and in church parking lots are further examples.

What makes this story different

One way the Lord is redeeming this crisis is by using it to
remind us of our mortality and need for help outside ourselves. This virus
shows us that all our technological sophistication and medical advances
together are not enough to prevent our deaths from coronavirus or something
else. At best, they can only prolong our lives.

But it is still “appointed for man to die once, and
after that comes judgment” (Hebrews 9:27).

There is a God-shaped emptiness in each of us, as Pascal
noted. We try to fill this spiritual emptiness with material things, but like
the wrong pieces to a jigsaw puzzle, they don’t fit. Our souls are still hungry
for what we were made to need: “As the deer pants for flowing streams, so
my soul pants for you, O God. My soul thirsts for God, for the living God”
(Psalm 42:1–2).

C. S. Lewis: “God made us: invented us as a man invents
an engine. A car is made to run on petrol, and it…

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Houston Area Sherriff’s Office Holds Prayer Vigil for Deputy in Hospital with COVID-19

Houston Area Sherriff’s Office Holds Prayer Vigil for Deputy in Hospital with COVID-19


The Harris County, TX Sherriff’s Office held a prayer vigil last week for one of their deputies who was diagnosed with COVID-19, Click 2 Houston reports.

Sgt. Raymond Scholwinski is a 26-year veteran of the Sherriff’s Office and is in the ICU. Scholwinski, 70, works precinct 2 in Humble and is one of 30 members of the department who have been diagnosed with COVID-19.

Lt. Shannon Bowdoin, the Sherriff’s Office Chaplain, prayed, “Father, we come to You now, and I come to you in the name of Jesus, and I ask you, Father, to touch this family. I especially ask you right now Lord, to reach down into that hospital room where Ray is…and by Your sovereign strength, power, and authority, will You touch every cell of his body?”

Bowdoin noted in his prayer that the time of Passover had begun and prayed, “Father, bless each of us with Your presence. Let each of us know that You have never left us nor forsaken us and on this Passover day that we would see death pass us over.”

Dozens from the Sherriff’s Department stood outside the patrol vehicles with their hands lifted during the prayer. Members of Sgt. Scholwinski’s family joined them, with everyone wearing masks and standing “an appropriate distance from each other.”

Sheriff Ed Gonzalez told reporters that the Department is “continuing to work closely with the family just to make sure he has the best care…

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Authorities Singling Out Religious Groups to Enforce Social Distancing Rules Will Face Action for Discrimination, AG Barr Says

Authorities Singling Out Religious Groups to Enforce Social Distancing Rules Will Face Action for Discrimination, AG Barr Says


Authorities who choose to single out religious organizations to enforce social distancing rules will face action for discrimination, Attorney General William Barr’s office said.

In the week leading up to Easter, the attorney general’s office said they would begin “monitoring govt regulation of religious services,” The Christian Post reports.

“While social distancing policies are appropriate during this emergency, they must be applied evenhandedly & not single out religious orgs. Expect action from DOJ next week,” read a tweet from the official DOJ Twitter account on Saturday.

Many churches have turned to online or drive-in services, but many state officials have been uncertain about how to treat churches in light of social distancing rules.

In late March, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio considered closing churches and synagogues if they refused to follow a stay-at-home order. He was criticized for what others called an “unconstitutional threat.”

“De Blasio’s incendiary & unconstitutional…

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Franklin Graham Encourages Churches to ‘Obey Those in Authority,’ Not Meeting in Person

Franklin Graham Encourages Churches to ‘Obey Those in Authority,’ Not Meeting in Person


Evangelist Franklin Graham shared some encouraging words for pastors in the U.S in response to COVID-19 on the Ben Shapiro Show Sunday.

The Christian Post reports that Graham told Shapiro “we can’t slow down” when asked how he, his family and organization are doing in the pandemic.

Despite Easter Sunday, many churches have shut down following social distancing guidelines and being deemed as “non-essential” by state and local governments.

However, “we need to obey those in authority. That’s what the Bible teaches,” responded Graham, son of the late evangelical leader Billy Graham. “The churches are not shut down,” he continued.

“I think more people are attending online services than they did when they were meeting in person.”

Graham emphasized that the Church “needs to continue to be the Church.”

“But I’d just encourage pastors across the country to obey those that are in authority. And I think that’s what the congregations would expect us to do,” he said, calling the virus very infectious and deadly. “Especially for those who have underlying health issues, this could be a death sentence,” he added.

Graham, who is also the CEO and president of humanitarian aid organization Samaritan’s Purse, also noted the work the organization is doing in New York and the aid the group has sent to Italy.

As Christian Headlines previously reported,…

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Tom Hanks hosted ‘Saturday Night Live’ from home: The power of the risen Christ to proclaim the risen Christ

Tom Hanks at the Governors Awards on Sunday, Oct. 27, 2019, in Los Angeles.

Tom Hanks and his wife, Rita Wilson, were the first celebrities to make global headlines as coronavirus patients. Now fully recovered, Hanks hosted NBC’s Saturday Night Live from his home last weekend.

Wearing a suit while standing in his kitchen, Hanks said, “It is a strange time to try and be funny, but trying to be funny is SNL’s whole thing, so we thought ‘What the heck!’” He joked that since being diagnosed with coronavirus, he has become “more like America’s dad than ever before” because no one wants to be around him and he makes people uncomfortable. 

Andrea Bocelli’s amazing gift 

Tom Hanks is just one celebrity using his platform to help in these difficult days. Andrea Bocelli is another. 

His “Music for Hope” concert from Milan’s historic Duomo cathedral is one of the most moving videos I have seen. Often described as having the most beautiful voice in the world, Bocelli sings “Ave Maria” and “Sancta Maria” in front of a single microphone, accompanied only by the cathedral’s organist. His concert closes with a rendition of “Amazing Grace” I’ll not forget. 

The renowned singer, who has been blind since the age of twelve, explained the purpose behind his concert: “I believe in the strength of praying together. I believe in the Christian Easter, a universal symbol of rebirth that everyone, whether they are believers or not, truly needs right now.” 

His words speak to the hunger of the human heart for God, a theme that is being illustrated in many ways every day across this pandemic. The darker the room, the more compelling the light. 

When we are afraid of offending others 

One of the perennial fears Christians face is that we will offend those with whom we seek to share our faith. Intolerance is the cardinal sin of our age. A culture that considers all truth claims to be subjective and…

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Mississippi Church Sues City after Police Ticket Congregants Attending Drive-in Service

Mississippi Church Sues City after Police Ticket Congregants Attending Drive-in Service


A Mississippi church is fighting back against the city of Greenville after authorities shut down its drive-in service.

According to Fox News, Temple Baptist Church in Greenville, represented by the Alliance Defending Freedom, is suing the city.

The Greenville Police Department has not commented.

The suit comes after Grenville Mayor Errick Simmons approved an executive order on April 7 that prohibits drive-in services until the state’s shelter-in-place is lifted.

Reports say eight Greenville police officers issued $500 tickets to congregants who refused to leave a parking lot where Temple Baptist Church was having a drive-in service last week.

“Government is clearly overstepping its authority when it singles out churches for punishment, especially in a ridiculous fashion like this,” said ADF senior counsel Ryan Tucker, director of the ADF Center for Christian Ministries. “In Greenville, you can be in your car at a drive-in restaurant, but you can’t be in your car at a drive-in church service. That’s not only nonsensical, it’s unconstitutional, too.”

Representatives from the Alliance Defending Freedom says church members stayed in their cars with their windows rolled up during the service. It was the third week the church had been conducting drive-in services.

Another church in Greenville, the King James Bible Baptist Church, also had their drive-in services…

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